Nematodes: Strongyloides Stercoralis
Nematodes: Strongyloides Stercoralis
Nematodes: Strongyloides Stercoralis
Dracunculus medinensis
Dracunculiasis
• After maturation into adults and
copulation, the male worms die and
the females (length: 70 to 120 cm)
migrate in the subcutaneous tissues
towards the skin surface.
• One year after infection, the female
worm induces a blister on the skin of
the distal lower extremity, which
ruptures.
1 2
3
4
Dracunculiasis
• When this lesion comes into contact
with water, a contact that the patient
seeks to relieve the local discomfort,
the female worm emerges and releases
larvae.
• The larvae are ingested by a copepod
and after two weeks (and two molts)
develop into infective larvae
• Ingestion of the copepods closes the
cycle.
Intermediate host
genus Cyclops
copepod
in joint
Filariasis: Causal Agents
Lymphatic Filariasis is found in the tropics and subtropics of India, China, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Africa,
South America, and the Pacific.
Elephantiasis
Elephantiasis
Life Cycle of Filaria
Anopheles
Aedes vectors:
Hematoxylin
B. malayi:
subterminal and
terminal nuclei
Brugia malayi
Tropical Eosinophilia
• Weingarten’s syndrome
• Subacute or chronic form of B. malayi
or W. bancrofti filariasis occurring in
the tropics (India) with episodic
nocturnal wheezing and coughing,
marked blood eosinophilia, and
interstitial thickening and diffuse
nodular mottling in the lung fields.
• Microfilariae are confined to the lungs.
Laboratory Diagnosis
• For such assessments one must take into
account the parasites' possible nocturnal
periodicity in selecting the optimal blood
drawing time (10 p.m.-2 a.m. for most
brugian filariasis and bancroftian
infections).
Laboratory Diagnosis
For examining blood, hydrocoele fluid,
articular effusions and urine:
2) spread 20 microliters evenly over a
clean slide and let dry
3) stain with Giemsa or a similar stain
4) Wet smear: dilute 20-40 microliters of
anti-coagulated blood with water or 2%
saponin, which will lyse the RBC but
allow the microfilariae to remain motile
and thus more readily identifiable.
Laboratory Diagnosis
• Knott's concentration technique: 1 ml of
anti-coagulated blood mixed with 10 ml
of 2% formalin is centrifuged; examine
the sediment either unstained or fixed
and stained.
• the microfilariae are non-motal and
generally straight, and they can be easily
missed if the viscous sediment is not
searched diligently.
Laboratory Diagnosis
• Membrane filtration: the most sensitive
technique for quantitating microfilariae
in blood, urine or other body fluids.
• Polycarbonate (Nuclepore®) filters with
a 3 µm pore size. Anti-coagulated blood
or other fluid is passed through a
Swinnex holder containing the filter,
followed by a 35 ml of pre-filtered water
that lyses the RBC. A volume of air then
follows the water, and the filter is
removed, placed on a slide and stained.
Laboratory Diagnosis
• Immunoassay for antigen detection of
circulating filarial antigens: rapid-
format immunochromatographic test
for detection of W. bancrofti antigens.
• Useful diagnostic approach because
microfilaremia can be low and
variable.
Laboratory Diagnosis
Loa loa