Balantidium coli, Malmsten, 1857.

Syn.: Paramæcium coli, Malmsten, 1857.

The body is oval, 60 µ to 100 µ in length (up to 200 µ according to Janowski), and 50 µ to 70 µ in breadth. The peristome is funnel-shaped or contracted, the anterior end being then broadened or pointed according to the degree of contraction (figs. 113, 114). The ecto- and endo-plasm are distinct, the latter is granular, containing drops of fat and mucus, granules of starch, bacteria, and occasionally also red and white blood corpuscles. There are usually two contractile vacuoles, seldom more. The anus (cytopyge) opens at the posterior extremity. The macronucleus is bean- or kidney-shaped, rarely oval; the micronucleus is spherical.

Balantidium coli lives in the large intestine of man, in the rectum of the domestic pig, and has been found in monkeys. It propagates by transverse division, but conjugation and encystment are known to take place.[247] Transmission to other hosts is effected by the cysts of the parasite (fig. 114).

Balantidium coli, first seen by Leeuwenhoek, was described by Malmsten in 1857 in a man aged 35 years, who had two years previously suffered from cholera, and since then had been subject to diarrhœa. The examination showed an ulcer in the rectum above the mid sphincter ani, in the sanguineous purulent secretion of which numerous Balantidia were swimming about. Although the ulcer was made to heal, the diarrhœa did not cease and the stools contained numerous Balantidia, the number of which could only be decreased by extensive enemas of hydrochloric acid.

The second case related to a woman who was suffering from severe colitis, and who died ten days after admission. The malodorous, watery evacuations contained innumerable Balantidia, in addition to pus, and at the autopsy the anterior portion of the large intestine was found to be infested with them.

Subsequently this parasite has often been observed in human beings, and various cases have been recorded. These occurred in Russia, Scandinavia, Finland, Cochin China, Italy, Germany, Serbia, Sunda Islands, Philippine Islands, China, and in other parts of Asia and in America. Other cases were reported by Askanazy, Ehrnroth, Klimenko, Nagel, Koslowsky, Kossler, Waljeff, Strong and Musgrave, Glaessner[248] and others. Sievers found B. coli very common in Finland.

In the majority of the cases described by Sievers from Finland, and in other cases from Central Europe, the patients suffered from obstinate intestinal catarrh, which did not always cease even after the Balantidia had disappeared. On the other hand, Balantidia have occasionally still been found to persist, though in small numbers, after the catarrh has been cured. Some authors, nevertheless, do not regard Balantidia as the primary cause of the various diseases of the large intestine, which often commence with the development of ulcers, but they consider that they may aggravate these diseases and render them obstinate. According to Solowjew, Askanazy, Klimenko and Strong and Musgrave, however, the parasites penetrate the intestinal wall, and give rise to ulcerations which may extend deeply into the submucosa, and even be found in the blood and lymphatic vessels of the intestinal wall. According to Stokvis, B. coli occurs also in the lung; at all events this author states that he found one living and several dead paramæcia (?) in the sputum of a soldier, returned from the Sunda Islands, who was suffering from a pulmonary abscess. Sievers has shown that B. coli might occur in persons not suffering from intestinal complaints, but E. L. Walker[249] (1913) states that every person parasitised with B. coli is liable sooner or later to develop balantidian dysentery.

Since Leuckart confirmed the frequent presence of B. coli in the rectum of pigs, and corresponding observations were made in other countries, the pig is universally considered to be the means of the transmission of Balantidium to man. The encysted stages only serve for transmission, because, according to all observations, the free parasites have a very small power of resistance. They perish when the fæces have become cool; they cannot live in ordinary, slimy, or salt water. As they are killed by acids even when much diluted, they cannot pass through the normal stomach alive except under the most unusual circumstances. The pigs, in whose intestines the Balantidium appears to cause little or no disturbance, evacuate numerous encysted Balantidia with the fæces, and their occasional transference to man brings about their colonization there, but perhaps only when a disease of the colon already exists.

Experimental transmission of the free parasites to animals (per os or per anum) yielded negative results, even in the case of pigs. Casagrandi and Barbagallo (1896), however, had positive, as well as negative, results. They employed healthy young cats, or cats in which catarrhal entero-colitis had been artificially induced (which in other experiments is apt to cause the death of the animals experimented upon in about six or seven days), or finally cats that had dilatation of the rectum with alkaline reaction of the fæces. An attempt to infect three healthy cats by injecting human fæces containing Balantidium into the rectum proved negative, in so far as the fæces of the experimental animals had an acid reaction and contained no Balantidia, but at the autopsy performed eight days after infection a few encysted parasites were found in the mucus of the ileum. In the case of four cats suffering from entero-colitis, into which human fæces containing Balantidia were introduced per os, Balantidium cysts were found in the fæces three days after the last ingestion. Great numbers, moreover, were found in the cæcum and the posterior part of the small intestine at the autopsy of the animals, which died about eight days after the commencement of the experiments. Actual colonization, therefore, was not effected in either series of experiments. Free or encysted Balantidia of pigs were used for further experiments. The experiments proved negative when fæces containing cysts were injected into the rectum of healthy cats (three experiments), or cats (two) suffering from spontaneous intestinal catarrh, or when such material was introduced per os into three healthy cats. In the case of two cats with intestinal catarrh artificially produced, a small number of the active Balantidia injected into the rectum remained alive. Larger quantities of fæces containing encysted Balantidia were introduced into two other cats affected with the same complaint. These, certainly, did not appear in the fæces, but small numbers, free and alive, were found in the cæcum. Similarly, encysted Balantidia were introduced into two cats with dilated rectum, and whose fæces had an alkaline reaction. In these cases no parasites appeared in the fæces, but three and five days later, when the two animals were examined, a very small number were discovered free in the large intestine. Klimenko did not succeed in infection experiments with B. coli on young dogs, whose intestines had been artificially affected by disease.