Beyond the European continent, echinococcus is frequent in the inhabitants of Iceland, Argentine, Paraguay and Australia. In Iceland, according to Finsen, 1 in every 43 inhabitants is affected with echinococcus; according to Jonassen the proportion is 1 to 63; this is due to the habits of the people of Iceland or, in fact, to the frequency of Tænia echinococcus in dogs, and the prevalence of the hydatid in cattle. In certain districts of Australia it is just as frequent. In Cape Colony, Egypt and Algeria echinococcus is not rare, but it is scarce in America and in Asia, with the exception of the nomadic tribes of Lake Baikal.

Echinococcus attacks persons of every age, though it is rare in children up to 10 years of age and in old people. It occurs most frequently between the ages of 21 and 40 years. According to all statistics it preponderates in women (about two-thirds of the cases). The liver is its favourite seat (57·1 per cent. of the cases); next in order come the lungs (8 per cent.), kidneys (6 per cent.), cranial cavity, genitalia, organs of circulation, spleen (3·8 per cent.), etc. As a rule one organ only is invaded; multiple occurrence may originate from one infection, or eventually from a later infection (?), or it may come to pass that from some cause (through the spontaneous rupture of an echinococcus, or the rupture of one caused by an injury or surgical operation) daughter cysts, brood capsules or scolices escape into the abdominal cavity,[294] where they settle or become transformed and go on growing. In the distribution of this secondary echinococcus the great powers of motility of the free scolices must be taken into account (Sabrazès, Muratet, and Husnot).

Human echinococci may also die at various stages of development, become caseous or calcified, or may be absorbed, the cause for this being either disease of the hydatid itself or inflammation of its connective tissue capsule; the discovery of the laminated cuticle, which has great powers of resistance, or the finding of the hooklets of the scolices is sufficient to form a conclusion as to the nature of such formations.

Siebold (1853) was the first to rear Tænia echinococcus in the dog by feeding it with the echinococcus of cattle and especially of sheep. Küchenmeister, van Beneden, Leuckart, Railliet and others obtained similar results, and Thomas, Naunyn, Krabbe and Finsen succeeded in rearing T. echinococcus in dogs from the bladder worms of human beings; these grow comparatively slowly (one to three months[295]) and only during the process of growth develop their hooklets in their definite form (fig. 258). It lies in the nature of things that dogs, whether experimentally or naturally infected, almost always harbour T. echinococcus in large quantities. That cats exceptionally harbour these worms has been already mentioned (Dévé). Finally, Leuckart infected young pigs by feeding them with mature segments.

Echinococcus multilocularis (alveolar colloid).

In addition to the form of echinococcus already described, and which is also frequently termed Echinococcus unilocularis, there is a second form which occurs in man as well as in animals, and which is termed E. multilocularis, s. alveolaris (alveolar colloid).

It was originally regarded as a tumour; its animal nature was first established by Zeller and R. Virchow. The parasite, which varies in size from that of a fist to a child’s head, presents a collection of numerous cysts, measuring between 0·1 and 3 to 4 mm. to 5 mm. in diameter, which are embedded at first in a soft, connective tissue stroma; the cut surface has therefore a honeycomb appearance. The cysts are surrounded by a pellucid and laminated cuticle, and each according to its size encloses either a small-celled tissue or a cavity lined by a parenchymatous layer; the fluid contained in such a cavity may be transparent, or is rendered opaque by globules of fat, bile-pigment, hæmatoidin and fat crystals. According to some authors all or most of these cysts intercommunicate; others state that this is the case at least as regards the cuticle. The scolices are by no means found in all the cysts, and when present only a few, rarely half, of the cysts contain scolices (one or more); it is supposed that at least some of these scolices are formed in brood capsules, and that the former are capable of undergoing a cystic metamorphosis.

One circumstance is peculiar to the multilocular echinococcus of man, namely, the disintegration that sets in at certain stages; in the centre of the parasite a cavity forms that frequently becomes very large and is filled with a purulent or brownish or brownish-green viscid fluid; in this fluid one finds shreds of the wall of the cavity, calcareous bodies, echinococcus cysts, also scolices and hooklets, as well as fat globules and crystals of hæmatoidin, margarine and cholesterin and concretions of lime. Such ulcerative processes, according to Ostertag, are never present in the multilocular echinococcus of oxen,[296] in which the separate cysts are larger and the connective tissue integument less powerfully developed.