Title: Trematodes
1Schistosomes and schistosomiasis Medical
Parasitology course, 2008 University of
Georgia Silvia N.J.Moreno
2Schistosomes and schistosomiasis
- Disease schistosomiasis or Bilharzia (in honor
of Theodor Bilharz) - Infect 200 millions of the worlds population in
Africa, Asia and S. America. Population at risk
600 millions. 20 Million with severe disease - Live in blood vessels of the definitive hosts
including humans. - Pathology is not due to host response against the
worms but rather to eggs entrapped in tissues
Theodor Bilharz -(1825-1862) Postal stamp
released in Egypt, 1962 Issued on his 100th death
anniversary
Ascites due to portal hypertension, liver
fibrosis. Bilharzia. Schistosomiasis. Schistosoma
mansoni. Photo Dr Van den Enden
3Schistosome biologyimportant points
- They live in the bloodstream
- They live for a long time
- The host can become resistant to infection
- The parasites do not replicate in their
definitive host - Have separate sexes-male has pouch which holds
female
www.icp.ucl.ac.be/opperd/ parasites/schisto1.html
4Transmission
- Pollution of fresh water with excreta containing
Schistosome eggs
- Presence of the snail host
Snail from genus Biomphalaria http//www.cdfound.
to.it/HTML/sch1.htm
- Human contact with water infested with cercaria
5Geographic distribution
- Schistosoma mansoni
- Africa (52 countries) , Caribbean, Eastern
Mediterranean, South America - Schistosoma japonicum
- Asian countries and the Pacific region
- Schistosoma haematobium
- Africa (54 countries), Eastern Mediterranean
- Schistosoma intercalatum
- African Countries (10)
S. hematobium
6Schistosome life cycle
Eggs passed in feces or urine
7Schistosoma mansoni eggs These eggs are large
(length 114 to 180 µm) and have a characteristic
shape, with a prominent lateral spine near the
posterior end. The anterior end is tapered and
slightly curved. When the eggs are excreted,
they contain a mature miracidium
S. hematobium egg In this species, the eggs are
large and have a prominent terminal spine at the
posterior end. Length 112 to 170 µm.
S. japonicum egg the egg is typically oval and
has a vestigial spine. Schistosoma japonicum
eggs are smaller (68 to 100 µm by 45 to 80 µm)
than those of the other species.
8Schistosome miracidium
- Eggs hatch releasing miracidia
- 200 ?m length and 40 ?? diameter
- Swims at 2 mm/sec by beating of the cilia
- Remain infective for 8-12 h
- Infects the snail
- They accumulate around the snail or in a drop of
snail-conditioned water
Miracidium Swimming towards Snail Intermediate
Host
9Main intermediate snail hosts that transmit human
schistosomiasis
S. Mansoni S. intercalatum S. hematobium
S. japonicum S. mekongi (Biomphalaria)
(Bulinus) (Bulinus) (Oncomelania)
(Tricula)
Africa B. Pfeifferi B. Alexandrina B.
Sudanica Americas B. glabrata B.
straminea B. tenagophila
B. truncatus B. glabosus B. forskalii B.
africanus
T. aperta
O. hupensis
B. globosus B. forskalii
Bulinus globosus, the intermediate host snail for
Schistosoma haematobium (courtesy
WHO/TDR) www.icp.ucl.ac.be/opperd/
parasites/schisto1.html
Biomphalaria glabrata
10Intramolluscan stages
- The miracidium penetrates the snail
- It sheds the epithelium and remodel its surface
(2 h approx.) - A new surface layer appears around the newly
formed sporocyst - A new syncytial tegument is formed
- Primary sporocysthollow, fluid filled germinal
sac - Daughter sporocysts in less than a week (35-600)
- Cercaria by 3-4 weeks after infection (1500/day
for 18 days)
SPOROCYST
http//www.personal.leeds.ac.uk/bgy1mjt/sporocyst
.html
11Cercaria in the water
- First escape into the hemolynph and then through
the snails integument - Swim into the surrounding water to find their
definitive host - Swims by alternating side-to-side rhythmic
contractions - It is composed of a body 125 ?m long by 25 ?m in
diameter to which a 200 ?m long tail is attached
http//www.personal.leeds.ac.uk/bgy1mjt/cercaria.
