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[Brugia
malayi] [Brugia timori] [Dirofilaria spp.] [Loa loa] [Mansonella ozzardi]
[Mansonella perstans]
[Mansonella streptocerca]
[Onchocerca volvulus] [Wuchereria bancrofti] |
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During a blood
meal, an infected mosquito (Aedes, Culex, Anopheles,
Mansonia) introduces third-stage filarial larvae of Dirofilaria
immitis into the skin of the definitive host, which is usually a
domestic dog or coyote in the United States (although a wide
variety of other animals can also be infected, including felids, mustelids, pinnipeds, beaver, horses, and humans), where they penetrate into the bite
wound
.
In the definitive host, the L3 larvae undergo two more molts into L4 and
adults. Adults reside in pulmonary arteries, and are occasionally
found in the right ventricle of the heart
.
Adult females are usually 230-310 mm long by 350 µm wide; males are usually
120-190 mm long by 300 µm wide. Adults can live for 5 - 10 years. In
the heart, the female worms are capable of producing microfilariae over
their lifespan. The microfilariae are found in peripheral blood
.
A mosquito ingests the microfilariae during a blood meal
.
After ingestion, the microfilariae migrate from the mosquito’s midgut
through the hemocoel to the Malpighian tubules in the abdomen
.
There the microfilariae develop into first-stage larvae
and subsequently into third-stage infective larvae
.
The third-stage infective larvae migrate to the mosquito's proboscis
and can infect another definitive host when it takes a blood meal
.
In humans
,
D. immitis larvae tend to follow the same migratory pathway as in the
canine host, ending up in the lungs, where they often lodge in small-caliber
vessels, causing infarcts and typical “coin lesions” visible on radiographs.
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