Picture from Encarta
Helminth Worm Helminth Worm
Life Cycle of Human Blood Flukes Life Cycle of Human Blood Flukes
South African Tsetse Fly South African Tsetse Fly

Life Cycle of Human Blood Flukes

Life Cycle of Human Blood Flukes
Flukes of the genus Schistosoma parasitize two hosts. The young hatch from their eggs in rivers and lakes and enter a specific kind of aquatic snail, where they develop into tadpole-like larvae called cercariae. When the cercariae leave the snail, they burrow through the skin of a human host swimming or wading in infested water. Adult flukes mature in the host’s bloodstream and settle in the veins of the gut. Their eggs, deposited in the lining of the human intestine and bladder, pass back into water via the sewage system, and the cycle begins again. More than 200 million people worldwide suffer from schistosomiasis, a disease characterized by the abscesses and bleeding caused by the flukes’ infestation.
© Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Appears in these articles:
Invertebrate; Parasite; Animal; Human Disease
* Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Join Now
Advertisement

Englishtown: Learn English online
Upgrade your Encarta experience
Encarta RSS Feeds
© 2008 Microsoft