Schistosoma
Schistosoma Species
- The schistosomes are also known as "blood-flukes"
- There are several important species producing serious human and animal disease in the tropics
- The pathology is mostly associated with the passage of eggs through the liver, urinary bladder or intestinal wall (depending on the predilection site of the fluke)
- As their common name suggests, the adults live in blood vessels
- Unusually for a trematode, the sexes are separate
- The smaller female lies enveloped by the male
- The eggs of most species have spikes to assist their passage through host tissue to get into faeces or urine (depending on predilection site)
- The intermediate hosts are water snails
- On release, the cercariae swim in water and actively seek their final host, which they enter by skin penetration
- There is therefore no metacercaria stage
Test yourself with the Trematodes Flashcards
Literature Search
Use these links to find recent scientific publications via CAB Abstracts (log in required unless accessing from a subscribing organisation).
Schistosomes causing cercarial dermatitis: a mini-review of current trends in systematics and of host specificity and pathogenicity. Kolářová, L.; Moravec, F.; Scholz, T.; Bukva, V.; Institute of Parasitology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, České Budějovice, Czech Republic, Folia Parasitologica, 2007, 54, 2, pp 81-87, many ref. - Full Text Article