1 / 29

Eukaryote agents of disease

Eukaryote agents of disease. Protists, Fungi and Helminthes. Apicomplexa. Plasmodium falciparum Babesia microti Cryptosporidium Toxoplasma gondii. Malaria. Several species within the genus, Plasmodium P. falciparum P. ovale P. vivax Severity and treatability varies by species

kristy
Download Presentation

Eukaryote agents of disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Eukaryote agents of disease Protists, Fungi and Helminthes

  2. Apicomplexa • Plasmodium falciparum • Babesia microti • Cryptosporidium • Toxoplasma gondii

  3. Malaria • Several species within the genus, Plasmodium • P. falciparum • P. ovale • P. vivax • Severity and treatability varies by species • Anopheles spp. mosquitoes are vectors and definitive hosts, where sexual reproduction occurs, transmit through injection of saliva • Asexual stage occurs in humans when merozoites/trophozoites reproduce in RBC

  4. Cryptosporidium spp. • Cause cryptosporidiosis • Many mammalian reservoirs • Cysts are highly resistant to environmental stress and water treatment (i.e. chlorination) • Cysts passed in feces of host, survive long periods in water where they may be ingested by next host • May also be transmitted by direct fecal-oral route • Causes diarrhea, which may be severe in immunocompromised patients • Massive outbreaks (Milwaukee) can occur when water treatment malfunctions

  5. Babesia microti • Causes babesiosis • Often asymptomatic • flu-like symptoms usually not fatal • Difficult to treat • Parasite resemble P. falciparum in RBCs • rodents are main reservoir • Transmitted by black-legged ticks (Ixodes scapularis) to humans

  6. Toxoplasma gondii • Causes toxoplasmosis • May be asymptomatic, or resemble low-grade infection resembling mononucleosis • May lead to still births in congenital infections • Contracted through contact with cat feces, or undercooked beef • Many mammals and birds may be infected but cats are definitive hosts

  7. Mastigophora • Giardia intestinalis (lamblia) • Trypanosoma cruzi • Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, T.b. rodesiense. • Trichomonas vaginalis • Leishmania spp.

  8. Trypanosomes • Chaga’s disease- Trypanosoma cruzi • African Sleeping Sickness • Trypanosoma brucei gambiense • T.b. rodesiense.

  9. Leishmania spp. • Visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) • Cutaneous leishmaniasis (Baghdad boil, oriental sore other names) • Muco-cutaneous leishmaniasis (espundia) • Transmitted by sand fly

  10. Trichomonas vaginalis • Causes trichomoniasis, vaginitis • Symptoms include profuse vaginal discharge • Limited by normal vaginal acidity • Male prostate, seminal vesicles, urethra may be infefcted

  11. Giardia intestinalis • One of the most common protozoan parasites in U.S. • Adheres to intestinal epithelium and disrupts absorption of water and nutrients • Fecal-oral route of transmission, especially through water contaminated with feces of humans or reservoirs • Many mammals can be reservoirs

  12. Sarcodina • Entamoeba histolytica • Naegleria fowleri • Acanthamoeba castellani

  13. Entamoeba histolytica • Amebic dysentery • Severity varies by strain and host • Invade intestinal mucosa and may result in long-term infection and tumor-like masses (amebomas) • Extra intestinal infection may result in liver abcess • Severe cases may result in malnutrition • Many animals may harbor these parasites in their intestines

  14. Free-living amebas • Naegleria fowleri may enter through the nose of host from fresh water • Enters NS through olfactory epithelium and into brain where they cause severe tissue damage and hemorrhage • Often fatal after only a few days • Treatment with Amphotericin B is possible if diagnosis is made quickly • Acanthamoeba castellani is Similar to N. fowleri, however, entry may be through ulcers or damaged tissues, such as corneal abrasions associated with contact lenses

  15. Fungi • Medical mycology is the study of disease-causing fungi • Can cause infection (Candida etc..) or intoxications (see below) • Many fungi are saprophytes and live primarily off of dead organic matter Intoxicating fungi • Aflatoxins on moldy foods- Aspergillus flavus • Ergotism- Claviceps purpurea • Poor indoor air quality-black mold, Stachybotriys sp.

