This document discusses several parasitic diseases important in meat inspection, including trichinellosis, taeniasis, cysticercosis, echinococcosis, fascioliasis, and taenia hydatigena. For each parasite, it describes the life cycle, clinical signs, postmortem findings, and meat inspection judgment criteria. Images are also provided showing cysts and lesions caused by these parasites. The goal is to educate meat inspectors on identifying and properly judging meat affected by these parasitic diseases.
2. TRICHINELOSIS
• Etiology
–Trichinella spiralis, T. nativa, and T. britovi
• Hosts
–All mammals, principally, pigs, man, rats,
etc
• Life cycle. Clean life cycle. It has no free living
stages outside the host.
• After ingestion, it gets encysted in the muscles
• Larvae get released from muscles by action of
digestive enzymes.
• Larvae enters the lymphatic system to the03/01/15 Dr. Nyakarahuka 2
4. It is common in developing countries where
meat fed to pigs is raw or undercooked
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5. Trichinellosis
• Predilection site is Muscles
• Host reaction can lead to calcification
• Caused by eating raw or undercooked pork or
wild game infected with the larvae
• Diagnosis
– Trichinoscopy tests .Taking a piece of muscle esp
diaphragm and compress it between two glass slabs
and view on microscope
– Artificial Digestion using gastric juices
– Serological tests
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6. Parasite Control Measures
• Through cooking of meat of meat at a temp
not less than 60o
c
• Freeze at -150
c for at least 30 days
• Avoid feeding swill or garbage to pigs
• Drying is ineffective, but salting and smoking
can be effective
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8. Taeniasis(Cestodes)
• Segmented worms that live in intestines
• Adults release last maturing
segments(Progrolitids) can be gravid with over
30,000.
• These are passed into feces and hatched into
larvae on the ground .
• Larvae are ingested by animals, migrate to their
predilection sites to form cystic forms
• These cystic forms are the ones infective to man.
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9. Taeniasis
• 3 types of cyst occur
– cysticercus. Has got an outer membrane enclosing
a single scolex, each with a varying degree of fluid.
– Coenurus(Multiceps cysts), with single cyst and
several scoleces
– Hydatid cysts(Echinococcus).It contains brood
capsules with scoleces –Daughter cysts
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10. Taenia Solium(Pork tape worm)
• Final host is man, intermediate host is pig. Larvae
is picked by the pig while scavenging
• It moves through blood stream to the liver and
finally to active muscles where it forms cysts.
• Active muscles include heart muscle, diaphragm,
massatter muscles, tongue, abdominal muscles,
neck etc.
• This cystic form is know as cysticercus cellulosae.
• The condition is know as cyticercosis. Also known
as pork measles.
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12. T. Solium
• It can be visible in muscles 4-10 weeks after
infection
• They appear as white sports measuring
16x9.5mm.They look like as if rice is in
muscles.
• In man, it causes neurocysticercosis leading to
cns signs, epilepsy
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19. T. Solium
Judgment at Meat inspection
• If the total number of cysts is more than 6,
condemn the whole carcass.
• Any organ or head or any part of the pig with 1 or
more cyst should be condemned.
• If in extended examination, you find between 1-5
cysts in whole carcass, conditionally approve.
• Subject the carcass to treatments such as -10o
c
for about 2wks
• Heat treatment-sterilize by heat or boiling at 95-
100o
c for 30 minutes or heat 72o
c for 2hrs
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21. Prevention
• Massive chemotherapy treatment of infected
humans,
• Improving sanitation.
• Education humans are major ways to discontinue
• Cooking of pork or freezing it and inspecting
meat are effective means to cease the life cycle
• The management of pigs by treating them or
vaccinating them is another possibility to
intervene .
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22. Taenia saginata(Beef Measles)
• Also called beef-tape worm
• Or Beef measles
• Cystic form called cyticercosis bovis
• Big problem in Africa, asociated with serious
economical losses.We can not export meat.
• Final host is man, intermediate host is
bovine(Cattle).Other wild ruminants are
infected.
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24. Taenia saginata
• Taenia saginata occurs where cattle are raised
by infected humans maintaining poor hygiene,
• human feces is improperly disposed of,
• meat inspection programs are poor,
• where meat is eaten without proper cooking
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25. Taenia saginata
• Predilection sites are tongue, heart muscle,
massater, adductor muscles, diaphragm and
psoas muscles, i.e. active muscles.
• Occasionally in liver and lungs.
• The cyst is fully developed 18 wks after ingestion,
can be diagnosed at 6 wks, can remain viable
even two weeks after death of animal.
