This document discusses schistosomiasis, a parasitic disease caused by infection with Schistosoma blood flukes. It is most common in tropical and subtropical regions, infecting over 200 million people worldwide. The disease causes tissue damage as eggs released by adult worms become trapped in organs, eliciting an immune response that leads to granuloma formation and fibrosis. Chronic infection can result in serious complications affecting the liver, bladder, intestines and other organs. The life cycle requires freshwater snails as intermediate hosts and transmission occurs when larval forms penetrate human skin during water contact.