PetriKey

Parasite

Diphyllobothrium latum

Fish tapeworm linked to B12 deficiency

dye-fil-oh-BOTH-ree-um LAY-tum

cestodetapewormfishb12foodbornedibothriocephalus

High-yield clue

Raw freshwater fish transmission and vitamin B12 competition causing megaloblastic anemia are the defining clues.

Overview

The broad fish tapeworm, now accepted as Dibothriocephalus latus (older name Diphyllobothrium latum), the largest human tapeworm, acquired from raw or undercooked freshwater fish and famous for competing with the host for vitamin B12.

Classification

  • Cestode (tapeworm)
  • Current name Dibothriocephalus latus (2017 revision)
  • Largest human tapeworm
  • Copepod first host, freshwater fish second host
  • Operculated eggs

Lab & identification clues

  • Operculated eggs on stool examination
  • Proglottids wider than long vocabulary
  • Eggs distinguish it from Taenia

Associations

  • Raw/undercooked freshwater fish (e.g., pike, perch)
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency and megaloblastic anemia
  • Cold-lake and pickled-fish epidemiology
  • Often asymptomatic carriage

Commonly confused with

  • Taenia species
  • Clonorchis sinensis

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