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DRACUNCULUS


'''Dracunculus''' is a genus of spiruroid nematode parasites in the family Dracunculidae. Humans are the host of some species.

Contents
Species
''D. medinensis'' and ''D. insignis''
Other species
Life Cycle
Notes
References

Species


''D. medinensis'' and ''D. insignis''

The life cycle of ''Dracunculus medinensis''.

The best known species is ''D. medinensis'', known commonly as the Guinea worm. This parasite is frequently found in the subcutaneous tissues and muscles of humans, dogs, and sometimes cattle and horses. The medical name for this condition is dracunculiasis. The disease causes cutaneous nodules and subsequent ulcers. The caudal end of the adult female worm protrudes from the host animal's body, most commonly on a lower limb, through an ulcer, allowing it to release its offspring into water, where they can find new hosts.
''D. insignis'' infects dogs and wild carnivores, causing cutaneous lesions, ulcers, and sometimes heart and vertebral column lesions. Like ''D. medinensis'', it is also known as Guinea worm, as well as ''Dragon'' or ''Fiery Dragon''.
DNA fingerprinting can differentiate between ''D. medinensis'' and ''D. insignis'', which is important to efforts to eradicate dracunculiasis.[1]
Other species

''D. fuelliborni'' parasitizes opossum, ''D. lutrae'' parasitizes otters, and ''D. ophidensis'' parasitizes reptiles.

Life Cycle


The life cycle was elucidated in 1870 when Alexei Pavlovich Fedchenko of Russia discovered the copepod crustacean intermediate host stages.

Notes


1. Bimi ''et al.'', 2005

References



Differentiating ''Dracunculus medinensis'' from ''D. insignis'', by the sequence analysis of the 18S rRNA gene, , L., Bimi, Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, 2005



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