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Ascaris lumbricoides

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Ascaris lumbricoides is a large parasitic roundworm of the genus Ascaris. It is the most common parasitic worm in humans.<ref name="titleeMedicine - Ascaris Lumbricoides: Article by Aaron Laskey">Template:Cite web</ref> An estimated 807 million–1.2 billion people are infected with Ascaris lumbricoides worldwide.<ref name=CDC>Template:Cite web</ref> People living in tropical and subtropical countries are at greater risk of infection. Infection by Ascaris lumbricoides is known as ascariasis.<ref name=CDCEpi>Template:Cite web</ref>

It has been proposed that Ascaris lumbricoides and Ascaris suum (pig roundworm) are the same species.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Life cycle

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File:Ascaris lumbricoides life cycle.tif
Image showing life cycle inside and outside of the human body of one fairly well described helminth: A. lumbricoides

Ascaris lumbricoides, a roundworm, infects humans via the fecal-oral route. Eggs released by adult females are shed in feces. Unfertilized eggs are often observed in fecal samples but never become infective. Fertilized eggs embryonate and become infectious after 18 days to several weeks in soil, depending on the environmental conditions (optimum: moist, warm, shaded soil).<ref name=CDC2018>Parasites - Ascariasis. (14 February 2018). Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/parasites/ascariasis/biology.html</ref>

Infection occurs when a human swallows water or food contaminated with embryonated eggs. In the duodenum, a single rhabditiform larva hatches from each of the ingested eggs. The larvae then penetrate the mucosa and submucosa and enter the venules or lymphatic vessels. From there, the larvae then pass through the heart to enter the pulmonary circulation. The larvae then break through the walls of the pulmonary capillaries to enter the alveoli.<ref name="Murray">Murray, Patrick R.; Rosenthal, Ken S.; Pfaller, Michael A. Medical Microbiology, Fifth Edition. United States: Elsevier Mosby, 2005Template:Page needed</ref><ref name=Read1995>Template:Cite journal</ref> The juvenile worms then migrate from the alveoli, through the bronchioles and bronchi, and into the trachea. An acute inflammatory reaction can occur if some of the worms get lost during this migration process and accumulate in other organs of the body.<ref name=Read1995/>

Once in the trachea, the worms are coughed up into the pharynx and then swallowed again, after which they pass through the stomach and into the small intestine, where they mature into adult worms.<ref name=CDC2018/><ref name=Read1995/> The adult worms begin producing fertilized eggs within 60–65 days of being swallowed;<ref name=Read1995/> females produce as many as 200,000 eggs per day for 12–18 months. These fertilized eggs become infectious after two weeks in soil; they can persist in soil for 10 years or more.<ref name="Murray"/>

It might seem odd that the worms end up in the same place where they began. One hypothesis to account for this behavior is that the migration mimics an intermediate host, which would be required for juveniles of an ancestral form to develop to the third stage. Another possibility is that tissue migration enables faster growth and larger size, which increases reproductive capacity.<ref name=Read1995/> The eggs have a lipid layer which makes them resistant to the effects of acids and alkalis, as well as other chemicals.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Page needed</ref>

Morphology and anatomy

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File:Ascaris lumbricoides4.jpg
Fertile egg as can be seen in a microscope
File:Ascaris lumbricoides.jpg
Fertile egg in human faeces (detail)
File:Ascaris lumbricoides non-fertile egg.jpg
Infertile egg

Ascaris lumbricoides is characterized by its great size. Males are Template:Convert in diameter and Template:Convert long. The male's posterior end is curved ventrally and has a bluntly pointed tail. Females are Template:Convert wide and Template:Convert long. The vulva is located in the anterior end and accounts for about one-third of its body length. Uteri may contain up to 27 million eggs at a time, with 200,000 being laid per day. Fertilized eggs are oval to round in shape and are Template:Convert long and Template:Convert wide with a thick outer shell. Unfertilized eggs measure Template:Convert long and Template:Convert wide.<ref name="Roberts">Roberts, Larry S.; Janovy, John Jr. Foundations of Parasitology, Eighth Edition. United States: McGraw-Hill, 2009Template:Page needed</ref>

Anatomically, the digestive tract is complete with prominent muscular pharynx. Respiration is by simple diffusion across body wall. The nervous system consists of a nerve ring and many longitudinal nerve cords. They are dioecious and have separate reproductive systems consisting of thread like gonads and genital ducts that open outside by apertures. Fertilization is internal and development is mostly indirect. Sexual dimorphism is well marked. Externally, males are much shorter than females and males also have a curved posterior end, unlike females. Internally, in males, all the digestive, reproductive systems open in a common chamber- cloaca whereas in females, there is a separate anus for digestive tract and female genital pore for female reproductive system.Template:Fact

