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Trichinellosis, also called trichinosis , caused by Trichinella spiralis , is contracted by consuming undercooked meat, which releases the larvae and allows them to encyst in muscles. Infection can cause fever, muscle pains, and digestive system problems; severe infections can lead to lack of coordination, breathing and heart problems, and even death. Finally, heartworm in dogs and other animals is caused by the nematode Dirofilaria immitis , which is transmitted by mosquitoes. Symptoms include fatigue and cough; when left untreated, death may result.

Part 2

The physician explains to Sarah’s mother that ringworm can be transferred between people through touch. “It’s common in school children, because they often come in close contact with each other, but anyone can become infected,” he adds. “Because you can transfer it through objects, locker rooms and public pools are also a potential source of infection. It’s very common among wrestlers and athletes in other contact sports.”

Looking very uncomfortable, Sarah says to her mother “I want this worm out of me.”

The doctor laughs and says, “Sarah, you’re in luck because ringworm is just a name; it is not an actual worm. You have nothing wriggling around under your skin.”

“Then what is it?” asks Sarah.

  • What type of pathogen causes ringworm?

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  • What is the most common nematode infection in the United States?

Platyhelminths (flatworms)

Phylum Platyhelminthes (the platyhelminths) are flatworms . This group includes the flukes, tapeworms, and the turbellarians, which include planarians. The flukes and tapeworms are medically important parasites ( [link] ).

The flukes ( trematodes ) are nonsegmented flatworms that have an oral sucker ( [link] ) (and sometimes a second ventral sucker) and attach to the inner walls of intestines, lungs, large blood vessels, or the liver. Trematodes have complex life cycles, often with multiple hosts. Several important examples are the liver flukes ( Clonorchis and Opisthorchis ), the intestinal fluke ( Fasciolopsis buski ), and the oriental lung fluke ( Paragonimus westermani ). Schistosomiasis is a serious parasitic disease, considered second in the scale of its impact on human populations only to malaria. The parasites Schistosoma mansoni, S. haematobium , and S. japonicum , which are found in freshwater snails, are responsible for schistosomiasis ( [link] ). Immature forms burrow through the skin into the blood. They migrate to the lungs, then to the liver and, later, other organs. Symptoms include anemia, malnutrition, fever, abdominal pain, fluid buildup, and sometimes death.

a) Class Turbellaria – a photograph of a flat oval-shaped worm labeled Pseudobiceros bedfordi. B) Class Monegena – a micrograph of a rectangular cell with a bulb at one end. Labeled Dactylogyrus sp. C) Class Trematoda – A photograph of a long oval organism labeled Fascioloides magna and two smaller oval organisms labeled Fasciola hepatica. D) Class Cestoda – A photograph of a very long tapeworm labeled Taenia saginata.
Phylum Platyhelminthes is divided into four classes. (a) Class Turbellaria includes the Bedford’s flatworm ( Pseudobiceros bedfordi ), which is about 8–10 cm long. (b) The parasitic class Monogenea includes Dactylogyrus spp. Worms in this genus are commonly called gill flukes. The specimen pictured here is about 0.2 mm long and has two anchors, indicated by arrows, that it uses to latch onto the gills of host fish. (c) The Trematoda class includes the common liver fluke Fasciola hepatica and the giant liver fluke Fascioloides magna (right). The F. magna specimen shown here is about 7 cm long. (d) Class Cestoda includes tapeworms such as Taenia saginata , which infects both cattle and humans and can reach lengths of 4–10 meters; the specimen shown here is about 4 meters long. (credit c: modification of work by “Flukeman”/Wikimedia Commons)

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Source:  OpenStax, Microbiology. OpenStax CNX. Nov 01, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12087/1.4
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