Schistosoma
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A genus of trematodes, Schistosoma spp., commonly known as blood-flukes, cause the most important human helminth infection (schistosomiasis) from a world health perspective, and are considered by the World Health Organization as second in importance only to malaria, with hundreds of millions infected worldwide. Adult worms parasitize mesenteric blood vessels. Eggs are passed through urine or feces to fresh water, where larval stages can infect a new host by penetrating the skin.
Schistosoma | ||||||||||||
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Missing image Schistosoma_mansoni.jpg Schistsoma mansoni egg | ||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||
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Species within the genus Schistosoma | ||||||||||||
S. mansoni |
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Taxonomy
There are four species of schistosome which are infective to humans:
- Schistosoma mansoni, found in Africa, Brazil, Venezuela, Suriname, the lesser Antilles, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic. It is is also known as Manson's blood fluke or swamp fever.
- S. japonicum whose common name is simply blood fluke is found widely spread in Eastern Asia and the southwestern Pacific region. In Taiwan this species only affects animals, not humans.
- S. mekongi is related to S. japonicum and affects both superior and inferior mesenteric veins. S. mekongi differs in that it has smaller eggs, a different intermediate host, and longer prepatent period in the mammalian host.
- S. haematobium, commonly referred to as the bladder fluke, originally found in Africa, the Near East, and the Mediterranean basin, was introduced into India during World War II.
S. indicum, S. nasale, S. leiperi are all parasites of ruminants.
Morphology
Adult schistosomes share all the fundamental features of the digenea. They have a basic bilateral symmetry, oral and ventral suckers, a body covering of a syncytial tegument, a blind-ending digestive system consisting of mouth, oesophagus and bifurcated caeca; the area between the tegument and alimentary canal filled with a loose network of mesoderm cells, and an excretory or osmoregulatory system based on flame cells. Adult worms tend to be 10-20 mm long and use globins from their hosts' hemoglobin for their own circulatory system.
Reproduction
Unlike other trematodes, the schistosomes are dioecious, in that the sexes are separate. The two sexes display a strong degree of sexual dimorphism, and the male is considerably larger than the female. The male surrounds the female and encloses her within his gynacophoric canal for the entire adult lives of the worms, where they reproduce sexually.
See also
For a full discussion of life cycles, symptoms and control measures, see the main article on schistosomiasis.
External links
- British Department for International Development Control of Schistosomiasis (http://www.dfid-kar-water.net/w5outputs/output_summary_sheets/control_schistosomiasis_os.html)
- The World Health Organisation (http://www.who.org)
- University of Cambridge Schistosome Laboratory (http://www.path.cam.ac.uk/~schisto/)zh:血吸虫