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51 Fascioliasis

The liver fluke Fasciola hepatica is usually a para­site of sheep and cattle. “Liver rot” in sheep was described in a French work in 1379, and the first human case was described in 1760.

The fluke’s life cycle was discovered in 1881. Fascioliasis is a signifi­cant veterinary problem, but human infection is also fairly common. The fluke’s life cycle is much like that of Fasciolopsis buski (see Fasciolopsiasis), with people or herbivores infected by eating raw water­cress or other plants contaminated by the cysts of the fluke. Adult worms settle down in the bile ducts after a period of wandering in the liver. Mild infesta­tions may cause little damage, but fever, jaundice, and right upper quadrant abdominal pain radiating to the shoulder blade are common symptoms. Bile ducts may become partially or totally obstructed, and liver destruction can be severe.

F. hepatica is cosmopolitan in distribution, with important foci of human infection in southern France, in Algeria, and in South America. Diagnosis is made by examining the feces of symptomatic pa­tients with a microscope to find the eggs. Treatment is generally effective. Prevention is by treating sheep to keep them from perpetuating the cycle, controlling snail intermediate hosts, and keeping domestic animals away from ponds where water­cress is grown.

K. David Patterson

Bibliography

Deschiens, R., Y. LeCorroller, and R. Mandoul. 1961. Enquete sur les foyers de distomatose hdpdatique de la Vallde de Lot. Annales de VInstitut Pasteur 10: 5­

12.

Foster, W. D. 1965. A short history of parasitology. Edin­burgh.

Kean, B. H., Kenneth E. Mott, and Adair J. Russell, eds. 1978. Tropical medicine and parasitology: Classic in­vestigations, Vol. II, 561-83. Ithaca and London. [Nine important accounts, including two from the six­teenth century.]

Reinhard, Edward G. 1957. The discovery of the life cycle of the liver fluke. Experimental Parasitology 6: 208­32.

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Source: Kiple Kenneth F. (Editor). The Cambridge World History of Human Disease. Cambridge University Press,1993. — 1200 p.. 1993

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