The entire life cycle, from egg to adult, takes place in the
human gastrointestinal tract of a single host, or about 4–8 weeks. Although infection often occurs via
ingestion of embryonated eggs by inadequate hand washing or nail biting, inhalation followed by swallowing of airborne eggs may occur rarely. and are passed out with stool. The gravid female pinworms settle in the
ileum,
caecum (i.e., beginning of the
large intestine),
appendix and
ascending colon, where they attach themselves to the
mucosa and ingest colonic contents. Almost the entire body of a
gravid female becomes filled with eggs. The estimations of the number of eggs in a gravid female pinworm range from about 11,000 to 16,000. The egg-laying process begins about five weeks after initial ingestion of pinworm eggs by the human host. The gravid female pinworms migrate through the colon towards the
rectum at a rate of 12 to 14 cm per hour. They emerge from the
anus, and while moving on the skin near the anus, the female pinworms deposit eggs either through (1) contracting and expelling the eggs, (2) dying and then disintegrating, or (3) bodily rupture due to the host scratching the worm. After depositing the eggs, the female becomes
opaque and dies. The female emerges from the anus to obtain the oxygen necessary for the maturation of the eggs. ==Infection==