American Society of Hirudotherapy

Three-dimensional visualisation of developmental stages of an apicomplexan fish blood parasite in its invertebrate host

Research article published in Parasites & vectors (2011)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Preclinical (animal)Clinical TrialsHayes et al. · Parasites & vectors, 2011

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although widely used in medicine, the application of three-dimensional (3D) imaging to parasitology appears limited to date. In this study, developmental stages of a marine fish haemogregarine, Haemogregarina curvata (Apicomplexa: Adeleorina), were investigated in their leech vector, Zeylanicobdella arugamensis; this involved 3D visualisation of brightfield and confocal microscopy images of histological sections through infected leech salivary gland cells. FINDINGS: 3D assessment demonstrated the morphology of the haemogregarine stages, their spatial layout, and their relationship with enlarged host cells showing reduced cellular content. Haemogregarine meronts, located marginally within leech salivary gland cells, had small tail-like connections to the host cell limiting membrane; this parasite-host cell interface was not visible in two-dimensional (2D) light micrographs and no records of a similar connection in apicomplexan development have been traced. CONCLUSIONS: This is likely the first account of the use of 3D visualisation to study developmental stages of an apicomplexan parasite in its invertebrate vector. Elucidation of the extent of development of the haemogregarine within the leech salivary cells, together with the unusual connections between meronts and the host cell membrane, illustrates the future potential of 3D visualisation in parasite-vector biology.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Indexed MeSH termsAnimalsApicomplexaImaging, Three-DimensionalLeechesMicroscopy, ConfocalSalivary Glands

Summary

Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This study applied three-dimensional brightfield and confocal imaging to visualize developmental stages of an apicomplexan fish blood parasite (Haemogregarina curvata) inside the salivary gland cells of its leech vector, reporting previously undescribed tail-like connections between parasite meronts and the host cell membrane. Important caveat for ASH readers: this is a naming/context overlap, not therapeutic hirudotherapy evidence. The leech in question (Zeylanicobdella arugamensis) is a marine fish ectoparasite serving as a disease vector, and the paper is a parasitology imaging-methods study with no relationship to the medicinal Hirudo leech or to any human clinical use; its relevance to hirudotherapy is effectively nil.

Citation

Three-dimensional visualisation of developmental stages of an apicomplexan fish blood parasite in its invertebrate host.

Hayes et al. · Parasites & vectors, 2011

Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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