The Igh Podcast

Episode 8: Echinococcus granulosus and the HyData Project

Informações:

Synopsis

Parasites come in all shapes and sizes. Some of them can live in their host without causing symptoms whilst others cause debilitating and sometimes fatal disease. A few episodes ago, we talked about lungworm in cattle. While lungworm can affect other species as well, like deer and buffalo, they tend to be closely related to cattle. However, other parasites make a habit of infecting different species as part of their lifecycle. Rather than having a free-living life cycle, which leaves them at the mercy of the elements, they take up residence in an intermediate host. Here they are relatively safe and can busy themselves preparing to infect their definitive host where another round of reproduction will take place.   A good example of these types of parasites are Echinococcus, a genus of Cestodes which are more commonly known as tapeworms. This type of tapeworm tends to use livestock as an intermediate host and predatory species, such as canids, as their definitive host. They have an important role in human he