Difference between revisions of "Angiostrongylus vasorum"

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(Created page with '=== '''''ANGIOSTRONGYLUS VASORUM''''' === *Infects dogs and foxes. *A typical metastrongyloid, with the adult worms living in the pulmonary arteries and the right side of the hea…')
 
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Once restricted to Southern Ireland and Cornwall, this lungworm is spreading across the British Isles and is now endemic in the South-East. The fox may act as a reservoir of infection.
 
Once restricted to Southern Ireland and Cornwall, this lungworm is spreading across the British Isles and is now endemic in the South-East. The fox may act as a reservoir of infection.
  
 
+
=== Angiostrongylosis ===
 +
*Clinical signs of angiostrongylosis are associated with:
 +
**accumulating lung damage caused by eggs and larvae (respiratory distress)
 +
**coagulation disorders caused by adult worms (bruising, haematomas, e.g. in spinal cord)
 +
*Diagnosis: demonstration of large numbers of L1 in faeces (with Barmann technique).
  
  
 
[[Category:Metastrongyloidea]][[Category:Dog_Nematodes]]
 
[[Category:Metastrongyloidea]][[Category:Dog_Nematodes]]

Revision as of 13:03, 28 April 2010

ANGIOSTRONGYLUS VASORUM

  • Infects dogs and foxes.
  • A typical metastrongyloid, with the adult worms living in the pulmonary arteries and the right side of the heart.

Life-Cycle

Adults (approximately 2cm), produce anticoagulants to reduce thrombus formation leading to coagulation disorders:

→ eggs laid into pulmonary arteries

→ trapped in lung capillaries

→ larvae (with merastrongyloid kinky tail) hatch out

→ alveoli (causing a small injury)

→ trachea

→ swallowed

→ passed in faeces

→ slug (intermediate host)

→ eaten by dog or fox (final hosts)

→ larvae migrate via mesenteric lymph nodes

→ blood stream

→ heart.

Epidemiology

Once restricted to Southern Ireland and Cornwall, this lungworm is spreading across the British Isles and is now endemic in the South-East. The fox may act as a reservoir of infection.

Angiostrongylosis

  • Clinical signs of angiostrongylosis are associated with:
    • accumulating lung damage caused by eggs and larvae (respiratory distress)
    • coagulation disorders caused by adult worms (bruising, haematomas, e.g. in spinal cord)
  • Diagnosis: demonstration of large numbers of L1 in faeces (with Barmann technique).