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Finding Genius Podcast

On the Study of Parasitic Diversity and Life Cycles—Stephen Greiman, PhD—Department of Biology at Georgia Southern University

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 20 February 2020

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Stephen Greiman, Ph.D., is an assistant professor at Georgia Southern University where he studies diverse groups of parasitic organisms. He discusses the following:

  • How a pork or beef tapeworm could find its way into the brain, spinal cord, organ, or a body cavity of a human being
  • What the difference is between the parasite's role in an intermediate host and a final or definitive host
  • What types of treatments are available to humans who have been invaded by a parasite

Dr. Greiman focuses on the study of tapeworms and flukes, which have complex life cycles and use at least one intermediate host before reaching the final or definitive host. He explains the difference between parasitic function in intermediate versus definitive hosts and the pathologies that can be caused by parasites in both types of hosts.

He gives an example of how parasites change the behavior of intermediate hosts as a way of making them more susceptible to predation, such as parasitic flukes which cause a snail's tentacles to pulsate and change colors, making them look more like maggots. In other cases, a fluke may cause a snail to crawl on vegetation and thereby become more visible by predators.

Dr. Greiman also talks about how the consumption of undercooked beef or pork can cause a human to become an incidental intermediate host for tapeworm larvae which can cause all kinds of diseases and pathologies, such as seizures.

Currently, there is a lot of interest in host-microbiome and parasite microbiome interactions, and this research is being aided by genomic sequencing and transcriptomics.

For more information about Dr. Greiman's research, visit http://www.stephengreiman.com/.

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:07.2

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0:13.0

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0:15.0

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0:17.0

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0:20.0

He hunts down at interviews geniuses in fields such as sleep science, cancer, stem cells,

0:25.4

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0:27.0

Get ready.

0:28.0

Here come the geniuses.

0:29.4

This is the Finding Genius podcast with Richard Jacobs with the Future Tech and Finding Genius, I guess

0:50.7

serious. I have Stephen Grimely. He's an assistant professor in the Department of Biology

0:55.0

at Georgia Southern University.

0:57.0

I'm going to be talking about his research on flatworms.

1:00.0

Interesting, so Stephen, thanks for coming.

1:02.0

Yeah, thanks for coming.

1:03.0

Yeah, thanks for having me.

1:04.0

Why are you studying flatworms with no sea elegance or are these very different?

1:10.0

Yeah, they're a little bit different from sea elegant, so that's a round worm.

1:15.0

You know, the flat worms are pretty diverse, so we use the word helmpt a lot for

1:20.0

multicellular parasites, and that includes the flat worms but it also includes the

1:25.3

round worms like sea elegance which is a non-parasitic round worm or helmet and so my

1:31.3

group I really like to focus on our tapeworms and flukes and overall they're extremely

...

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