Tremaaa
Tremaaa
Aspect Details
Reproductive System Hermaphroditic (in most species); some have separate sexes
Category Details
Habitat in Host Lung parenchyma (also ectopic: brain, skin, abdomen, etc.)
Pathogenesis Fibrotic cysts with adult worms and eggs in lungs; ectopic
migration possible
Associated Cultural Practices Consumption of raw crabs in dishes like kinagang, kinilaw,
sinugba
Common Name Giant intestinal fluke Sheep liver fluke Tropical liver fluke
Habitat in Humans Small intestine Bile ducts of liver Bile ducts of liver
Definitive Hosts Humans, pigs Sheep, cattle, humans Cattle, sheep, humans
Intermediate Host Planorbid freshwater snail Lymnaeid snail (e.g., Lymnaea Lymnaeid snail (e.g., Lymnaea
truncatula) auricularia)
Egg Morphology Large, oval, operculated; Large, oval, operculated Similar to F. hepatica
indistinct from Fasciola spp. (similar to F. buski)
Adult Morphology 2–7.5 cm long, no cephalic 2–3 cm long, with cephalic Larger than F. hepatica (up to
cone cone 7.5 cm), broader
Pathology Inflammation, ulceration, Biliary obstruction, hepatitis, More severe hepatic damage
intestinal obstruction liver cirrhosis due to larger size
Geographic Distribution Southeast Asia Worldwide (esp. temperate Africa, Asia (tropical areas)
zones)
Adult Morphology Elongated, flat, ~10–25 mm Similar to C. sinensis but Similar to O. felineus but
long; oral sucker small, ventral slightly shorter; testes lobed generally smaller (7–12 mm);
sucker slightly larger; two (not branched); shape more testes lobed and tandem
highly branched testes in slender
posterior end
Egg Morphology 27–35 µm × 11–20 µm; Very similar to C. sinensis; Eggs similar to other two;
operculated; prominent slightly smaller and narrower minor size variation makes
shoulder; small knob at species differentiation by egg
posterior end morphology difficult
Geographic Distribution East Asia (China, Korea, Eastern Europe, Russia, Southeast Asia (Thailand,
Vietnam) Siberia Laos, Cambodia)
Intermediate Hosts 1st: Bithynia snails; 2nd: 1st: Bithynia tentaculata; 2nd: 1st: Bithynia siamensis
freshwater fish (cyprinids) freshwater fish goniomphalos; 2nd: freshwater
fish
Definitive Hosts Humans, dogs, cats Humans, carnivorous Humans, dogs, cats
mammals (dogs, cats, foxes)
Pathology Chronic infections: cholangitis, Similar to C. sinensis; may Closely associated with
bile duct obstruction, induce liver damage and cholangiocarcinoma,
cholangiocarcinoma inflammation especially in endemic areas
Diagnosis Fecal examination for eggs; Egg detection; species Same as O. felineus;
serology/PCR for confirmation differentiation difficult on molecular methods for specific
morphology alone ID
Common Name Oriental blood fluke Manson's blood fluke Vesical blood fluke
Geographic Distribution Philippines, China, Indonesia Africa, South America, Africa, Middle East
Caribbean, Middle East
Intermediate Host Oncomelania hupensis Biomphalaria spp. (snail) Bulinus spp. (snail)
quadrasi (snail)
Egg Morphology Ovoid, small lateral spine or Oval, lateral spine Oval, terminal spine
hook; 46–110 × 37–90 µm
Pathogenesis Granuloma formation around Granulomas in liver and Granulomas in bladder wall →
eggs → hepatosplenic intestines → hepatosplenic hematuria, bladder fibrosis,
disease, CNS lesions, schistosomiasis squamous cell carcinoma
pulmonary hypertension
Acute Phase Katayama fever (fever, Similar acute syndrome Similar acute syndrome
malaise, eosinophilia)
Diagnosis (Direct) Kato-Katz (stool), MIFC, rectal Kato-Katz (stool) Filtration of urine, microscopy
biopsy
Unique Features Smallest eggs; zoonotic; can Largest lateral spine among Only species excreted in urine;
cause cerebral and pulmonary schistosome eggs associated with bladder cancer
lesions
Definitive Hosts Humans, dogs, cats, birds Humans, dogs, cats, birds
1st Intermediate Host Snail (species varies: freshwater, Melania juncea (brackish water snail in
brackish, or marine) PH)
2nd Intermediate Host Fresh/brackish/marine fish (under scales, Same; over 30 fish species reported in PH
muscle, etc.)
Morphology Scale-like spines; gonotyl near left ventral Same; sometimes less prominent gonotyl
sucker border
Life Cycle Notes Cercariae from snails encyst in fish Same; often base of fins
muscles, fins, scales
Diagnosis Stool exam (Kato thick > formalin-ether), Same; distinguish from
PCR in low burden Clonorchis/Opisthorchis
Epidemiology Egypt, Israel, India, China, Korea, Japan, Philippines (Compostela Valley), emerging
Philippines in 8 Mindanao provinces
Prevention & Control Avoid raw/undercooked fish, lab Same; surveillance in raw fish–eating
surveillance, education regions (e.g., kinilaw areas)
Definitive Hosts Humans, pigs, dogs, cats, rats Humans, pigs, dogs, cats, rats
1st Intermediate Host Gyraulus convexiusculus, Hippeutis Not identified in PH (likely same as E.
umbilicalis ilocanum)
2nd Intermediate Host Pila luzonica, Vivipara angularis Lymnaea cumingiana, Ampullarius
canaliculatus
Adult Size 2.5–6.6 mm (L) × 1–1.35 mm (W) 5–12 mm (L) × 2–3 mm (W)
Testes Deeply bilobed, tandem in third quarter 2 large testes, each with 6–9 lobes,
arranged in tandem
Epidemiology (PH) Northern Luzon, Leyte, Samar, Mindanao Northern & Central Luzon, Siargao Island