| 
 Throughout the world in domestic cats   
   
 Found in small intestine of foxes, dogs, cats; skin of humans. Usually found in unsanitary, warm, and moist conditions which favor the development of eggs and
infection of hosts. 
 Rhabditiform larval stages feed on bacteria associated with organic matter. Adult stage feeds on blood and tissue from the intestinal lining of the host. Parasites draw mucus into their buccal cavity and suck the blood and tissue. The action of
digestive juices and the shearing of teeth form a bolus of tissue that is separated from the host gut andingested.
 Host blood is drawn almost continuously into the intestine and passed out through the anus. 
Blood plasma and corpuscles undergo at least partial digestion in the nematode. 
Hookworms
consume up to 1 ml blood per individual per day. 
 Parasites are dioecious, with male and female organs in separate individuals. 
Lifecycle direct. Following copulation, female lays eggs in the hosts intestine. Eggs are passed out in the host feces. Usual daily output of eggs for a single female hookworm is between 10,000 and 30,000 eggs. In favorable conditions of moisture, temperature, and oxygen, eggs develop in the soil and hatch when they reach maturity. They release a rhabditiform larva which feeds for a short time 
as a microbivore and molts twice before becoming an infective filariform larva. Larva enters the host either by being swallowed or by burrowing into the skin through hair follicles. In the case of pregnant bitches, larvae may enter the
fetus and infect prenatally. When it reaches the small intestine of the host, the larva molts a fourth and final time and develops to maturity in about five weeks. 
 Infection by a hookworm usually results in bloody diarrhea and anemia. Hookworm infections undermine the health of the host, causing stunting of growth and general laziness. 
Often accompanied by acute mental distress. Ancylostoma tubaeforme causes a severe rash in humans known as "creeping eruption." Rash is caused because the larvae cannot get below the skin in the abnormal human host.   
 Anthelminthics 
 Marchiondo, A.A. Cruthers, L.R., Reinemeyer, C. 2020. Nematoda, Trichostrongyloidea. 
		Chapter 2 in Marchiondo, Cruthers and Fourie (eds) Parasiticide 
		Screening Vol 2. Academic Press Noble, Elmer R. and Glenn A. Noble. 1982. Parasitology: The Biology of 
	Animal Parasites. Lea & Febiger, Philadelphia.
 Olsen, O. Wilford. 1974.  Animal Parasites: Their Life Cycles and Ecology. University Park Press. Baltimore. Smyth, J.D. 1962. Introduction to Animal Parasitology. English 
	Universities Press Ltd., London. Trager, W. 1986. Living Together: The Biology of Animal Parasitism. 
	Rockefeller University, NYC
 
 Return to Ancylostoma menu Want more information about nematodes? 
Go to Nemaplex Main Menu. |