L2 Protazoa Flashcards

1
Q

Transmission of Protozoa?

A
  • Faecal-oral
  • Vector-borne
  • Direct
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2
Q

Diagnosis of Protozoal Infections?

A

Intestinal
CANNOT GRAM STAIN
Stool microscopy (3 samples on 3 consecutive days)
Antigen detection in stool
PCR

Extraintestinal/Tissue
Serology
Histopathology
PCR

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3
Q

List the protozoal infections that are of special importance in the immunocompromised host?

A

Toxoplasma Gondii

Cryptosporidium Parvum

Giardia Lamblia

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4
Q

Protozoal infections that are of special importance in the immunocompromised host?

Risk Groups?

A

Toxoplasma Gondii (HIV/Transplant )

Cryptosporidium Parvum (HIV)

Giardia Lamblia

Isospora belli (HIV, HTLV-1,
ALL, Lymphoma)

Cyclospora cayetanensis (HIV)

Microsporidia (HIV/Transplant )

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5
Q

Life Cycle/Human Acquisition of Toxoplasma Gondi?

A

Life Cycle
Cat is reservoir host, passes oocysts in feces

Other animals may act as intermediate hosts

Acquisition of Human Infection
Ingestion of undercooked meats from intermediate host

Ingestion of oocysts from cat faeces

Less Commonly
Transplacental

Blood transfusion, organ transplantation (uncommon)

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6
Q

Presentation/Reactivation risks of Toxoplasmosis in HIV?

A

30% risk of reactivation (if not on prophylaxis)
* HIV+
* CD4 < 100
* Toxoplasma IgG positive

CNS most common site of reactivation

Extra-cerebral infection
* Chorioretinitis
* Hepatitis
* Pulmonary infection

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7
Q

Clinical Presentation of Toxoplasma CNS infection?

A

Subacute onset
Meningitis caused by bacteria/virus (Acute)

Manifests as:
Headache
Confusion
Fever

Focal neurological deficits
Seizures
Altered mental status

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8
Q

Diagnosis of CNS disease in HIV?

A
  • Compatible clinical syndrome
  • ≥ 1 mass lesion on brain imaging
    MRI > CT
    Ring enhancing lesions, usually multiple
  • Detection of organism in brain biopsy

OR

  • CD4 < 100
  • Toxoplasma IgG positive
  • Not on effective prophylaxis
  • Typical appearance on brain imaging
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9
Q

CSF in Toxoplasmosis?

A

Elevated WCC (lymphocytes)

Elevated protein

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10
Q

Risk/Manifestation of Toxoplasmosis in Transplant?

A

Highest risk in heart transplant

Manifests as:
Myocarditis, encephalitis, pneumonitis

May have disseminated disease

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11
Q

Prevention/Treatment of Toxoplasmosis?

A

Prevention
Primary infection
* Avoid contact with cat faeces – hand hygiene
* Consume well-cooked meat
* Wash fruit and vegetables
* Pre-transplant – check serostatus
* Matching of seronegative recipient, if possible

Prophylaxis with Cotrimoxazole
* HIV – when CD4 < 100
* Transplant – if high risk (D+, R-)

Treatment

Pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine (add folinic acid to prevent hematological toxicity)

Duration – 6 weeks

Followed by chronic suppressive therapy while immunocompromised

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12
Q

Life Cycle of Cryptosporidium Parvum

A

1) Thick walled oocyst exits host (sporulated) through GIT

2) Contamination of water/food with oocytes

3) Ingested by hos

4) Wall breakdown within host => watery diarrhea

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13
Q

Clinical Features of Cryptosporidium Parvum vs. Giardia Lamblia

A

Cryptosporidium Parvum
Watery diarrhea (Weight loss with chronic diarrhea)

Anorexia, nausea, malaise

Low grade fever

Crampy abdominal pain

Biliary tract infection, pancreatitis in HIV

Giardia Lamblia
Asymptomatic

Acute diarrhoea

Chronic diarrhoea – malabsorption/ weight loss

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14
Q

Diagnosis of Cryptosporidium Parvum

A

Visualization of parasite
* Modified acid-fast stain
* Immunofluorescent antibody

Not detected by routine Ova and Parasites exam

Multiple samples (Intermittent shedding)

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15
Q

Prevention/Management of Cryptosporidium Parvum

A

Prevention
Good hygiene
Avoid exposure to water from lakes, streams, swimming pools

Resistant to chlorination!!
(Filter/Boiling removes cysts from water, not chlorination)

Management
Nitazoxanide, Paromomycin

Supportive
Reduction of immunosuppression
Notify Public Health

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16
Q

Diagnosis of Giardia Lamblia

A

Visualization of parasite
Routine Ova and Parasites exam (O&P)
* Trophozoites
* Cysts

Stool (Multiplex PCR)

Duodenal aspirate/biopsy (Giardia Tends to affect small intestine)

17
Q

Prevention/Management of Giardia Lamblia

A

Prevention
Good hygiene
Avoid drinking water from lakes, rivers, streams

Management
Metronidazole po

Supportive
Notify Public Health

18
Q
A