 Today I'm here to talk about one of the most interesting and insidious little parasites out there.  It's the smallest nematode that invades humans and is one of the world's most clinically important and widespread parasites. Imagine, for a moment, a parasite that not only invades your body to feed off of your yummy insides, but one that also manages to force your own body into being a slave to its decadence. This is the modus operandi of Trichinella spiralis.  But before we get into that, let's check out its taxonomic specs.
Today I'm here to talk about one of the most interesting and insidious little parasites out there.  It's the smallest nematode that invades humans and is one of the world's most clinically important and widespread parasites. Imagine, for a moment, a parasite that not only invades your body to feed off of your yummy insides, but one that also manages to force your own body into being a slave to its decadence. This is the modus operandi of Trichinella spiralis.  But before we get into that, let's check out its taxonomic specs.
Taxonomy
| Larval form coiled in a spiral. | 
Life Cycle
This parasite has an interesting life cycle. It begins with an uninfected animal eating an infected animal. This can happen amongst domestic animals such as pigs or amongst wild animals living in various environments. Epidemiologist W. C. Campbell constructed four life cycles based on the involved hosts of this parasite. The first was the domestic cycle, which involved pigs and is the most important cycle that involved accidental human infection. The other three may be due to other species of Trichinella and may also involve accidental human infection, but is far less common than the first cycle. These three cycles are known as sylvatic cycles and involve different animals for different climatic regions. To keep things simple, we will only talk about the domestic cycle today.
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| Cross section of muscle tissue containing nurse cells. | 
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| Nurse cells that formed in a pig's diaphragm. | 
Within pigs, this parasite is transmitted by pigs eating infected meat scraps from other animals or from their common practice of cannibalism. (Trust me, I grew up on a pig farm...YES Wilbur will eat his babies if their mother accidentally lays on them, suffocating one while nursing three. They are stupid, dirty creatures, and they deserve to be eaten. Plus, bacon is delicious!)
Trichinosis
After becoming infected, a person may start having symptoms in as little as 12 hours or as much as 2 days. As the worms move through the body, they damage parts of the intestine and cause immune responses that result in inflammation. Such responses can manifest as nausea, vomiting, sweating, and diarrhea. 5-7 days later, some people experience fevers or facial swelling (a.k.a. "facial edema"). After 10 days, people will experience intense muscular pain, difficulty breathing, low blood pressure, and possible nervous disorders. The disease can cause severe damage to the heart, respiratory issues, or kidney malfunction that can eventually lead to death.
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| An artist's depiction of a larva in a nurse cell. | 
In pigs, the symptoms are often undetectable unless the parasite load is so much that it can cause fatality (uncommon).
Diagnosis, Prevention, and Treatment
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| For a muscle biopsy, you have to make an incision in the skin to reveal the underlying muscle, then a hollow needle is used to extract a small amount of muscle tissue for laboratory analysis. | 
Pigs are diagnosed following ELISA testing.
To prevent the transmission of this disease, the US has a national surveillance system that tracks reported cases and inspects sources of possible contamination. The pork industry has also made changes in order to reduce pig exposure to this disease and to recognize warning signs of infection in order to treat pigs before being slaughtered for their meat. Laws have also reduced risk of human infection by regulating pork processing procedures, such as providing guidelines for specific cooking and freezing temperatures and times as well as for curing procedures.
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| I like this picture of the medicine because it looks like a worm was drawn on one side of this pill! :p | 
To treat trichinosis, humans and pigs are both prescribed antihelminthic drugs such as mebendazole or albendazole. In humans, this is not always affective. Humans also receive corticosteroids and painkillers to cope with the pain of the infection as it is being treated.
Moral of the Story
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| Mmmm...Teriyaki pork loin! Is it cooked all the way through?... | 
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| Because I can't NOT post a picture of a parasite colored in rainbow... | 

 
Goodness, this scares me and I don't even eat pork.
ReplyDeleteI think my family has this but no doctors can figure it out !? We are at our wits end and need some sort of treatment soon or I am scared we will die :( What kind of doctor is the best to diagnose this parasite ?
ReplyDeleteI know this is old but there are support groups on Facebook. Theyre good, they help with meds u can take, learning how to advocate for yourself and be your own doctor. Trying equine dewormer from feed stores... u must do your research and always go to the hosp if it's serious bc not every symptom is parasites but they do cause a wide host of problems. There are so many ways to get parasites, our skin is a zoo and we are mammals with warm blood. Blood is the key. What they want, lottle vampire parasites. U must, MUST, AND MUST do your research and always use common sense but most doctors will say you're delusional bc theyre not familiar with this stuff and not aware that we can catch this stuff that theyre taught we can't catch but we def CAN. INFECTIOUS DISEASE doctor would be best or start with dermatologist to get referred bc they usually don't know or don't go that far from what I've heard anyway so I did what I'm telling u and became my own doc! Much luck xoxo
DeleteThank you to the person above. I will look on Facebook.
ReplyDelete