Alveolar echinococcosis (alveococcosis multicentric echinococcosis, Latin alveococcosis, English alveococcus disease) is a zoonotic chronic leukemia that is characterized by the development in the liver of cystic structures capable of infiltrative growth and metastasis to other organs.
Antiparasitic treatment of hydatidid echinococcosis is carried out with albendazole inside after meals at 10 mg / kg (not more than 800 mg per day) in two doses, a course of 28 days, intervals between courses of at least 2 weeks. Duration of treatment of clinically expressed forms of invasion (presence of cysts) 12-18 months. Treatment of hydatidid echinococcosis is carried out at normal laboratory parameters (clinical and biochemical blood tests), during the treatment every 5-7 days a blood test is performed
Assuming echinococcosis allows clinical manifestations (tumor-like, slowly growing formation in the liver, lungs or other organs) and epidemiological data.
Typical symptoms of liver hydatidosis echinococcosis in uncomplicated cases - decreased efficiency, general weakness, dyspeptic disorders, headaches, sometimes allergic manifestations: skin rashes, itching, eosinophilia in the blood.
The causative agent of hydatidid echinococcosis Echinococcus granulosus is referred to as Plathelminthes. Class Cestoda. The Taeniidae family. Sexually mature E. Granulosus is a belt helminth of white color 3-5 mm in length. It consists of a head with four suckers and a double crown of hooks, from the cervix and 2-6 segments. The last segment is filled with a uterus containing eggs (oncospheres), which possess invasive ability and do not need ripening in the environment.
Echinococcosis is a chronic course of biogelmintosis caused by the parasitization of larvae of cestodes of the genus Echinococcus in humans. Echinococcosis hydatidosis (single-chamber echinococcosis, echinococcosis cystic, Latin echinococcosis, English echinococcus disease) - chronic zoonotic biohelminthosis with fecal-oral mechanism of transmission of the pathogen, characterized by the formation of parasitic cysts in the liver, less often in the lungs and other organs.
Cysticercosis (Latin cysticercosis) is a chronic biogelmintosis caused by the larval stage of the pork chain-cysticerca (Finns). The causative agent of cysticercosis, Cysticercus cellulosae (Taenia solium larval stage) is a 5-15 mm diameter vesicle containing an inverted scolex.
Teniosis (Latin name - taeniosis, English - taeniasis) is a biogelmintosis caused by parasitizing the pig's tartar in the intestine of a man and manifested by a violation of the functions of the gastrointestinal tract.
Teniarinhoz (lat. Taeniarhynchosis) - helminthiasis from the group of cestodoses, caused by Taeniarhynchus saginatus (bovine chain) or Taeniarhynchus confusum and characterized by the development of dyspeptic manifestations. A person becomes infected by eating beef containing the larvae of the pathogen and not having undergone sufficient heat treatment.
Diphyllobothriosis (Latin diphyllobothriosis: English diphyllobothriasis, fish tapeworm infection) - intestinal helminthiasis caused by tapeworms. Characterized by a chronic course with a predominant violation of the activity of the gastrointestinal tract and the development of megaloblastic anemia.