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Essentials of Diagnosis
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Infections are generally asymptomatic
Nonspecific gastrointestinal symptoms, including diarrhea, may occur
Prolonged heavy infection can lead to megaloblastic anemia and neuropathy from vitamin B12 deficiency
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General Considerations
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Six tapeworms infect humans frequently
The large tapeworms are
Taenia saginata (the beef tapeworm, up to 25 m in length)
Taenia solium (the pork tapeworm, 7 m)
Diphyllobothrium latum (the fish tapeworm, 10 m)
The small tapeworms are
Hymenolepis nana (the dwarf tapeworm, 25–40 mm)
Hymenolepis diminuta (the rodent tapeworm, 20–60 cm)
Dipylidium caninum (the dog tapeworm, 10–70 cm)
Eggs passed in human feces that reach fresh water are taken up first by crustaceans, which in turn are eaten by fish, both of which are intermediate hosts
Human infection results from eating undercooked freshwater fish
Infection with multiple worms over many years can occur
Nonhuman reservoir hosts include dogs, bears, and other fish-eating mammals
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Large tapeworm infections are generally asymptomatic
Nonspecific gastrointestinal symptoms (eg, diarrhea)
Megaloblastic anemia and neuropathy can result from prolonged heavy infection
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Differential Diagnosis
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Beef, pork, dwarf, rodent, or dog tapeworm
Chronic fatigue syndrome
Chronic hepatitis
Irritable bowel syndrome
Amebiasis
Ascariasis
Enterobiasis (pinworm, mostly children)
Hookworm disease
Strongyloidiasis
Celiac disease or tropical sprue
Pernicious anemia (D latum)
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Diagnosis is usually made based on the identification of characteristic eggs or proglottids in stool
Egg release may be irregular, so examination of multiple specimens or concentration techniques may be needed
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Praziquantel
Treatment of choice
Single dose of 5–10 mg/kg is highly effective
Side effects include headache, malaise, dizziness, abdominal pain, nausea
Niclosamide
Alternative therapy
Single dose (2 g for adults chewed) is effective
Side effects include nausea, malaise, abdominal pain
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A disintegrating worm is usually passed within 24–48 h of treatment. Since efforts are not generally made to recover and identify the scolex, cure can be presumed only if regenerated segments have not reappeared 3–5 months later
If it is preferred that parasitic cure be established immediately, the head (scolex) must be found in posttreatment stools; a laxative is given 2 h after treatment, and stools must be collected in a preservative for 24 h. To facilitate examination, toilet paper must be disposed of separately
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