Dioctofiomyosis: causes and symptoms
Dioctomiasis, or dioctophimosis in medical terms (from the Latin, "διοκτόφιμος", expressing "wonderfully parasitic"), is a rare disease that is caused by a group of parasites of the roundworm family Trichuridae. These intestinal parasites go by several names, including trichopodium (false podium cyst), monocytic buckle worm, and double-headed worm. Since patients infected with both parasites do not have many symptoms individually, many prefer to call
Dioctysmophi, or omentichus, is a broad and mobile tapeworm, a vein parasite that travels through the bladder and ends in the intestines or animal such as humans. Dioctis can take three forms - narrow and long like a whip, double-sided thin and wide like a ribbon or a worm like a multidimensional olive. The variegated color of the spots varies from yellow-brown, almost black to light and even light pink or milky. When a man is infected, hyperemia of the genital organs, stricture of the urethra, purulent inflammation of the prostate, and cystitis are noted. In women, pathogens cause