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| [Spirometra
mansoni] [Spirometra ranarum] [Spirometra mansonoides] [Spirometra
erinacei] ['Sparganum proliferum'] |
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Life cycle of Spirometra spp.
Adult members of the genus Spirometra live in the
intestines of dogs and cats
.
Eggs are shed in feces
and embryonate in the environment
.
Eggs hatch in water and release coracidia
,
which are ingested by copepods. The coracidia develop into
procercoid larvae in the copepod intermediate host
.
Second intermediate hosts, including fish, reptiles and amphibians,
ingest infected copepods and acquire procercoid larvae. The
procercoid larvae develop into plerocercoid larvae in the second
intermediate host
.
The cycle is completed when a predator (dog or cat) eats an infected
second intermediate host
. Humans cannot serve as definitive hosts for Spirometra spp., but
serve as paratenic or second intermediate hosts
and develop sparganosis. Humans acquire sparganosis by either
drinking water contaminated with infected copepods or consuming the
flesh of an under-cooked second intermediate or paratenic host.
Spargana can live up to 20 years in the human host.
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