Tapeworm
Tapeworm
What Is the Life Cycle of the Beef Tapeworm?
What Is the Life Cycle of the Pork Tapeworm?
What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Tapeworm Infection?
How Do Doctors Diagnose and Treat Tapeworm Infection?
Tapeworms are long, flat, intestinal worms found in humans and many other animals.
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Cestodes
Infestation
Neurocysticercosis
Tapeworms, also called cestodes (SES-todes), infect humans worldwide, although they are rare in the United States. The most common species in humans are Taenia saginata, the beef tapeworm, and Taenia solium, the pork tapeworm. As adults, these worms stay in the intestines and usually do little harm. But if people become infected with the cysts (immature stage) of the pork tapeworm, they can develop a condition called cysticercosis (sis-ti-ser-KO-sis), which can damage the brain. This is a major health problem in many tropical countries.
What Is the Life Cycle of the Beef Tapeworm?
The adult beef tapeworm is usually a whopping 15 to 30 feet long (4.5 to 9 meters) and lives in the small intestine. An infected person usually has only one or two worms. The tapeworms use their head, called the scolex, to attach themselves to the intestinal wall. They have 1,000 to 2,000 body segments, called proglottids, each containing 80,000 to 100,000 eggs.
The eggs can survive for months or years in the environment. When cattle or other herbivores (plant-eaters) eat egg-contaminated vegetation, the eggs hatch and burrow through their intestinal wall. The larvae* burrow into muscles and form fluid-filled cysts, which are protective capsules. If humans eat raw or undercooked beef containing cysts, the cysts develop over a 2-month period into adult tapeworms. Adult beef tapeworms can live for more than 30 years.
- * larvae
- are worms at an intermediate stage of the life cycle between eggs and adulthood.
What Is the Life Cycle of the Pork Tapeworm?
The adult pork tapeworm is about half as long as the beef tapeworm, usually 8 to 11 feet (2.5 to 3.5 meters) long. It also has a scolex for attaching to the intestinal wall and a body of about 1,000 proglottids. Each proglottid contains about 50,000 eggs.
The life cycle is similar to the beef tapeworm’s except that the worms infect pigs instead of cows. When humans eat raw or undercooked pork containing cysts, the cysts develop into adult tapeworms in humans. Adult pork tapeworms can live up to 25 years.
Cysticercosis
Pork tapeworms also can cause a more serious infection, called cysticercosis. This happens if people eat or drink something contaminated with human waste containing pork tapeworm eggs. The eggs hatch into cysts in the intestines, and the cysts travel through the blood to the rest of the body, especially the muscles and brain.
What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Tapeworm Infection?
Beef tapeworm infections produce only mild symptoms that may include diarrhea, abdominal pain, and weight loss. Pork tapeworm infections generally produce no symptoms. Cysticercosis, however, can cause muscle pain, weakness, and fever. If the central nervous system is involved, it can also cause epilepsy* or inflammation of the brain and the membranes around it (meningoencephalitis).
- * epilepsy
- is α disorder in which α person repeatedly has seizures, sudden attacks in which the person may jerk, grow rigid, or lose consciousness briefly.
How Do Doctors Diagnose and Treat Tapeworm Infection?
Eggs and proglottids can be seen in stool samples by microscopic examination. But to tell which tapeworm—beef or pork—is involved, a scolex would have to be removed and examined. This is seldom done, as doctors usually can prescribe the same medication for both types of infection. Stools are checked at 3 and 6 months after treatment to ensure that the infection is gone.
Cysticercosis is diagnosed by examining the muscles or brain with a CT scan* that can show the cysts. Blood tests for antibodies, which are substances the body makes to fight the infection, can confirm the diagnosis. Cysticercosis is also treated with medication but, in rare instances, cysts may be removed surgically.
- * CT scans
- or CAT scans are the short form for computerized axial tomography, which uses x-rays and computers to view structures inside the body.
