The two species that commonly infect humans have a similar morphology.
A. duodenale worms are pale grey or slightly pink. The head is bent a little in relation to the rest of the body, forming a hook shape – hence the name. The hook is at the front end of the body. They have well-developed mouths with two pairs of teeth. Males measure approximately 10 by 0.5 mm, and females are often longer and stouter. Males also have a prominent copulatory bursa posteriorly.
N. americanus is generally smaller than
A. duodenale, with males usually being 5 to 9 mm long and females about 10 mm long. Instead of the two pairs of teeth in
A. duodenale,
N. americanus has a pair of cutting plates in the buccal capsule. Also, the hook is much more defined in
Necator americanus. First- and second-stage larvae are in the
rhabditiform stage. After feeding for seven days or so, they will
moult into third-stage larvae (L3) known as the
filariform stage, which is the non-feeding, infective stage. Filariform larvae can survive for up to two weeks. They are extremely motile and will move onto higher ground to improve their chances of finding a host. It takes about a week for the larvae to reach the gastrointestinal tract and a total of five to nine weeks from larval skin penetration for eggs to be passed in stool, indicating that the parasite has reached maturity in the intestine and mated.
Necator americanus can cause a prolonged infection lasting from one to five years, with many worms dying in the first year or two. Some worms, though, have been recorded as living for fifteen years or more. In comparison,
Ancylostoma duodenale worms are short-lived, lasting for around six months. However, larvae can remain dormant in tissue stores and be recruited over many years to replace the worms that die. The worms mate inside the host, in which the females also lay their eggs, to be passed out in the host's feces into the environment to start the cycle again.
N. americanus can lay between nine and ten thousand eggs per day, and
A. duodenale between twenty-five and thirty thousand per day. Worms need five to seven weeks to reach maturity, and symptoms of infection can therefore appear before eggs are found in the feces, making the diagnosis of hookworm infection difficult. ==Diagnosis==