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  2. Fasciola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciola

    Fasciola pass through five phases in their life cycle: egg, miracidium, cercaria, metacercaria, and adult fluke. [2] The eggs are passed in the feces of mammalian hosts and, if they enter freshwater, the eggs hatch into miracidia.

  3. Fasciolosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolosis

    Because of the size of the parasite, as adult F. hepatica: 20–30 × 13 mm (0.79–1.18 × 0.51 inches) or adult F. gigantica: 25–75 × 12 mm (0.98–2.95 × 0.47 inches), fasciolosis is a big concern. [4] The amount of symptoms depends on how many worms and what stage the infection is in.

  4. Fasciola gigantica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciola_gigantica

    Fasciola gigantica causes outbreaks in tropical areas of South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Africa.The geographical distribution of F. gigantica overlaps with F. hepatica in many African and Asian countries and sometimes in the same country, although in such cases, the ecological requirement of the flukes and their snail hosts are distinct.

  5. Fasciolidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolidae

    Adult trematodes of Fasciolidae range in length from 2 cm, for species of Parafasciolopsis, and 10 cm, for species such as Fasciola gigantica. The oral and ventral suckers are usually located. the cercariae are of a gymnocephalic shape. [2]

  6. Fascioloides magna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascioloides_magna

    A detailed account of the F. magna life cycle was given by Swales (1935), Erhardová-Kotrlá (1971), and reviewed by Pybus (2001). [1] [2] [4] The cercariae of F. magna shed from the snail. Adult flukes occur in pairs or groups within a fibrous capsule in the liver parenchyma of the definitive host. Mature flukes release eggs which are ...

  7. Fasciolopsiasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolopsiasis

    Microscopic identification of eggs, or more rarely of the adult flukes, in the stool or vomitus is the basis of specific diagnosis. The eggs are indistinguishable from those of the very closely related Fasciola hepatica liver fluke, but that is largely inconsequential since treatment is essentially identical for both. [citation needed]

  8. Fasciola hepatica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciola_hepatica

    Fasciola hepatica is one of the largest flukes of the world, reaching a length of 30 mm and a width of 13 mm (Fasciola gigantica, though, is even bigger and can reach up to 75 mm). [16] It is leaf-shaped, pointed at the back (posteriorly), and wide in the front (anteriorly).

  9. Fasciolopsis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolopsis

    Fasciolopsis buski is a large, dorsoventrally flattened fluke characterized by a blunt anterior end, undulating, unbranched ceca (sac-like cavities with single openings), tandem dendritic testes, branched ovaries, and ventral suckers to attach itself to the host.