Schistosoma - S.haematobium_20
Schistosoma haematobium aka Bilharzia (Urinary schistosomiasi)
Date: 1/16/2010 4:06:11 PM ( 14 y ) ... viewed 2735 times dwell 300
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# Title: Schistosoma haematobium aka Bilharzia (Urinary schistosomiasi)
# Description: Bilharzia is often chronic and can cause pain, secondary infections, kidney damage, and even cancer
# Pulmonary symptoms are possible but rare
# Life Cycle: Adult->egg->miracidium->cercaria->Adult http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schistosoma_mansoni#Life_cycle
# ***From a single miracidium result a few thousand cercaria
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label Adult # Dowsing
54471.3257
label 1
label cercariae
48886.8778
label 2
label miracidia
67998.8778
label 3
label eggs
10000.3332
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# Clinical Presentation in Humans
# Early: Hives or an itchy papular skin rash (“swimmer’s itch”) and local swelling often starts about 24 hrs after the initial infection and lasts for about 4 days. At one to two months, the infected individual may present with fever, hepatitis, enlarged liver, spleen, and lymph nodes, and eosinophilia. Pulmonary symptoms are possible but rare. This illness lasts for one to three weeks. Not everyone manifests these early-stage signs and symptoms.
# Later, gradual onset: After months or years, the infected individual may experience painful or difficult urination (dysuria), blood in urine (hematuria), urethral obstruction, kidney damage from obstruction of urine (obstructive nephropathy), no urination (dysuria), and/or elephantiasis of penis. 50-70% of people with long term infection have some kind of symptomatic urinary tract finding upon examination.
# Earlier complications (moths-years): Chronic bacterial urinary tract infections are a frequent complication of the urinary tract dysfunction caused by the parasite. The bladder may also develop tubercles, polyps, ulcers, sandy patches, cystitis cystica, and/or leukoplakia that are visible upon endoscopic examination.
# Late complication (years): Bladder cancer (squamous cell carcinoma) is associated with long-term urinary schistosomiasis, but it incidence is not known.
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