Max Braun in 1899 first defined the genus
Paragonimus, which initially only included the species
P. westermani. In Vietnam, since paragonimiasis was first reported there in 1906, it was presumed for 89 years that only one species of
Paragonimus lung fluke,
P. westermani, caused paragonimiasis in humans. However, scientists have been conducting many studies of crabs and humans infected with paragonimiasis, leading to the discovery of several previously unknown species. and was first described in the Guangdong Province in 1959, originating from a viverrid's lungs. Today, according to the
World Health Organization, estimates put the number of persons afflicted with paragonimiasis at 20.7 million and the number at risk of contracting the disease at 293 million. For
P. skrjabini, it stands as a public health threat in certain areas of the world, such as the Three Gorges Reservoir where it is the primary paragonimiasis causing parasite. Changes in the environment such as pollution and the persistence of individuals' consumption habits of raw crab puts paragonimiasis epidemics at high risk. "Skrjabini" is named in honor of the Russian Helminthologist,
Konstantin Skrjabin (1878–1972). ==Life Cycle==