Blood Tissue Nematodes
Blood Tissue Nematodes
Blood Tissue Nematodes
General Characters
1- Adult worms live in the lymphatic, subcutaneous
connective tissue or body cavities.
2- Female worms are viviparous.
3- The early first-stage larvae, known as microfilariae
that have no differentiated organs inside, instead
there are columns of cells with prominent nuclei.
4- Filarial worms are transmitted through the bite of an
insect vector.
Filarial worms
They include the following species:
1- Wuchereria bancrofti.
2- Brugia malayi.
3- Onchocerca volvulus.
4- Loa loa.
5- Mansonella perstans.
6- Mansonella ozzardi.
Infective stage:
Filariform larva [3rd stage larva]:
It is about 1.5-2 mm x 20 um, with
cylindrical oesophagus and lies in
the labium of mosquito vector.
Mode of infection:
During
bite
by
mosquito
I.H,
Wuchereria bancrofti
Disease: Bancroftian filariasis, wuchereriasis,
elephantiasis.
D. H.: Man.
I.H. (vector): Female Culex Mosquitoes.
Habitat: Lymphatic tissues of lower limbs &
external genitalia.
Microfilariae appear in the peripheral blood
by night [nocturnal periodicity] & disappear
by day time.
Geographical distribution
Morphology
Adult worms are whitish & thread like.
Male: 2.5 - 4 cm &
Female: 5-10 cm.
Morphology
Microfilaria: 250-300x8 m in length & surrounded by a loose
sheath.
Body forms smooth (graceful) curves, has rounded anterior end
and tapering tail. Both ends are free of nuclei. It has a nocturnal
periodicity.
Nocturnal [microfilarial]
periodicity theories
1- Biological adaptation between M.F. & night biting activity of
mosquito.
2- Chemical attraction between M.F. & saliva of mosquito.
3- During sleep, decrease oxygen content & increase carbon dioxide
content stimulate M.F. to migrate from blood vessels of lung to
peripheral blood.
4- Khalils theory: Blockage of lymphatics; during day on upright
position of the patient; prevents M.F. to find their way to the
circulation.
By night time & during sleep, relaxation of the patients body will
open the lymphatics allowing M.F. to reach the peripheral blood.
Life cycle
A- Development in man:
1- When an infected mosquito bites man to take a
blood meal, infective larvae are deposited on human
skin usually in pairs, penetrate the skin through the
bite wound or by its own activity.
Life cycle
B- Development in mosquito:
4- Microfilariae are taken up by a female mosquito
when it sucks a blood meal.
5- In the stomach of mosquito, microfilariae loose their
sheath, penetrate the wall of mid gut & migrate to the
thoracic muscles where they develop into infective
larvae.
6- Development in the mosquito takes 2-3 weeks.
Each ingested microfilaria develops into one filariform
larva [cyclo-developmental transmission].
7- Infective larvae migrate to the head region within
the labium ready to be transmitted when mosquito
takes another blood meal.
Mechanism of Elephantiasis
Increased permeability of obstructed lymphatic walls, leading to
leakage of lymph rich in protein under the skin causing cellular
proliferation of connective tissue & deposition of fibrous tissue.
Clinically: At first, the swelling is pitting but later becomes nonpitting then the skin becomes thickened, rough, fissured and
susceptible to ulceration and 2nd infections with bacteria or
fungi.
Elephantiasis occurs after persistent high infection
for 5-10 years.
Diagnosis
I- Clinical
History & Clinical picture
II- Laboratory
III- Imaging techniques
Provocative test
To obtain blood at day time, give the patient 50-100 mg DEC orally &
examine the blood within 30- 60 min.
d- Immunodiagnosis
1- Skin test with antigenic extract of the dog filaria Dirofilaria
immitis.
2- IHAT, IFAT and ELISA: for detection of filarial antibodies.
3- Detection of filarial antigens is specific & sensitive and can
detect early infection saving patients from complications of the
disease.
e- Molecular techniques: PCR.
f- High eosinophilia.
==
Treatment
1- Antifilarial drugs:
a- Diethylcarbamazine [DEC]: 6mg/Kg/day for 12
days, repeated every 6 months as long as the patient
remains microfilaraemic or has symptoms.
b- Ivermectin: Single oral dose of 150 ug/Kg body weight.
c- Combination of DEC & ivermectin: gives better results.
2- General measures:
Rest, antibiotics, antifungal, physiotherapy & bandaging.
3- Elephantoid tissues: Corrected surgically.
Occult Filariasis
* Clinical conditions of hyper-sensitivity reactions to
microfilarial antigens.
* The classical features of lymphatic filariasis are absent.
* Microfilariae are not seen in peripheral blood (due to its
destruction in the lung by the immune response) but
adult worms and microfilariae may be seen in the tissues.
* The condition may be caused by Wuchereria bancrofti,
Brugia malayi or by some animal filarial worms.
Brugia malayi
Similar to W. bancrofti in life cycle, diagnosis, treatment
& control and differs as regards:
1- Disease: Malayan filariasis.
2- Distribution: Far East.
3- I.H. (Vector):
Female Mansonia mosquito.
4- Reservoir hosts: Cats & monkeys.
5- Habitat: Lymphatic of upper limbs.