
Photo Credit: Nathan Anderson
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Echinococcus multilocularis (Fox Tapeworm) in the Pacific Northwest
The Core Concept: Echinococcus multilocularis, commonly known as the fox tapeworm, is a zoonotic parasite recently established in the Pacific Northwest that causes a severe, potentially fatal disease known as alveolar echinococcosis in humans and other accidental hosts.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: The parasite relies on a two-host life cycle, living harmlessly as an adult within the intestines of canids (such as foxes and coyotes) while shedding microscopic eggs in their feces. Infection in intermediate hosts (rodents) or accidental hosts (humans and dogs) occurs via fecal-oral contamination, leading to the development of destructive larval cysts in the liver rather than intestinal tapeworms.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Primary Hosts: Wild canids, specifically foxes and coyotes, which harbor adult intestinal tapeworms and shed infectious eggs into the environment.
- Intermediate Hosts: Small rodents, such as mice and squirrels, which ingest the eggs and develop the cyst-forming larval stage in their livers.
- Accidental Hosts: Humans and domestic dogs that contract the larval form through environmental exposure to contaminated soil or feces.
- Transmission Vector: Fecal-oral transmission, requiring the inadvertent ingestion of microscopic eggs to complete the infection pathway.

.png)









