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Fascioloides magna

Fascioloides magna, also known as Large American liver fluke or Giant liver fluke, is a parasiticflatwormin the class Trematoda, Phylum Platyhelminthes, which grows to a maximum length of 100 millimeters, and is thick and oval in shape. It is distinguished from other members of the genus Fasciolaby the lack of an anterior projecting cone. It occurs in domestic and wild ruminants, deerbeing the normal hosts.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • 1 Life cycle
  • 2 Diagnosis and treatment
  • 3 See also
  • 4 External link

Life cycle

The life cycle is not completed in cattle. In this host, pathogenicityis low, and losses are confined primarily to the fluke's destruction of the animal's liver. In sheep and goats, a few parasites can cause death due to extensive fluke migration in the liver parenchyma. In deer, there is little tissue reaction, and the parasites are enclosed in thin, fibrous cyststhat communicate with bile ducts. In cattle, F. magna cause severe tissue reaction, resulting in thick-walled encapsulations that do not communicate with bile ducts. In sheep, encapsulations do not develop, and the parasites migrate in the liver and other organs, causing tremendous damage. Histologically, infected livers of cattle, sheep, and deer show black, tortuous tracts formed by migrations of young flukes.

Diagnosis and treatment

While the eggs of F. magna resemble those of F. hepatica, this similarity is of limited use; eggs usually are not passed in cattle and sheep. Recovery of the parasites at necropsy, as well as proper identification of F. hepatica or F. gigantica is necessary for definite diagnosis. When domestic ruminants and deer share the same grazing areas, the presence of disease due to F. magna should be kept in mind. Mixed infections with F. hepatica occur in cattle.

Oxyclozanidehas been reported to be effective against F. magna in white-tailed deer, and rafoxanidehas been used successfully against natural infections in cattle. Albendazole(7.5 mg/kg), clorsulon(15 mg/kg), and closantel(15 mg/kg) have shown efficacy against this fluke in sheep. Currently no products are approved for use against this fluke in the USA. Deer are required for completion of the life cycle; if they can be excluded from the areas grazed by cattle and sheep, then infection can be controlled. Control of the intermediate host (lymnaeid snails) may be possible once it has been identified in a region and the nature of its habitat examined.

See also

  • Fascioliasis

External link

  • Viral, parasitic and prion diseases of farmed deer and bison (PDF format)
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/Fascioloides_magna"



This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascioloides+magna Wikipedia article Fascioloides magna.

 
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