## Correct Answer: D. Wuchereria bancrofti *Wuchereria bancrofti* microfilariae are characterized by the presence of a **sheath with no nuclei in the tail region**—this is the defining morphological feature that distinguishes it from other filarial parasites. The sheath is a remnant of the egg membrane that persists around the microfilaria after release into the bloodstream. In *W. bancrofti*, the tail end (posterior extremity) is **free of nuclei** (anucleate tail), whereas the body contains nuclei extending to near the tail tip. This morphological distinction is critical for species identification in blood smears, particularly in endemic regions of India (coastal areas, Assam, Odisha, West Bengal). The presence of a sheath and the anucleate tail are key diagnostic features used in thick blood films and thin smears examined under light microscopy. *W. bancrofti* causes lymphatic filariasis and is the most common filarial infection in India, transmitted by *Culex* mosquitoes in urban and semi-urban settings. The sheath stains with Giemsa and appears as a clear halo around the microfilaria, making it easily identifiable in laboratory diagnosis. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Mansonella prestans La d** — *Mansonella prestans* microfilariae are **unsheathed** (lack a sheath entirely), making them fundamentally different from the question's requirement of a sheathed microfilaria. Additionally, *M. prestans* is found in dermal tissues and body cavities, not in peripheral blood, and is extremely rare in India. The absence of a sheath is the primary discriminating feature that eliminates this option. **B. Brugia timori** — *Brugia timori* microfilariae possess a **sheath with nuclei extending to the tail tip**, including nuclei in the tail region itself. This contrasts sharply with *W. bancrofti*, which has an anucleate (nucleus-free) tail. *B. timori* is also geographically restricted to Indonesia and is not endemic in India, making it clinically irrelevant in the Indian context. **C. Brugia malayi** — *Brugia malayi* microfilariae have a **sheath with nuclei present in the tail region**, specifically showing 2–3 nuclei in the tail space. This is the key distinguishing feature from *W. bancrofti*'s anucleate tail. Although *B. malayi* is endemic in parts of India (Kerala, Assam), the presence of tail nuclei makes it morphologically distinct and rules it out as the answer. ## High-Yield Facts - **Wuchereria bancrofti** microfilariae have a **sheath with anucleate (nucleus-free) tail**—the gold standard diagnostic feature. - **Brugia malayi** microfilariae have a sheath with **2–3 nuclei in the tail space**, distinguishing it from *W. bancrofti*. - **Brugia timori** microfilariae have a sheath with nuclei extending **to the tail tip**, not anucleate. - **Mansonella prestans** microfilariae are **unsheathed** and found in dermal/body cavity tissues, not blood. - *W. bancrofti* is transmitted by **Culex mosquitoes** in urban India; *B. malayi* by *Anopheles* in rural/forested areas. - Thick blood films taken at **11 PM–1 AM** maximize *W. bancrofti* microfilariae detection due to nocturnal periodicity in India. ## Mnemonics **Tail Nuclei Rule (Filarial ID)** **W**uchereria = **W**ithout tail nuclei (anucleate); **B**rugia = **B**usy tail (nuclei present). Use when comparing sheathed filariae on blood smear. **Sheath Status Quick Check** Sheathed filariae: *W. bancrofti*, *B. malayi*, *B. timori*. Unsheathed: *Mansonella*, *Onchocerca*, *Loa loa* (partially). Eliminates *M. prestans* immediately. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "sheath" with "nuclei in tail" to lure students who memorize that *Brugia* species have sheaths and assume all sheathed filariae have tail nuclei. The anucleate tail of *W. bancrofti* is the discriminating feature that separates it from *Brugia* species. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian endemic zones (coastal Odisha, West Bengal, Assam), thick blood films from patients with lymphedema or hydrocele showing sheathed microfilariae with anucleate tails confirm *W. bancrofti* infection—the most common cause of lymphatic filariasis in India affecting ~40 million people. Nocturnal blood sampling is essential for diagnosis. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology Ch. 46 (Filarial Nematodes); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine Ch. 8 (Lymphatic Filariasis)_
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