Top Banner
Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda
14

Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda. B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons. Up to 82% of adult.

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Arleen Baker
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Presented by:Asmerom Lebasi

& Tamrat Oda

Page 2: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.

Up to 82% of adult raccoons and 90% of young raccoons are infected

First infection reported in 1984 in a10 month-old-child in Pennsylvania

Only 11 cases have been reported so far 4 have been fatal

Page 3: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Nematoda Class: Nematoda Order: Ascaridida Family: Ascarididae Genus: Baylisascaris Species: procyonis

Page 4: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Found through out North America In the Midwest, over half of the raccoons studied

were infected.

Northeast regions of the United States California and Georgia. 

Proven human cases have been reported in California, Oregon, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, and Minnesota and Missouri.

Page 5: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Definitive Host: Raccoon

Dogs also serve as DH asthey harbor infections and shed eggs

Intermediate Host: small mammals: mouse, squirrel, bird

Accidental hosts: Human

Page 6: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

They are tan-white in color, cylindrical and taper at both ends.

Female can be up to 24 inches long

Male can be up to 12 inches long

Page 7: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.
Page 8: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.
Page 9: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Unembryonated eggs are shed in the environment.

They take 2-4 weeks to embryonate and become infective.

Raccoons can be infected by ingesting embryonated eggs from the environment.

Additionally, over 100 species of birds and mammals (especially rodents) can act as paratenic hosts for this parasite: eggs ingested by these hosts hatch and larvae penetrate the gut wall and migrate into various tissues where they encyst.

The life cycle is completed when raccoons eat these hosts. 

The larvae develop into egg-laying adult worms in the small intestine and eggs are eliminated in raccoon feces. 

Humans become accidentally infected when they ingest infective eggs from the environment; typically this occurs in young children playing in the dirt.

Migration of the larvae through a wide variety of tissues (liver, heart, lungs, brain, eyes) results in VLM and OLM syndromes, similar to toxocariasis. 

Baylisascaris larvae continue to grow during their time in the human host. 

Page 10: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Raccoons have NO symptoms!

appear 1-3 weeks after infection, although they can take as long as 2 months

Nausea, blindness,coma Skin irritations Lethargy Loss of muscle control Liver enlargement

Page 11: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Microscopy Fecal floats to identify eggs in the feces CAT scanEosinophiles : high level of WBC count Serologic testing exam

Page 12: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Laser treatment of the eye is a possibility if the eye becomes infected with larvae

Damage done is irreversible so there is no exact treatment for human

Raccoons can be successfully treated with several anthelmintics to kill the adult worms.

Effective drugs are piperazine, fenbendazole, pyrantel pamoate, levamisole

Page 13: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

Avoid contact with raccoons don’t feed them don’t keep them as pets Wash your hands frequently when your

around raccoons - especially important for children because they frequently put their fingers in their mouths

Page 14: Presented by: Asmerom Lebasi & Tamrat Oda.  B. procyonis is a large roundworm infection that lives in the intestines of raccoons.  Up to 82% of adult.

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol8no4/01-0273.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baylisascaris

http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153-10370_12150_12220-27261--,00.html

http://www.peteducation.com/article.cfm?c=2+2107+2255&aid=721

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxL2qHBetvI&feature=related