| The adult liver fluke, ''Fasciola hepatica'', lives in the bile ducts of a wide range of animals, including sheep, cattle, rabits and, less often, horses. It can infect humans causing a painful abdominal disease. The intermediate host in the UK is a mud snail, ''Lymnaea truncatula''. Significant economic losses occur in western parts of the British Isles. Deaths, clinical and subclinical disease in cattle is confined to a younger stock. Fasciolosis is a seasonal disease with more serious outbreaks occurring in some years than in others. A similar but slightly larger species, ''F. gigantica'', occurs in wetter tropical regions. | | The adult liver fluke, ''Fasciola hepatica'', lives in the bile ducts of a wide range of animals, including sheep, cattle, rabits and, less often, horses. It can infect humans causing a painful abdominal disease. The intermediate host in the UK is a mud snail, ''Lymnaea truncatula''. Significant economic losses occur in western parts of the British Isles. Deaths, clinical and subclinical disease in cattle is confined to a younger stock. Fasciolosis is a seasonal disease with more serious outbreaks occurring in some years than in others. A similar but slightly larger species, ''F. gigantica'', occurs in wetter tropical regions. |
| + | '''Acute fasciolosis''': sudden death; normally September-November; enlarged pale, friable, haemorrhagic liver with more than 1000 immature flukes in liver parenchyma. (In cattle, acute disease is rarely seen). |
| + | '''Chronic fasciolosis''': progressive weight-loss over weeks or months; January-March; anaemia normochronic, leads to hypochromic; hypoalbuminaemia, which leads to oedema; small distorted cirrhotic liver; enlarged bile ducts; more than 250 adult flukes. (In cattle, calcification of bile ducts leads to 'pipe-stem' liver). |