Helminth
Ascaris
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Ascaris
, Ascariasis
See Also
Helminth
Parasitic Infection
Pathophysiology
Nematode: Roundworm
Infected patient with Ascariasis secretes eggs in stool
Stool
contaminates soil with Ascariasis eggs (and eggs may persist for up to 10 years in soil)
Ascariasis eggs hatch into worms within 2-4 weeks at which point they are infective
Ascariasis eggs are ingested by exposed persons
Especially communities with open
Defecation
in fields or where animal feces are used to fertilize crops
Ascariasis eggs that hatch after ingestion (typically by day 4) pass through the cecal mucosa
Ascariasis worms enter lungs via circulatory system or
Lymphatic System
Ascariasis matures in lungs for 10-14 days
Once mature, Ascariasis induces cough, and patient swallows coughed secretions, re-entering intestinal tract
Ascariasis worms mature further in intestinal tract
After 9-11 weeks from time of initial ingestion, Ascariasis starts to lay eggs
Infected patients shed up to 200,000 Ascariasis eggs per day
Worms
live for 10 months to 2 years and do not reproduce within host patient
Epidemiology
Prevalence
Asia (75%)
Africa (10%)
Latin America (10%)
Transmission
Human feces contaminated fruits and vegetables
Fomites
Flies
can deposit eggs on food
Symptoms
Often asymptomatic
Intense lower
Abdominal Pain
for days
Signs
Distinctive Ascariasis eggs in stool
Roundworm passed in stool
Length: 15-30 cm (6 to 12 inches)
Color: creamy white
Labs
Stool
Ova and Parasite
s
Stool
microscopy
Worm if available
Complications
Bowel Obstruction
Urticaria
Asthma
Management
May start empiric treatment with anti-
Helminth
agent if classic roundworm identified
However, still send stool samples as above
Concurrent infection with other
Helminth
(e.g.
Strongyloides
) requires additional management
Anti-
Helminth
agents
Albendazole
400 mg orally for one dose (pregnancy category C)
Mebendazole
(not available in U.S. as of 2012) 500 mg daily for one dose (or up to three days)
Pyrantel Pamoate
Indicated in pregnancy
Patient Education
Medication will result in passing very large numbers of worms in stool
Close contacts are not empirically treated in most cases (unless unreliable for follow-up)
Test suspected cases
References
Mason, Grock and Tenner in Herbert (2017) EM:Rap 17(11): 6
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