Filarial worms are arthropod‐transmitted nematodes that dwell, as adults, in the subcutaneous tissues and the lymphatics. Although eight filarial species infect humans, four are responsible for most of the pathology associated with these infections:
Wuchereria bancrofti
,
Brugia malayi
,
Onchocerca volvulus
, and
Loa loa
. The taxonomy of these parasites follows a newly adopted molecular approach. All filariae go through a complex life cycle that includes an infective larval stage carried by the insects and an adult worm stage that resides in humans, either in the lymph nodes, the adjacent lymphatics, the subcutaneous tissue, or the pleural/peritoneal cavities. There are significant differences in the clinical manifestations of filarial infections, or at least in the period over which the manifestations present, between patients native to the areas of endemicity and those who are travelers or recent arrivals in these same areas.