Trematode infection. Fasciola hepatica eggs. Wet mounts with iodine. The eggs are ellipsoidal. They have a small, barely distinct operculum (upper end of the eggs in panel A). The operculum can be opened (egg in panel B), for example, when slight pressure is applied to the coverslip. The eggs have a thin shell that is slightly thicker at the abopercular end. They are passed unembryonated. Size range is 120-150 μm X 63-90 μm. Image courtesy of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Trematode infection. Clonorchis sinensis egg. These are small operculated eggs. Size is 27-35 μm X 11-20 μm. The operculum, at the smaller end of the egg, is convex and rests on a visible "shoulder." At the opposite (larger, abopercular) end, a small knob or hooklike protrusion is often visible (as here). The miracidium is visible inside the egg. Image courtesy of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.