  16. Candida albicans • candidiasis (oral, intestinal, vaginal, cutaneous) • Often called thrush • Vaginitis (yeast infection) • Diaper rash in babies • Can invade many internal tissues and cause toxic reactions (including sepsis)

  17. Dermatophytes • Superficial cutaneous mycosescaused by threegenera: Trichophyton spp. Microsporum, and Epidermophyton spp. • Tinea pedis- atheletes foot (feet and hands) • Tinea cruris-jock itch • Tinea corporis (ringworm that actually forms the characteristic ring)- non-hairy surfaces of body • Tinea capitus (ringworm of scalp) • Tinea barbi (ringworm of facial hair) Not scientific names of organisms but names of diseases

  18. Other fungal skin diseases • Sporotrichosis- Sporothrixshenckii • Blastomycosis- Blastomyces dermatitidis

  19. Fungal respiratory diseases • Coccidiomycosis- Coccidioides immitis • Histoplasmosis- Histoplasma capsulatum • Cryptococcosis- Filobasidiella (Cryptococcus) neoformans • Pneumocystis pneumonia- Pneumocystis carinii • Aspergillosis- Aspergillus spp.

  20. Helminthes • Platyhelminthes-flatworms • Cestodes: tapeworms • Trematodes: flukes • Nematoda-roundworms • Filarial worms • Others

  21. Tapeworms (cestodes) • Beef tapeworm- Taenia saginata- undercooked beef • Pork tapeworm- Taenia solium- undercooked pork • Cysticercosis results from the ingestion of human feces. Cysticerci form in tissues all around the body including the brain can result in epilepsy and death

  22. Other Tapeworms • Broad fish tapeworm- Dibothrocephelus latus (Dyphyllobothrium latum) eating undercooked freshwater fish • Hydatidosis or hydatid disease- Echinoccocus granulosus, dog feces cysts form in tissues including the brain • Vampirolepis (Hymenolepis) nana- most common cestode infection of humans, animal feces • Dipylidium caninum- children accidental hosts by ingesting fleas

  23. Blood FlukesSchistosomiasis (bilharzia) • Schistosomamansoni, S. japonicum, S. haemotobium and others • Distributed throughout Africa, South Asia and equatorial South America (S. mansoni) • Female lives within body groove of male, female body adapted for laying eggs in blood vessel. • Eggs pass in human feces and into natural water • Miracidium invades snail (intermediate host) • Cercaria invades human in water • Cercarial dermatitis (swimmers itch)-various genera of schistosomes- an allergic reaction to a parasite that doesn’t normally infect humans

  24. Other Flukes • Sheep fluke- Fasciola hepatica • Snail intermediate host • Infective stage on aquatic vegitation • Chinese liver fluke- Chlonorchis sinensis • Snail intermediate host • Second intermediate host commonly Grass Carp • Survive meat preparation other than cooking • Lung fluke- Paragonemus westermani • Acquired through eating raw crabs • Metacercariae bore through GI tract and penetrate the diaphragm and into the bronchioles, eggs transported out of lungs by cilia, swallowed and expelled with feces

  25. Nematodes: Hookworm • Main species :Ancelystoma caninum and Necator americanus • Larvae penetrate skin and migrate to circulatory system, then travel to lungs, coughed up and swallowed, adults reside in intestines as blood feeders • Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption) caused by hookworms that can’t get into the blood stream

  26. Nematodes: Filarial worms • Onchocerciasis, River blindness • caused by Onchocerca vovulus a filarial worm that migrates to various tissues including the eyes • Transmitted by black flies (Simuliidae: Simulium damnosum) • Loaiasis • Caused by Loa loa, filarial worm, that can end up in the eye but does not result in blindness • Transmitted by deer flies (Tabanidae: some African spp. of Chrysops)

  27. Lymphatic Filariasis • Main species that cause LF are Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi • Several species of mosquitos are vectors including Culex spp. Aedes spp. • Periodic and subperiodic forms of transmission cycle, may also be diurnal or nocturnal • Filarial worms cause inflammation and block the flow of lymph- this can result in elephantiasis

  28. Common Nematode infections

  29. Other Nematode infections

More Related