Schistosome
A parasitic trematode worm contracted from infested water that is capable of causing liver, gastrointestinal tract and bladder disease. There are three main species of these trematode worms (flukes) — Schistosoma haematobium, Schistosoma japonicum, and Schistosoma mansoni — that produce disease in humans. The larval forms of the parasite live in freshwater snails. The cercaria (form of the parasite) is liberated from the snail burrow into skin, transforms to the schistosomulum stage, and migrates to the urinary tract (S. haematobium), liver or intestine (S. japonicum, S.mansoni) where the adult worms develop. Eggs are shed into the urinary tract or the intestine and hatch to form miracidia (yet another form of the parasite) which then infect snails, completing the life cycle of the parasite. Adult schistosome worms can cause very serious tissue damage. Some schistosomes which cannot live within man nonetheless cause swimmer’s itch. Disease due to schistosomes is termed schistosomiasis or bilharzia after the shortlived German physician Theodor Bilharz (1825-1862).
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schis·to·some 'shis-tə-.sōm, 'skis- n any trematode worm of the genus
Schistosoma or of the family Schistosomatidae
called also blood fluke
schis·to·so·mal .shis-tə-'sō-məl, .skis- adj
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schis·to·some (shisґ-) (skisґto-sōm) 1. an individual fluke of the genus Schistosoma. 2. sometimes extended to refer to any fluke of the family Schistosomatidae.
Medical dictionary.
2011.