html
12Cercaria characteristics
- Covered by a single continuous syncytial
tegument 0.5 ?m thick on the body and 0.2 ?m
thick on the tail - A trilaminate plasma membrane over a trilaminate
basement membrane forms the outer surface of the
tegument - Glycocalyx (highly antigenic) of 1-2 ?m thick
cover the surface of the tegument - Unicellular glands that secrete proteinases that
digest extracellular proteins
13Cercaria to schistosomula
- Tail is lost
- Shedding of the glycocalyx
- Penetration glands empty
- Formation of a new double-unit membrane on the
syncytial surface. - Some glycocalyx remains on the surface of the
schistosomula - Several new glycoproteins not found in the
cercaria - Loss of resistance to the hypoosmolar stress of
fresh water - Change from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism
14Inside the human host Schistosomula
- 3-4 days in the subdermal layers
- Bloodstream briefly passing through the right
side of the heart into the pulmonary artery - Pulmonary capillaries around the 4th day and
remain for 2-3 days - Schistosomula becomes resistant to the immune
response - The fibrous interstitial layer beneath the
tegument as well as some of the anterior
musculature, disintegrates and disappears - After passing through the lungs schistosomula
come to rest in the hepatic portal vein
http//www.cdfound.to.it/HTML/sch2.htm
15Inside the human host Schistosome adult worms
- Male/female pair copulate throughout
life-produce eggs - Females resides in canal-Important for
maturation - Some differences among species
- Worm pairs can live for more than 10 years in a
host - Pair migrate back against the blood flow to the
mesenteries around the intestine.
http//www.med.sc.edu85/parasitology/schis8.jpg
16Adult worm characteristics
- No body cavity or circulatory system. The
internal organs are embedded within a solid
cellular parenchyma - Covered by a tegument (skin)
- Ventral and oral suckers
- Reproductive tract differs in different species
Digestive system of schistosomes is very simple
They have only one bifurcated digestive tract.
Their digestion is performed by frame cells, and
they seem to have no excretory pore.
http//www2.ttcn.ne.jp/akky/parasite/digest.htm
17The tegument
- Poor in organelles syncytium with cytoplasmic
connections with underlying nucleated cell bodies - The outer surface has folds and is pitted with
numerous opening of tubular canals - Males
- Warty tubercles with many spines which help to
maintain the position of the pair against the
blood flow - Female
- Wrinkled annularly and is smooth except for
dense spination around the excretory pore. - Underlying the tegument is a basal lamina from
which mitrotubules extend into the tegumentary
matrix
Diagram of the ultrastructure of the adult
schistosome tegument (click to enlarge).
www.york.ac.uk/res/ schisto/proteomics.htm
18The egg
- Surrounded by a biopolymer composed of proteins
crosslinked to each other by quinone bridges - Contains pores to allow the influx of nutrients
and efflux of macromolecules - The shell is a highly organized conglomerate
- Surface proteins with numerous repetitive domains
The egg is eliminated with feces into the water
to release miracidia that http//www.wellcome.a
c.uk/en/labnotes5/animation_popups/schisto.html
19Pathogenesis of Schistosomiasis
- Eggs that do not leave the body are swept to the
pre-sinusoidal capillaries of the liver and are
trapped there (or in the bladder wall) - The immune system responds and walls off the eggs
with a granuloma, the egg dies - Continuous stimulation of the immune system leads
to regulation or fibrosis (less or more
morbidity) - Periportal fibrosis leads to portal hypertension
- Portal hypertension leads to collateral
circulation, eosophageal varices, blood loss
(Sm Sj) - Continuous aggravation in the bladder wall leads
to carcinoma of the bladder (Sh)
Granuloma in a mouse liver formed around a
Sepharose bead coupled with schistosome egg
secreted proteins. http//www.york.ac.uk/res/schis
to/proteomics.htm
20Clinical symptoms
- Schistosomiasis is an immunologic disease.
