Parasitology Strongyloides, Acanthocephalans, and Whips

Descripción

Brief overview of M. ingens, M. hirudinaceus, Strongyloides spp., Ancylostoma spp., and Uncinaria spp.
Cassie Bowling
Fichas por Cassie Bowling, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Cassie Bowling
Creado por Cassie Bowling hace más de 5 años
53
0

Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
Strongyloides spp. Distribution Course in body Definitive Host Life Cycle Clinical Signs Diagnosis Treatment Zoonotic? Threadworms Worldwide (tropical/subtropical) Small intestine to mucosa to lungs to connective tissue to small intestine (female only) Mammals Direct Cycle: Embryonated egg autoinfects or hatches to rhabditiform larva, larva passes in stool to either infect another animal or carry out the cycle in the environment. Clinical signs: diarrhea, respiratory signs, hemorrhage, foal-heat diarrhea, weight loss Diagnosis: Fecal float with fresh feces, Baermann in dogs Treatment: Ivermectin, benzimidazoles, levamisole, prompt removal of feces, routine deworming Zoonotic
Strongyloides spp. (clear, smooth surface, smaller than HOTC/Strongyle eggs)
Strongyloides spp. (small, long filariform esophagus)
Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus (dark, larvated, embryonic envelopes, almond looking)
M. hirudinaceus (white/pink, flatish, transverse wrinkles, spiny attachment organ)
Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus Distribution Course in body Definitive Host Life Cycle Clinical Signs Diagnosis Treatment Zoonotic? M. ingens? Thorny headed worm of swine Worldwide GI tract Pigs Indirect cycle: eggs in feces, ingested by beetle-acanthor-acanthella-cystacanth, ingest beetle, mature in small intestine. Clinical signs: diarrhea, emaciation, abdominal pain, peritonitis Diagnosis: Sediment, adults at necropsy Treatment: MCLs, precent rooting, remove feces Zoonotic M. ingens normally infects raccoons and bears, but can infect dogs
Ancylostoma/Uncinaria spp. Distribution Course in body Definitive Host Life Cycle Clinical Signs Diagnosis Treatment Zoonotic? Hookworms Worldwide Skin/mucosa to blood to lungs to small intestine, transmammary Carnivores Direct Cycle: Egg in feces, develop in soil until L3, ingested by host, migrate to intestines to mature or striated muscle to encyst Clinical Signs: Anemia, dark tarry stool, respiratory distress, dermatitis, larval leaks Diagnosis: Fecal float/antigen, ID adults Treatment: Pyrantel, fenbendazole/febantel, emodepside, heartworm prevention, feces removal, prevent predation Zoonotic
Ancylostoma/Uncinaria spp. (clear, smooth surface, dark morula stage in fresh feces, ancylostoma is smaller than uncinaria spp.)
Ancylostoma/Uncinaria spp. (Small, dorsal hook end. Ancylostoma have teeth, Uncinaria have cutting plates)
Ancylostoma caninum host? Dogs
Ancylostoma tubaeforme host? cats
Ancylostoma braziliense host? Dogs and cats
Uncinaria stenocephala host? Dogs and cats
Mostrar resumen completo Ocultar resumen completo

Similar

Basic Immunology Principles
Robyn Hokulani-C
Anatomical terminology - Axial Skeleton
celine_barbiersg
Veterinary Technician 2
Kadii Spurling
Joint pathology
Justin Veazey
General epi flashes
Sno
Pelvic limb cutaneous nerves
jess_k_turner
LAM II study questions
curfman.melissa
Non-Arboviruses
Nicolette Adamson
LAM II FINAL
curfman.melissa
Encephalon
jess_k_turner
VET EPI EXAM GENERAL
Sno