The Infective
larvae quickly undergo
moulting to shed their sheath either upon
ingestion by the
host or upon burrowing into the host's skin. If ingested, they pass through the stomach into the
intestine and attach themselves to the
mucosa. If they have burrowed through the skin, they invade the subcutaneous blood vessels, are carried to the
lungs, and then move to the intestine via
trachea,
oesophagus and
stomach. In either case, the larvae develop into the final 3rd stage in the intestinal wall. The 4th stage larvae appear in 47 hours after oral infection. The 5th stage immature worms appear 6 days after infection. They reach
sexual maturity on and after 2 weeks after infection. Unlike the hookworms
Necator americanus and
Ancylostoma duodenale,
A. ceylanicum can competently infect and thrive within not only human hosts but other mammalian hosts as well (such as dogs, cats, or golden hamsters). Because it may primarily infect non-human mammals, and infect humans only opportunistically when its mammalian hosts are in close contact with people,
A. ceylanicum is termed a zoonotic hookworm. This same trait makes
A. ceylanicum a uniquely useful hookworm, since it can be studied in the laboratory while infecting golden hamsters, unlike most or all strains of
N. americanus or
A. duodenale, and thus can also be used as a test organism for possible drugs or vaccines aimed at preventing human infections. ==Pathogenicity==