- Symptoms are rarely seen except in heavily
infected individuals. - Skin penetration-local dermatitis within 24 h
- Migration of the schistosomula chills, fever,
sweating, cough, diarrhea, leukocytosis - Acute phase (Katayama diseases by S. japonicum)
- fever, chills, headache, anorexia, urticaria,
and diffuse megaly, lymphadenopathy and diffuse
vasculitis lesions - 2-3 weeks after the infection and usually lasts
1-2 months (typhoid fever) - Chronic disease-most important
- Fatigue, bowel and bladder symptoms, hepatic
dysfunction - Hepatosplenomegaly because of portal obstruction
- S. hematobium urinary tract infection,
inflammation, squamous cell epithelioma,
hydronephrosis and fibrosis of ureters
21The morbidity spectrum of schistosomiasis mansoni
The 2 faces of schistosomiasis
Intestinal asymptomatic schistosomiasis at the
Egyptian village level
Egyptian boy with hepatosplenomegaly, ascites
fluid build-up and superficial collateral
circulation (NAMRU-3 clinical ward in Cairo)
22Then there is the North American
schistosome-induced pathology --- Duck
schistosomes Raccoon schisto etc.
Sign on the door leading out of a resort to Lake
Bemidji, in Minnesota (the advice cant hurt, but
may not help either
Cercarial Dermatitis
23Diagnosis of Schistosomiasis
Microscopic fecal or urine examinations Thick
smear (Kato/Katz) Concentration techniques
(sediment/filter) Polycarbonate filters (urine
S. haematobium) Antibody assays (measure
exposure) Antigen assays (measure active
infection and quantify intensity) The
standard is egg counts but.
ALSO IMPORTANT Clinical signs, symptoms and
history of living in an endemic area
24Treatment of schistosomiasis
Praziquantel Oxamniquine Type
of Isoquinilone
Tetrahydroquinilone Compound Active against
All Species S. mansoni Dosage
40-60mg/kg
15-40mg/kg Single dose
1-2 doses Cure Rate 70-100
80-100 Main Side
Diarrhea,Nausea Dizziness
Effects Abdominal pain Drowziness
Price/adult 0.25 - 3
2 - 5 dose Mode of Calcium Channel
Delayed action Action blocker ?
Alkylation ?
As with egg excretion Effective treatment also
requires host responsiveness
25Factors Contributing to Transmission of
Schistosomiasis
- Water -- Uses Abuses
- Development (Dams Irrigation), Socioeconomic
(Sanitation) - Snail hosts
- Habitat (geography weather), Dams, Marshes
- Adult worms -- Longevity Fecundity
- Human animal (Sj) reservoir hosts
- Contamination Contact Patterns Occupational
aspects - Age/Prevalence Age/Intensity Curves
- Immunity?
- New data on the topic -- if time permits
- Focal Transmission sites
- Rural -- and now Urban/peri-urban settings
- Location, Location, Location..
26The infection is age-related
- S. haematobium and S. mansoni show age related
patterns - Children are nonimmune
- They become infected when old enough to play in
open water - Adults gradually acquire immunity
27Washing Clothes or other jobs
28There is also no transmission without fecal
contamination. So, how does fecal
contamination happen???
29Control measures/ Possible Points of Attack
- Sanitation, Water Supply Community
- Health education Hygiene
- Socioeconomic development gt toilets water
systems - Snail Control
- Molluscicides Competitors/Predators Habitat
reduction/closed irrigation Environmental
modification - Chemotherapy
- Target, Coverage -- Process Outcome Indicators
- Delivery options/Integration with other control
programs - Prevalence/Intensity/Morbidity
- Vaccine (not for a long time)
- Discovery, Process development, Testing
- Re-infection studies immune correlates
30Schistosomiasis Control Initiative
http//www.schisto.org
- 1. To encourage development of a sustainable
schistosomiasis control programme in sub Saharan
Africa. - 2. In the selected countries
- To reach at least 75 of school-age children and
other high-risk groups with chemotherapy -
praziquantel and albendazole. - Reduce schistosomiasis-related morbidity in high
risk groups. - Reduce prevalence and intensity of
schistosomiasis infections. - Reduce burdens due to intestinal helminths in the
targeted populations. - 3. Create a demand for sustained schistosomiasis
control. - 4. To promote access to anthelminthic drugs and
good case management in the regular health system.