Giardia lamblia is the etiological mediator of giardiasis, one of the most widespread gastrointestinal illnesses all over the world. 1 This parasitic infection seems to be the primary cause of non-viral or bacterial diarrhoea in humans and other vertebrates. 2 Giardiasis causes a wide range of medical symptoms including continuous diarrhoea along with abdominal pain and nausea, or no symptoms at all. Although re-infection and chronic infection are possible, most infections are self-limiting. 3 Giardia usually has a simple life cycle consisting of two separate phases of structural and biochemical developments: trophozoite (vegetative form), which colonizes the host intestine, and cyst (infective form), which is resistant in different environmental conditions. 4 Infection occurs when a host directly ingests feasible cysts or polluted water and food (the infective dose for a symptomatic contagion is about 10-100 cysts). 5 In giardiasis, severe pathophysiology occurs without trophozoites invading the small intestinal tissues. 6 The protozoan's direct and indirect pathogenic actions cause harm to the absorptive mucosa, resulting in enterocyte apoptosis and accelerated cell turnover, shortened villus,