• Uganda Code of Meat inspectors ensure routine
inspection of tongue, masseters, heart, adductor
muscles, etc
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26. Taenia saginata
Postmortem findings :
• Small white lesions (cysticerci 2 – 3 weeks after
infection) in muscle tissue
• Clear transparent bladders 5 × 10 mm (infective
cysticerci, 12 – 15 weeks after infection, Fig. 91)
• Opaque and pearl like (over 15 weeks of
infection)
• Degeneration, caseation and calcification (after
12 months or more after infection)
• Degenerative myocarditis
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31. Caseous cysticercus. Numerous clear transparent cysts on the
heart surface. 0.6 mm in diameter in the heart muscle
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32. Cysticercus ovis. The heart of an old ewe showing heavy infestation
with C. ovis. The cysts have degenerated and undergone calcification
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33. Taenia saginata
Judgment at meat inspection
• Condemn the whole carcass if;
– the infection is excessive i.e. if any muscle you incise,
you find 1 or more cysts or any organ you incise you
find 1 or more cysts.
– The total number of cysts in any muscle or
surrounding tissue or organ exceed 20 just on a single
incision
– 10 or more cyst in a dressed carcass
– 4 or more cysts in the head or organs of vicsera
together with 6 or more cysts in the dressesd carcass.
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34. Taenia saginata
Judgment at meat inspection
• When there is discoloration of the carcass
regard less of the number of cysts
• Conditionally approve if the carcass
– Has 1-9 cysts
– Any part of the carcass has 1 or 2 cysts
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35. Echinococcus granulosus
Hydatid disease
• The cystic form is hydatid disease
• Final host is dog and other caniids
• Intermediate hosts are cattle, ruminants, pigs,
• Man is an accidental intermediate host
• The eggs are released from the dogs into the
ground where they are picked
• The larvae go through the walls of small
intestines and finally into the liver, lungs,
peritoneal space, even in the brain.
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47. Judgment at PM
• The shape of cysts depend on shape and size of
organ where the cyst is located.
• It can be spherical and can be very large
• Leading to pressure necrosis.
• Carcass showing emaciation, edema and
muscular involvement is condemned and
destroyed.
• Affected viscera condemned and destroyed.
Burying of carcass is not sufficient, since dogs
may retrieve the affected organs.
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48. Taenia Hydatigena
• Its among the largest tape worms of dogs. The
cystic form is cysticercus tennuicolis found
intermediate hosts which are small
ruminants(goats and sheep) and pigs.
• It is one of the largest cysts up to 7.5 cm with
a long thin neck.
• Predilection sites include the omentum,
mesenteries & liver. Its some times cold a
bladder worm
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51. Taenia Hydatigena
• The development takes 5-6 weeks
• Judgment
– If infestation is not heavy, since sub-serosally/
remove cyst and pass carcass
– In case of excessive infestation, condemn the
affected organs.
– Man is an accidental host
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52. Taenia multiceps
• Cystic form is muliticpes multiceps or also called
coenurus cerebralis
• It exclusively confined to brain tissue of
ruminants
• Can be size of a pea or an egg. It has a
transparent wall with many scoleces
• Animals get infected via contaminated water
• Can be arrested in liver and die, otherwise reach
brain in 8-14 days leading to CNS signs
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53. Taenia multiceps
• Final host carnivores
• Intermediate hosts- ruminants
• Prevention
– Don’t give dogs raw meat
• Judgment
– In early cases when there is no emaciation,
condemn the head
– If there is emaciation, condemn the whole carcass
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54. Fascioliasis
• Caused by Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola
gigantica
• Signs can be acute, sub acute and subclinical
• At post mortem, acute lead to parachymatous
hepatitis, hemorrhages and fibrin on capsule.
• The liver has numerous sharp small lesions,
which on pressure exudes semi fluid necrotic
liver tissues and mature flukes.
• Although acute cases are rare
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55. Fascioliasis
• Chronic form most common
• Bile ducts are thickened, dilated, calciferous
• Bile ducts filled yellowish brown bile
containing flukes which can be expressed
when ducts are incised.
• Excessive calcification and fibrosis of ducts
leads to liver cirrhosis.
• Migrating flukes may reach other organs like
lungs
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56. Numerous flukes of Fasciola hepatica observed in the
bile ducts and liver parenchyma of a cow.
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60. Fascioliasis
Judgment
• Markedly cirrhotic liver should be condemned
• Affected liver can be consumed for pet food
• Or as inedible by-products or
• Using in pharmacological industries for
producing heparin or Vit.B12
• Otherwise mildly affected liver can trimmed
and pass the rest.
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61. Reading assignment
• Read and make notes on;
– Lung worms eg (Dictyocaulus viviparus
– Linguatura larvea
– Oesophagostomiasis
– Ascariasis
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