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Parasitology

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Cryptosporidium is the organism most commonly isolated in HIV positive patients presenting with diarrhea. Treatment is symptomatic, with fluid rehydration, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Parasitology


1
Parasitology
  • Part I Protozoans

2
Parisitology
  • Parasitism
  • Two organisms living together
  • One benefits from the relationship at the
    expense of the other
  •  

3
Parasitolgy
  •  
  • Three groups of parasites
  • Protozoan
  • Metazoan
  • Exoparasites
  • All the parasites are eukaryotes.

4
Protozoan (single celled)
  • All protozoans have 2 important stages of life
  • Trophozoite active, free swimming state of
    protozoan
  • Cyst dormant phase. In most cases this is the
    infective stage.

5
Protozoan
6
Protozoan (single celled)
  • Classified by the way they move.
  • Amoeba (sarcodina)
  • Flagellates (mastigophora)
  • Ciliates (ciliophora)
  • Sporozoans (apicomyplexa)

7
Sarcodina (Protozoan)
  • Sarcodina the largest phylum
  • (11,500 living species) of
  • protozoans.
  • It comprises the amebas and
  • related organisms which are all
  • solitary cells that move and
  • capture food by means of
  • pseudopods, temporary extensions
  • of the cell.
  • Most sarcodines are free living
  • others are parasitic. One of these
  • parasites is the causative organism
  • of amebic dysentery.

8
Sarcodina (Protozoan)
  • Most sarcodines are free
  • living others are parasitic.
  • They are found in aquatic and
  • terrestrial habitats.
  • Entamoeba histolytica is the
  • causative agent of dysentery.

9
Sarcodina (Protozoan)
  • Acanthamoeba is the etiology
  • of amoebic keratitis and
  • encephalitis.
  • Encephalitis is caused by
  • Acanthamoeba entering cuts or
  • through the nares and
  • spreading to the central
  • nervous system.

10
Flagellates (Protozoan)
  • Most of the approximately
  • 1,500 species of Mastigophora
  • are propelled by one or more
  • flagella, and members of the
  • group are referred to as
  • flagellates.

11
Giardia - Flagellates (Protozoan)
  • Giardiasis, infection of the small intestine
  • by a protozoan, Giardia lamblia.
  • Giardia is spread via the fecal-oral
  • route, most commonly by eating food
  • contaminated by the unwashed
  • hands of an infected person or by
  • drinking groundwater polluted by the
  • feces of infected animals such as dogs
  • and beavers (hence the nickname
  • "beaver fever" ).
  • It attaches itself to the walls of the
  • small intestine and there multiplies
  • quickly.

12
Trichomonas - Flagellates (Protozoan)
  • Trichomoniasis is caused by a
  • Trichomonas vaginalis and is
  • passed almost 100 of the time
  • through sexual contact.
  • Trichomoniasis is primarily an
  • infection of women's vaginal and
  • urinary tracts.
  • A woman is most susceptible to
  • infection just after having completed
  • her menstrual period.
  • Men also may carry the organism
  • unknowingly, since infection in men
  • may cause mild or no symptoms.

13
Trichomonas
14
Trypanosoma - Flagellates (Protozoan)
  • Human African Trypanosomiasis,
  • also known as sleeping sickness,
  • is a vector-borne parasitic
  • disease.
  • The parasites concerned are protozoa
  • belonging to the Trypanosoma Genus.
  • They are transmitted to humans by
  • tsetse fly (Glossina Genus) bites
  • which have acquired their infection
  • from human beings or from animals
  • harbouring the human pathogenic
  • parasites.

15
Trypanosoma Flagellates (Protozoan)
  • Chagas diseases occurs in 15 Central
  • and South American countries.
  • The symptoms of Chagas disease vary
  • over the course of an infection. In the
  • early, acute stage, symptoms are mild
  • and usually produce no more than
  • local swelling at the site of infection.
  • As the disease progresses, over the
  • course of many years, serious chronic
  • symptoms can appear, such as heart
  • disease and malformation of the
  • intestines. If untreated, the chronic
  • disease is often fatal.

16
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17
Protozoan - Ciliates
  • The ciliates are a group of protists
  • characterized by the presence of
  • hair-like organelles called cilia.
  • Cilia are identical in structure to
  • Flagella but typically shorter and
  • present in much larger numbers
  • with a different undulating pattern
  • than flagella.

18
Balantidium coli
  • Infection occurs when a host
  • ingests a cyst, which usually
  • happens during the consumption
  • of contaminated water or food.
  • Once the cyst is ingested, it passes
  • through the hosts digestive system.

19
Protozoan Apicomplexa (Sporozoan)
  • The Apicomplexa are a large group of
  • protists, most of which possess a
  • unique organelle called apicoplast and
  • an apical complex structure involved in
  • penetrating a host's cell.
  • They are unicellular, spore-forming,
  • and exclusively parasites of animals.
  • They are non-motile protozoans and
  • rely on the fluid structures of the body
  • for movement.

20
Sporozoan Major Pathogens
21
Plasomdium - Malaria
  • Malaria is a vector-borne infectious
  • disease caused by a eukaryotic protist
  • of the genus Plasmodium.
  • It is widespread in tropical and
  • subtropical regions, including parts of
  • the Americas, Asia, and Africa.
  • Each year, there are approximately
  • 350500 million cases of malaria,
  • killing between one and three million
  • people, the majority of whom are young
  • children in Sub-Saharan Africa.

22
Plasomdium - Malaria Life Cycle
  • .

23
Toxoplasma gondii
  • Toxoplasmosis is a parasitic disease
  • caused by the protozoan Toxoplasma
  • gondii. The parasite infects most
  • genera of warm-blooded animals,
  • including humans, but the primary host
  • is the felid (cat) family.
  • Animals are infected by eating infected
  • meat, by ingestion of faces of a cat
  • that has itself recently been infected, or
  • by transmission from mother to fetus.
  • Cats have been shown as a major
  • reservoir of this infection.

24
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25
Cryptosporidium parvum
  • Cryptosporidiosis, also known as
  • crypto, is a parasitic disease caused by
  • Cryptosporidium, a protozoan parasite
  • in the phylum Apicomplexa.
  • It affects the intestines of mammals
  • and is typically an acute short-term
  • infection.
  • It is spread through the fecal-oral
  • route, often through contaminated
  • water the main symptom is self-
  • limiting diarrhea in people with intact
  • immune systems.

26
Cryptosporidium parvum
  • In immunocompromised individuals,
  • such as AIDS patients, the symptoms
  • are particularly severe and often fatal.
  • Cryptosporidium is the organism most
  • commonly isolated in HIV positive
  • patients presenting with diarrhea.
  • Treatment is symptomatic, with fluid
  • rehydration, electrolyte correction and
  • management of any pain. Despite not
  • being identified until 1976, it is one of
  • the most common waterborne diseases
  • and is found worldwide.
  • The parasite is transmitted by
  • environmentally hardy microbial cysts
  • (oocysts) that, once ingested, exist in the
  • small intestine and result in an infection of
  • intestinal epithelial tissue.

27
Cryptosporidium Life Cycle
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