A reliable assessment of the viability of schistosome eggs trapped in host tissues is difficult. The use of a coupling azo dye method for the detection of alkaline phosphatase (A1P) in Schistosoma mansoni ova was found to be a specific and sensitive method for differentiating between viable and dead eggs, and can be used in both immature and mature eggs. In fully developed miracidia within an egg, A1P activity was demonstrated in germ cells and in the sensory endings of the neural cells. The embryonating miracidia displayed A1P activity on the body surface and in von Lichienberg’s envelope. The alkaline phosphatase test for egg viability shows increased sensitivity when compared with the more conventional Oogram and Hatching tests.
Brachylaimus fuscatus metacercaria develops unencysled in the terrestrial snail Ponsadenia duplocincta. For the first time in a larval stage of the genus Brachylaimus a distinctive surface structure has been observed. This structure of net-like interconnected ridges of the tegument was present on the whole body surface with the exception of the anterior part. Beside this structure scanning electron microscopy revealed five types of papillae. Three types, dome-like papillae, papillae with a finger-like process, and hollow papillae with a short cilium, were localized mainly in the suckers. Hollow papillae without a cilium were arranged in groups or singly around the ventral sucker and genital pore. Ribbed papillae were observed on the ventral body surface.
Ultrastructure of the primitive epithelium of Echinostoma revolutum (Digenea: Echinostomatidae) cercaria was studied. The germinal balls and developing cercariae are covered with the primitive epithelium in daughter rediae. When the definitive tegument of the cercaria is differentiated, the primitive epithelium degenerates. The last remnants of the primitive epithelium in a cercaria can be detected at the stage when the lateral gland cells have released their secretion into the definitive tegument.