Fasciolosis history and symptoms

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

History and symptoms

File:F. hepatica hypertrophia of bile duct.jpg
Hypertrophia of bile ducts in liver caused by F. hepatica (liver section; goat)
File:F. hepatica adults in bile duct.jpg
Adult flukes Fasciola hepatica in bile ducts (liver of goat)

The course of fasciolosis in humans has 4 main phases:[1]

  • Incubation phase: from the ingestion of metacercariae to the appearance of the first symptoms; time period: few days to 3 months; depends on number of ingested metacercariae and immune status of host
  • Invasive or acute phase: fluke migration up to the bile ducts. This phase is a result of mechanical destruction of the hepatic tissue and the peritoneum by migrating juvenile flukes causing localized and or generalized toxic and allergic reactions.[2] The major symptoms of this phase are:
  • Latent phase: This phase can last for months or years. The proportion of asymptomatic subjects in this phase is unknown. They are often discovered during family screening after a patient is diagnosed.[1]
  • Chronic or obstructive phase:

This phase may develop months or years after initial infection. Adult flukes in the bile ducts cause inflammation and hyperplasia of the epithelium. The resulting cholangitis and cholecystitis, combined with the large body of the flukes, are sufficient to cause mechanical obstruction of the biliary duct. In this phase, biliary colic, epigastric pain, fatty food intolerance, nausea, jaundice, pruritus, right upper-quadrant abdominal tenderness, etc., are clinical manifestations indistinguishable from cholangitis, cholecystitis and cholelithiasis of other origins. Hepatic enlargement may be associated with an enlarged spleen or ascites. In case of obstruction, the gall bladder is usually enlarged and edematous with thickening of the wall. Fibrous adhesions of the gall bladder to adjacent organs are common. Lithiasis of the bile duct or gall bladder is frequent and the stones are usually small and multiple.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2
  2. Facey, R.V., Marsden, P.D., 1960. Fascioliasis in man: an outbreak in Hampshire. Brit. Med. J. ii, 619–625.