: Yes parasites can live in your eyes. They reach there by our blood. Depending on the type of parasite it is, it can actually eat your eyeball, leaving you with one eye only- or no eyes if they eat both. They can also live in the brain, liver,heart etc. The most dangerous place for a parasite to live is in your brain- it causes death most of the times. Here go to animalplanet.com/monstersinsideme that's monsters inside me, and they teach all about the parasites. They are also in our drinking water, so make sure you have a good filter. They can also come to our bodies from the air we breathe in. They also rob us from our energy and food we eat, so sometimes they get all the goods and our bodies are left with their toxic wastes. When you go to animalplanet.com/monstersinsideme click on the "watch monsters inside me videos" something like that and click on "Parasites Invade Eyeball". : Here are a few links of good information about parasites: : http://www.appliedozone.com/parasites.html : http://www.the-natural-path.com/parasite-cleanse.html (really good) : http://animal.discovery.com/tv/monsters-inside-me/(good) : http://parasitesinwater.com/ : http://curezone.com/diseases/parasites/anderson.asp (really good) : http://irreatable.blogspot.com/2009/03/what-purpose-do-parasites-serve.html : http://www.paradevices.com/how_parasites.html
The scientific word for human parasites is "pathogens" or "parasitic organisms."
parasites
Endoparasites are parasites that live inside their host's body. These parasites can reside in the digestive tract, blood vessels, tissues, or organs of their host. Common examples include tapeworms, nematodes, and flukes.
No, parasites are typically transferred through direct contact with contaminated feces, blood, or bodily fluids, rather than through the air. Transmission through respiratory droplets would be unlikely for most parasites.
Parasitology is the study of parasites and their relationships with their hosts. Its branches include medical parasitology, which focuses on parasites that cause human diseases, veterinary parasitology, which studies parasites that affect animals, and ecological parasitology, which looks at the interactions between parasites and their hosts in natural ecosystems.
No. Various worms or parasites can live in the human body... tape worms, guinea worms, loa loa (eye worm), or scabies but not snakes.
Lice do not generally live in animal fur. I'm 99% sure that parasites that live on guinea pigs will not transfer to human skin.
The scientific word for human parasites is "pathogens" or "parasitic organisms."
Tiny black bugs that live on the human scalp could be mites or head lice. Both mites and head lice are parasites that use the human as a host.
Parasites are organisms that live on or in a host organism and rely on the host for nutrients and shelter. They can cause harm to the host by competing for resources, causing damage to tissues, or transmitting diseases. Examples of parasites include ticks, tapeworms, and malaria-causing parasites.
their normally a little smaller that human eyes.
There is no symbiosis because there is no benefit to us. It's not a symbiotic relationship - they are parasites.
Since enough alcohol can kill a human, I would say it would also kill parasites living in or on human.
PILES
Human and animals
no, parasites are just inside the human body
The parasites enter the body by way of a cut or via the eyes or mouth