Liver fluke – Fasciolosis
Common Name of Organism | Latin Name | Body Parts Affected | Diagnosis Type | Where Found | Source of Parasite |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liver fluke – Fasciolosis | Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica | liver, gall bladder | stool | Fasciola hepatica in Europe, Africa, Australia, the Americas and Oceania; Fasciola gigantica only in Africa and Asia, 2.4 million people infected by both species | freshwater snails |
Dormancy Period: Up to 3 months.
The disease progresses through four distinct phases; an initial incubation phase of between a few days up to three months with little or no symptoms; an invasive or acute phase which may manifest with: fever, malaise, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal symptoms, urticaria, anemia, jaundice, and respiratory symptoms. The disease later progresses to a latent phase with less symptoms and ultimately into a chronic or obstructive phase months to years later. Humans are infected by eating water-grown plants, primarily wild-grown watercress in Europe or morning glory in Asia. Infection may also occur by drinking contaminated water with floating young fasciola or when using utensils washed with contaminated water. Cultivated plants do not spread the disease in the same capacity. Human infection is rare, even if the infection rate is high among animals. Especially high rates of human infection have been found in Bolivia, Peru and Egypt.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasciolosis
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22Fasciolosis%22&t=newext&atb=v373-1&iar=images&iax=images&ia=images
Therapure Remedies: CP ID, CP PAR-D, CP PAR-M, CP W, CP 1-5, CP BVC, Neem Soap
Conventional Remedies: triclabendazole, nitazoxanide, mebendazole, pirantel pamoat, ivermectin