Signs and symptoms Most infected humans have a low number of worms and therefore are asymptomatic. Patients with more than 15,000 eggs per gram of stool may experience cramps, diarrhea, irritability, anorexia, or enteritis caused by cystercoids destroying the intestinal villi in which they develop.
Diagnosis Diagnosis for hymenolepiasis is done by examining stool for eggs. The proglottids that are disintegrated in the intestine cannot be detected. Egg output can be sporadic so a couple of stool tests a few days apart may be needed to diagnose the infection.
Treatment Different
Hymenolepis spp. can be treated with different
anthelmintics. These treatments include
albendazole,
niclosamide, and
praziquantel.
Epidemiology Prevalence of
Hymenolepis infections in endemic areas can reach 20%. In
Bat Dambang, Cambodia, middle school students were found to have higher
Hymenolepis prevalence than younger children, suggesting children are not learning prevention techniques as they mature. Turkish children living
shanty towns have higher prevalence than those in school provide apartments, with similar infection rates between boys and girls. In rural Mexico, 25% of the children aged 6–10 in twelve schools were infected with
H. nana.
Socio-economic factors and lack of parent education are strong influences on the high prevalence rate. While in Zimbabwe,
H. nana infections occur in children in small towns and high-density suburbs. Infections are more frequent in younger children who live in urban areas and in older children who live in rural locations. Overall prevalence was 24% in urban areas, and 18% in rural towns. In a study of six communities along the banks of
Lake Titicaca, the prevalence of
H. nana was 6.6%. The overall intestinal pathogenic infection prevalence rate was 91.2%, with many subjects having up to 5 different types of parasites. == Biology ==