Intestinal fluke: Fasciolopsis buski
Intestinal fluke: Fasciolopsis buski
- The largest intestinal fluke to infect humans.
- Humans ingest it when eating aquatic plants, particularly water chestnuts.
- Infection can cause gastrointestinal problems, fever, abdominal swelling, and intestinal obstruction.
Life Cycle
1. Miracidia invade
snail (intermediate host) and give rise to
cercariae (asexual reproduction).
2. Cercariae exit the snail.
3. Cercariae encyst and reside on aquatic plants such as
water chestnuts (the encysted larvae are called
metacercariae).
4. Humans
ingest metacercariae when eating the plants.
5. In the duodenum, metacercariae
excyst; immature flukes
attach to the intestinal wall.
6. The flukes become adults and
self-fertilize.
7. Eggs are excreted in
feces.
8. Eggs release
miracidia (free-swimming larval stage) in water.
Image Credits:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolopsis#/media/File:Fasciolopsis_buski_egg_08G0039_lores.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/sla9xo1z36oe9kl/Screenshot%202018-12-11%2011.21.45.png?dl=0