Epidemiology

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An estimated 807 million–1.2 billion people are infected with A. lumbricoides worldwide.<ref name=CDC/> While infection occurs throughout most of the world, ascariasis is most common in sub-Saharan Africa, the Americas, China, and east Asia.<ref name=Dold2010>Template:Cite journal</ref> Although the prevalence is low in the United States, ascariasis is still endemic in the southeastern United States due to the temperature and humid climate.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

A. lumbricoides eggs are extremely resistant to strong chemicals, desiccation, and low temperatures. The eggs can remain viable in soil for months or even years.<ref name="Roberts"/> Eggs of A. lumbricoides have been identified in coprolites in the Americas, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and New Zealand, the oldest ones being more than 24,000 years old.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Infections

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Template:Main Infections with these parasites are more common where sanitation is poor,<ref name="titleDPDx - Ascariasis">Template:Cite web</ref> and raw human feces are used as fertilizer.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Symptoms

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Often, no symptoms are presented with a minor A. lumbricoides infection, the inevitable consequence being the e.g. once a year passage of such clearly visible worm(s) on close inspection. In the case of bad infections symptoms commonly include bloody sputum, cough, fever, abdominal discomfort, intestinal ulcer(s), as well as a less commonly missed passing of the quite long worms.<ref>Template:MedlinePlusEncyclopedia</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Ascariasis is the most common cause of Löffler's syndrome worldwide. Accompanying pathological symptoms include pulmonary infiltration, eosinophilia (symptoms of the overabundance of eosinophils in the blood such as asthma and allergic reactions), and a diagnostic symptom is, aside from standard microscopy of stools, radiographic opacities.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> One study has observed increases in fertility in infected women, in a similar vein to good diet and exercise, but with all of the pathological negatives and discomforts the disease carries with it, varying from host to host and again with diet.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Distribution

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Ascaris lumbricoides is primarily distributed in tropical and subtropical regions around the world, particularly in areas with poor sanitation and hygiene practices. It is most prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia (including countries like India, Bangladesh, and Indonesia), and parts of Latin America, where inadequate sanitation infrastructure and the use of human faeces as fertilizer contribute to its spread.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Prevention

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Preventing any fecal-borne disease requires educated hygienic habits/culture and effective fecal treatment systems. This is particularly important with A. lumbricoides because its eggs are one of the most difficult pathogens to kill (second only to prions), and the eggs commonly survive 1–3 years. A. lumbricoides lives in the intestine where it lays eggs. Infection occurs when the eggs, too small to be seen by the unaided eye, are eaten. The eggs may get onto vegetables when improperly processed human feces of infected people are used as fertilizer for food crops. Infection may occur when food is handled without removing or killing the eggs on the hands, clothes, hair, raw vegetables/fruit, or cooked food that is (re)infected by handlers, containers, etc. Bleach does not readily kill A. lumbricoides eggs, but it will remove their sticky film, to allow the eggs to be rinsed away. A. lumbricoides eggs can be reduced by hot composting methods, but to completely kill them may require rubbing alcohol, iodine, specialized chemicals, cooking heat, or "unusually" hot composting (for example, over Template:Convert for 24 hours).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Treatment

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Template:Further Control of roundworm infections is based on treatment with medication, improved sanitation and health education.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This usually takes around three days.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

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Giant intestinal roundworms have been known since antiquity. In 1758 Linnaeus named them Ascaris lumbricoides. For many centuries, they were thought to arise by spontaneous generation. In 1855, Ascaris eggs were found in human faeces by Henry Ransom in England then this was described in the literature two years later by Casimir-Joseph Davaine in France.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Attempts to infect animals by feeding them eggs were unsuccessful. In 1886, Salvatore Calandruccio in Italy successfully infected a boy to whom he had given 150 eggs. Battista Grassi published this information without giving any acknowledgement to Calandruccio.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Development was thought to occur directly within the bowel lumen but Francis Stewart in Hong Kong in 1916 fed eggs to rats, then later mice, and found infective larvae in the faeces and in the lungs but no mature worms. In 1918, Sadao Yoshida ingested larvae recovered from the trachea of a guinea pig, then found eggs in his own stools 76 days later. In 1922, Shimesu Koino ingested 2,000 Ascaris lumbricoides eggs, found larvae in his sputum a few days later, then after 50 days took an anthelmintic and recovered 667 immature Ascaris lumbricoides, thus confirming the life cycle.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

References

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