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Causal
Agent:
Cercarial
dermatitis is caused by the cercariae of certain species of schistosomes
whose normal hosts are birds and mammals other than humans. These cercariae
seem to have a chemotrophic reaction to secretions from the skin and are
not as host-specific as other types of schistosomes. They attempt to,
and, sometimes may actually, enter human skin. The penetration causes
a dermatitis which is usually accompanied with intense itching, but the
cercariae do not mature into adults in the human body. Cases of cercarial dermatitis
can occur in both fresh and brackish water environments. One species of
schistosome often implicated in cases of cercarial dermatitis is Austrobilharzia
variglandis, whose normal hosts are ducks. The snail, Nassarius
obsoletus, is the intermediate host for this species and can be found at marine beaches
in temperate climates. Cercarial dermatitis should not be confused with
seabather's eruption, which is caused by the larval stage of cnidarians
(e.g., jellyfish). The areas of skin affected by seabather's
eruption is generally under the garments worn by bathers and swimmers where the organisms are
trapped after the person leaves the water. Cercarial dermatitis occurs
on the exposed skin outside of close-fitting garments.
Life Cycle:

Hosts of
avian schistosomes can be either year-round resident or migratory birds,
including seagulls, shorebirds, ducks, and geese. Adult worms are found
in the blood vessels and produce eggs that are passed in the feces
.
On exposure to water, the eggs hatch and liberate a ciliated miracidium
that infects a suitable snail (gastropod) intermediate host
.
The parasite develops in the intermediate host
to produce free-swimming cercariae that are released under appropriate
conditions and penetrate the skin of the birds and migrate to the blood
vessels to complete the cycle
.
Humans are inadvertent and inappropriate hosts; cercariae may penetrate
the skin but do not develop further
.
A number of species of trematodes with dermatitis-producing cercariae have
been described from both freshwater and saltwater environments, and
exposure to either type of cercaria will sensitize persons to both.
Geographic
Distribution:
Cercarial
dermatitis occurs worldwide with cases reported from every continent except
Antarctica. In the United States, cases are commonly reported from the Great Lakes
region.
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