Monday, December 6, 2021

Case of the Week 663

This week's case was generously donated by Monica Jarvis, Lilian Flores, and the parasitology lab at the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. They identified the following structures in a stool wet mount. They measure approximately 160 micrometers in length. Identification?




9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Did the subject eat crayfish? These are compatible in morphology with Psorospermium hackeli.
Florida Fan

Dinesh said...

Artifact.....Beaver bodies... spores of a parasitic algae...

Dr.V H Pankaj, India said...

A case of "pseudoparasitosis" in O&P exam, Beaver bodies!Algae Psorospermium, following consumption of seafood crayfish!

Luis H. said...

They are not parasites. They look like algae, diatoms maybe.

Luis H.

Anonymous said...

Desmids?

Sir Galahad said...

Alghe Diatomee

Sam said...

"Beaver bodies". Algae that can be found in faeces after the consumption of crayfish. Object not a parasite.

Unknown said...

Agree with the Psorospermium. You can see the plates of the outer shell and it is currently undifferentiated. It appears to be the north American long form.

Patrik said...

Non-parasite