Onchocerciasis is a transmissible biohelminthosis. Adult individuals live in the subcutaneous tissue of a person freely or inside the capsule (node). Microfilariae accumulate in the skin, in the lymph nodes.
Loalosis is a transmissible biohelminthosis. Sexually mature individuals parasitize in the skin, subcutaneous tissue, under the conjunctiva of the eye and under the serous membranes of various human organs. Larvae (microfilariae) circulate in the blood.
Vukhereriosis - transmissible filariasis, biogelmintosis, anthroponosis. Adult individuals live in lymphatic vessels, and larvae (microfilariae) in the blood.
Ankylostomidosis - geogelmintosis. Adult helminths parasitize the human duodenum and jejunum. Ankylostomiasis combines two helminthiasis: ankylostomiasis caused by the duodenal curve of the duodenum - Ancylostoma duodenale, and noncatarosis caused by the nekator - Necator amencanus.
Nematodoses are diseases caused by parasitic roundworms of nematodes. They are common on all continents. About 3 billion people are invaded by nematodes in the world.
Cestodias are called helminthiases, the causative agents of which belong to the class Cestoidea. Of medical importance are mainly representatives of two orders: lentets - Pseudophyllidea and Chain - Cyclophyllidea, belonging to the subclass of these tapeworms (Eucestoda).
Paragonimosis is a biogelmintosis, manifested mainly by the defeat of the respiratory system. Paragonimosis is characterized by a prolonged recurrent course.
Clonorchiasis is a biogelmintosis, which at an early stage manifests itself as allergic symptoms, and in the chronic stage proceeds with a predominant lesion of the liver and pancreas.
Schistosomatid dermatitis (cercariosis, itch bathers, water itch, cervical dermatitis) is a parasitic disease characterized by skin changes caused by larvae (cercariae) of some species of trematodes.