Answer: Ascaris lumbricoides ova, fertile
What makes this case somewhat unique is that there is a larva inside of each egg. As noted by Anon and Dr. Leisure, you would not expect to see an embryonated egg in a fresh stool specimen. Instead, eggs are passed from the human host in the unembryonated form and then develop in the soil into the infectious embryonated form containing a larva. However, if you have eggs in archived stool specimens - even in specimens preserved in formalin - the eggs can continue to develop as they would in the soil. That is what happened in this case. These eggs were seen in a stool specimen that had preserved in 10% formalin for several months, and larvae could be seen moving inside of the eggs! This is why I always teach my students that formalin will not reliably kill all parasites and that it is important to treat all specimens as if they are potentially infectious.
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