Case report: Lung Spirorchidiasis in a Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) in Southern Brazil
Data
2013
Orientador(es)
Coorientador(es)
Membro(s) da banca
Fonte
Marine Turtle Newsletter
Tipo
Página inicial
14
Página final
15
DOI
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
Resumo
Spirorchiid trematodes are implicated as an important cause of stranding and mortality in sea turtles
worldwide (Stacy et al. 2010). However, the real impact of these parasites on sea turtle health is poorly
understood. The complete life cycle of marine spirorchids still remains unknown; however snails or
polichaete annelids may serve as intermediate hosts shedding cercariae that penetrate the mucous
membranes of sea turtles, which are their final host (Dailey 1992). The adult trematodes inhabit the
cardiovascular system, primarily the heart, as well as visceral and mesenteric vessels, where they copulate
and oviposit, causing severe vasculitis, parasitic granulomas and thrombosis (Aguirre et al. 1998). Eggs
may migrate and lodge in different tissues, where they induce a granulomatous response (Work et al.
2005). The disease is spread when infected turtles shed the parasite eggs in their feces or urine, through
the cloaca (Dailey & Morris 1995).