Trichinela spiralis
Trichinella spirale is a type of roundworm from the family Trichinae. It is also known as trichinella or trichina worms. Trichina spiralis is one of the most common parasitic flatworms in the world, and it is found in North America, Europe and Asia. Every year, about 3 million people worldwide become ill with this infection, of whom about 59,000
What is it? This is a parasite - trichinosis, which causes the following diseases: trichinosis, or trichinosis.
This parasitic disease was first recorded in 1795 by German doctors M. Swidan and G. Insen. Triquina was discovered in human meat and was originally called "finnose". In Italy in 1832, the French parasitologist I. Vallee observed a nematode in dogs that penetrated the skin of a dog from meat. But the anatomical features of the pathogen were studied more fully by the German scientist D. Fuchs, and the phylogenetic relationship with mammals was shown by L. A. Grinevich. He believed that “a species of malignant abdominal pain” (as he called the disease) was common in mice, humans and humans. In dogs, he identified two pathologies with different parasites - Finns and Taeniids. In morphology, Finns resembled nematodes, sucking blood and helminths from the animal’s intestines. Further research proved that the disease is caused by helminths of the genus Trichinella. So not for