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English: Enterobiasis Enterobius vermicularis Life cycle of Enterobius vermicularis Eggs are deposited on perianal folds. Self-infection occurs by transferring infective eggs to the mouth with hands that have scratched the perianal area. Person-to-person transmission can also occur through handling of contaminated clothes or bed linens.
Enterobius yagoi Sutton, 1979 [3] The pinworm ( species Enterobius vermicularis ), also known as threadworm (in the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand) or seatworm , is a parasitic worm . It is a nematode (roundworm) and a common intestinal parasite or helminth , especially in humans. [ 7 ]
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The template takes a single optional parameter—a description of what the image should illustrate. Adds page to Category:Wikipedia requested ecological diagrams . If you are requesting a technical illustration (e.g. a graph), please provide as much reference data as possible.
This template is a software fork of {{Annotated image}} that was made for annotating generic images, like the thumbnail below, and page-spanning diagrams (e.g., many of the these image insertion templates) with a more normal appearance, a heading, and more alignment options than Template:Annotated image.
Welcome to the Route Diagram Template Sandbox!This page allows you to carry out experiments with the Route diagram templates. To edit, click or edit this page above (or the views section for obscure browsers), make your changes and click the Save page button when finished.
Now for the next step, create a smaller circle and then right click its outline (on Mac, use apple click). Now select fill and stroke. Under the fill tab, select the solid rectangle, which should now make the circle filled in with solid black. You can change the colour with the colour sliders.
Life cycle of Trichuris trichiura inside and outside the human body. The female T. trichiura produces 2,000–10,000 single-celled eggs per day. [3] Eggs are deposited from human feces to soil where, after two to three weeks, they become embryonated and enter the "infective" stage.