Enterobius (Pinworm)
Trevor A. Crowell, M.D.
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY
- Pinworms are intestinal nematodes (aka roundworms).
- The disease is also known as enterobiasis or threadworm disease, caused by Enterobius vermicularis.
- Epidemiology: worldwide, with 40 million cases per year. Infection is mostly seen in children.
- Most common nematode infection in the U.S.
- Increased prevalence with congestion, institutionalization, and poor sanitation
- A larger family size is associated with increased risk.
- The lifespan of a worm is 11-35 days, so the chronic disease is due to reinfection rather than persistent infection.
- Eggs are deposited nocturnally in perianal/perineal regions.
- Self-infection can occur by transferring eggs to the mouth after scratching the affected area.
- Eggs are transferred under contaminated fingernails, in dust and through contaminated clothes or linens.
- Life cycle: (Figure 1)
- Eggs are deposited on perianal folds by gravid females and transferred to the mouth by contamination of hands, clothes or bed linens.
- Ingested eggs hatch into larvae in the small intestine.
- Larvae mature into adults in the colon, and gravid females migrate nocturnally outside the anus to lay eggs.
- Each female worm can produce more than 10,000 eggs. Eggs remain viable for an average of 1-2 weeks. Infectivity decreases within 1 to 2 days in dry, warm environments.
There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.
© 2000–2025 Unbound Medicine, Inc. All rights reserved