Prevention Tapeworm infection may be prevented by thoroughly cooking meat until juices run clear and the centers are no longer pink. This ensures that any tapeworm cysts in the meat are destroyed.
See also
Encephalitis
Parasitic Diseases
Worms
Resource
The U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases has a fact sheet about Cysticercosis at its website. http://www.cdc.gov/nciod/focus/vol6no4/dpd.htm
Cestoda
Cestoda
The class Cestoda consists of long, flat, ribbonlike worms that are commonly called tapeworms. Tapeworms are obligatory parasites , ones that cannot survive independent of a host, that live in the intestines of vertebrate hosts. They form an extremely varied group, and nearly every vertebrate species is associated with a different parasitic cestode. Most cestodes make use of one or more intermediate hosts to bring them into the body of the ultimate host. Some cestodes can achieve impressive lengths—worms of up to 15 meters (50 feet) have been observed.
Characteristics of Cestodes
All tapeworms share a body plan. At the front end is a head region called the scolex. The scolex maintains a hold on the host's digestive tract and has many suckers and hooks for this purpose. The scolex also contains the tape-worm's sense organs, which consist primarily of cells sensitive to touch and chemical stimuli, as well as the modest concentration of nervous tissue that makes up the tapeworm brain.
The scolex is followed by a short neck region and a trunk, which is divided into a series of segments known as proglottids. New proglottids are produced in the neck region. As these form, older proglottids are pushed back toward the rear of the animal. The proglottids house the reproductive organs, which mature gradually as proglottids move to the back. Tapeworms are hermaphroditic , so that each proglottid includes both male and female gonads and generates both sperm and eggs. A tapeworm can reproduce sexually, either through self-fertilization or cross-fertilization with another tapeworm, or asexually, by breaking off proglottid segments at the end of the trunk. These reproductive traits are admirably adapted to reproduction in an environment (in the body of a host) in which worms are not guaranteed to encounter individuals of the same species.
Proglottids and fertilized eggs exit the host's digestive tract along with the host's excrement. In most tapeworm species, eggs or proglottids are first ingested, or taken in, by an intermediate host, often an arthropod or a different vertebrate species. The cestode may develop into a larval form or may become temporarily dormant within the intermediate host. The ultimate host becomes infested with the cestode when it consumes an infested intermediate host.
Because of the cestodes' parasitic lifestyle, certain organ systems are unnecessary. The most obvious of these is the digestive tract, which is absent from the group. Because cestodes live in an environment that is not only rich in nutrients, but one in which the nutrients are already well processed, further digestion is unnecessary. Instead, food absorption occurs over the entire surface of the cestode body, in an ectodermal, or skin, layer known as the integument. The integument is covered with tiny projections called mitotrichia, which increase the surface area available for absorption.
Subclasses of Cestodes
Cestodes are divided into two subclasses, Cestodaria and Eucestoda. Cestodaria is a small subclass of relatively small tapeworms that are parasites to elasmobranch fishes (sharks, rays, and chimeras). The trunks of cestodarians are not segmented into proglottids. The rear of the body includes a small sucker. Eucestoda is a much more diverse group, and includes all other cestodes. Eucestodes are characterized by the presence of proglottids.
see also Phylogenetic Relationships of Major Groups.
Jennifer Yeh
Bibliography
Brusca, Richard C., and Gary J. Brusca. Invertebrates. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates, 1990.
Gould, James L., and William T. Keeton. Biological Science, 6th ed. New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1996.
Hickman, Cleveland P., Larry S. Roberts, and Allan Larson. Animal Diversity. Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown, 1994.
Cestoda
tapeworm
Cestoda
tapeworm
tape·worm / ˈtāpˌwərm/ • n. a parasitic flatworm (class Cestoda), the adult of which lives in the intestine of humans and other vertebrates. It has a long ribbonlike body with many segments that can become independent, and a small head bearing hooks and suckers.