PetriKey

Parasite

Dientamoeba fragilis

Binucleate intestinal flagellate with no classic cyst

dy-ent-uh-MEE-buh FRAJ-ih-lis

protozoaflagellatetrichomonadgitrophozoite

High-yield clue

A binucleate trophozoite (two nuclei with fragmented karyosomes) usually seen with no classic cyst stage is the key study clue.

Overview

A trichomonad-related intestinal flagellate that, despite its amoeba-like name, is classically found only as a trophozoite and is linked to nonspecific GI symptoms. It matters as the parasite historically taught to lack a cyst stage.

Classification

  • Protozoa
  • Flagellate (trichomonad relative)
  • Trophozoite-predominant
  • Binucleate morphology

Lab & identification clues

  • Permanent-stained smear (trichrome) trophozoites
  • Two nuclei with fragmented karyosome vocabulary
  • Classically no cyst stage on stool exam
  • Molecular/PCR detection concept

Associations

  • Fecal-oral transmission vocabulary
  • Proposed co-transmission with pinworm eggs
  • Nonspecific abdominal/GI symptom study link
  • Often overlooked on routine stool exam

Commonly confused with

  • Entamoeba histolytica
  • Trichomonas vaginalis

Your notes

Original student-study summary. Sources checked: OpenStax Microbiology 2e, NCBI Bookshelf Medical Microbiology, and CDC topic pages where applicable; reviewed 2026-06. Educational only; no diagnosis, treatment, dosing, or specimen-handling guidance.

OpenStax: Microbiology 2e organism classification foundationssourceNCBI Bookshelf: Medical Microbiology organism chapterssourceCDC: CDC disease and public-health topic pagessource