Ancylostomiasis is a hookworm disease caused by infection with Ancylostoma hookworms. The name is derived from Greek ancylos αγκύλος 'crooked, bent' and stoma στόμα 'mouth'. Ancylostomiasis is a hookworm disease caused by infection with Ancylostoma hookworms. The name is derived from Greek ancylos αγκύλος 'crooked, bent' and stoma στόμα 'mouth'. Ancylostomiasis is also known as miner's anaemia, tunnel disease, brickmaker's anaemia and Egyptian chlorosis. Helminthiasis may also refer to ancylostomiasis, but this term also refers to all other parasitic worm diseases as well. In the United Kingdom, if acquired in the context of working in a mine, the condition is eligible for Industrial Injuries Disability Benefit. It is a prescribed disease (B4) under the relevant legislation.§ Ancylostomiasis is caused when hookworms, present in large numbers, produce an iron deficiency anemia by sucking blood from the host's intestinal walls. Depending on the organism, the signs and symptoms vary. Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus can enter the blood stream while Ancylostoma braziliensis cannot. Signs and symptoms of Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus are given in corresponding page. In Ancylostoma braziliensis as the larvae are in an abnormal host, they do not mature to adults but instead migrate through the skin until killed by the host's inflammatory response. This migration causes local intense itching and a red serpiginous lesion. Treatment with a single dose of oral ivermectin results in cure rates of 94–100%. The infection is usually contracted by people walking barefoot overcontaminated soil. In penetrating the skin, the larvae may cause an allergicreaction. It is due to the itchy patch at the site of entry that the earlyinfection gets its nickname 'ground itch'. Once larvae have broken through the skin,they enter the bloodstream and are carried to the lungs (however, unlike ascarids, hookworms do not usually cause pneumonia). The larvae migrate fromthe lungs up the windpipe to be swallowed and carried back down to theintestine. If humans come into contact with larvae of the dog hookworm or thecat hookworm, or of certain other hookworms that do not infect humans, thelarvae may penetrate the skin. Sometimes, the larvae are unable to complete theirmigratory cycle in humans. Instead, the larvae migrate just below the skinproducing snake-like markings. This is referred to as a creeping eruption orcutaneous larva migrans.