Diseases Parasitic

Parasitic diseases are a group of diseases that are caused by parasitic organisms (parasites). Parasites can live inside the body of humans or animals, as well as on their surface. Diseases caused by parasites can be very dangerous and require serious treatment.

Parasites can cause a variety of diseases, including infections, allergies, tumors and other health problems. Some of the most common parasites include worms, tapeworms, roundworms, and others.

Treatment of diseases caused by parasites can be complex and require the use of different methods. For example, medications such as piperazine or albendazole may be used to treat worms. Treatment methods such as diet, lifestyle changes and the use of special hygiene products may also be used.

However, it is important to remember that diseases caused by parasites are not always the result of poor hygiene or nutrition. Some types of parasites can be transmitted from animals to people or vice versa. Therefore, if you suspect that you have diseases caused by parasites, you should see a doctor for diagnosis and treatment.



Parasitic diseases Diseases caused by parasitic organisms - helminths, protozoa and microorganisms. Parasites settle in the organs and tissues of humans and animals, destroy the body and absorb the host’s nutrients, i.e. drain him.

They are divided into helminthiases (helminthic diseases) and protozoa (diseases of parasitic protozoa).

Helminths are roundworms ranging in size from 0.5 mm to several cm. They live in the body of animals (eating food) and humans (causing organ diseases or disruption of metabolic processes). There are about 80 species of different helminths in the world. For example: roundworms, pinworms, whipworms. Sometimes helminths can cause allergic reactions in the affected tissues. The group of protozoal diseases includes helminthic diseases, babesiosis (encephalitis), and toxoplasmosis. Helminthic diseases are caused by worms. Worm diseases are known throughout the world due to the fact that they are common and ubiquitous. These include hookworm disease, ascaridiosis, enterobiasis, opisthorchiasis, trichinosis, cysticercosis and other diseases. Diphyllobothriasis is associated with intraepithelial flukes (flatworms) that live in patients' intestines, absorbing nutrients. Trichinosis is caused by the nematode (roundworm) Trichinella, which parasitizes the muscles. Hookworms are parasites of the gastrointestinal tract that feed on blood. Roundworms are roundworms up to 40 cm long, they originate from the small intestine and are able to penetrate through the phagocytic cell into other tissues. This means that the development of roundworms occurs outside the host's body. According to the International Union for Disease Prevention and Control (ICD-10) classification, the presence of ascariasis is used as an indicator of the incidence of ascariasis. Flukes are a flat form found in the bile ducts of the liver. Dimophiola (cysticercus worm) is contracted by people who consume infected and cooked contaminated beef. Cysticerci can enter the organ. In some cases, localized forms of cysticercosis may develop without brain damage. Infestation by tapeworm Echinococcosis is caused by Echinococcus. Causes the same clinical manifestations as alveococcosis with or without cysts. Echinococcus develops in the human liver, lungs or brain. Opisthorchiasis is more common in the European part of the Russian Federation, mainly in the Volga River basin. Helminth is a parasite of the wide tapeworm Opistorchis viverrini (class Trematoda). It is characterized by allergic and toxicoallergic liver damage and progressive jaundice. The pathogenesis of invasion has been little studied. That