Published by Bupa's health information team, November 2008.
This factsheet is for people who have ascariasis, or who would like information about it.
Ascariasis is an infection caused by the worm Ascaris lumbricoides. A. lumbricoides is a parasitic roundworm that lives in the small intestine.
Ascariasis is very common worldwide. It is thought to affect up to a quarter of the world's population. The infection is most common in Africa, Central and South Eastern Asia and South America.
Ascariasis is caused by an infection with the parasitic worm A. lumbricoides. Parasites live off other animals, causing them harm.
A. lumbricoides is a type of roundworm. It is well adapted to living in the human body. It goes through several different stages in its lifecycle inside the body.
A. lumbricoides is spread by eating food contaminated by eggs from an infected person's faeces. The eggs can survive in soil for months or even years. From the soil the eggs can become attached to fruit or vegetables and are then eaten accidentally. The eggs are microscopic and not visible to the naked eye.
Once the eggs have passed from the stomach into the small intestine they hatch, releasing microscopic larvae. The larvae travel through the wall of your intestine and enter the blood stream, which carries them to your liver and heart.
After one to seven days the larvae reach your lungs. Here they pass through the lining of your lungs, and then travel up your windpipe to the back of your throat. You then swallow the larvae, which pass through your stomach and back into the small intestine where they develop into adult worms, living off half-digested food. Female worms can grow between 20cm and 35cm long; male worms are smaller and more slender than female worms, at around 10cm to 30cm in length. The adult worms are white in colour and have a similar size and appearance to an earthworm.
The worms mate in your small intestine and the females produce eggs that are passed in faeces, and the lifecycle begins again.
People who get severely infected may have hundreds, even thousands, of worms living inside them.
The infection is most common among young children in poor areas, because of their low hygiene standards and undeveloped immune system.
Ascariasis doesn't usually cause any symptoms. However if you are infected with many worms ascariasis can cause symptoms as follows.
Ascariasis can rarely cause a number of complications, some of which are severe.
Ascariasis is diagnosed by the presence of worms or eggs in a faecal sample. These can be tested for in a laboratory. Blood tests also show an increase in antibody levels and an increase in one of the types of white blood cells when the worms are in the larval phase.
If you have a barium meal X-ray, the adult worms are sometimes visible as string-like shadows.
Ascariasis can be easily treated with the right medicine. The infection is dealt with when the worms are in the adult stage of their life cycle.
A one-off dose of a drug called albendazole or the alternative drug levamisole is thought to be the best way to treat ascariasis. This is taken in a tablet form. Other drugs that might be used include piperazine and mebendazole, which is taken twice a day for three days.
If your breathing is affected by larvae in your lungs (See symptoms), a drug called prednisolone is used to control the inflammation in your lungs. The adult worm infection can then be treated two to three weeks later.
If your intestines become blocked by worms, your doctor may be able to clear them in hospital using liquid paraffin and the drug piperazine, which kills the worms. You will also be given fluids through a tube into your veins to keep you hydrated.
If your intestines become blocked by the worms and other treatments options haven't worked (see Medicines), you may need surgery to clear the blockage.
Improved hygiene measures will help stop re-infection. This includes better methods of disposing of faeces in the area, and not using human manure for fertilising crops -a common way that ascariasis is spread in developing countries.
This information was published by Bupa's health information team and is based on reputable sources of medical evidence. It has been peer reviewed by Bupa doctors. The content is intended for general information only and does not replace the need for personal advice from a qualified health professional.
Publication date: November 2008