Protozoa 2 Flashcards
the most important parasitic diseases of humans
transmitted by female anopheles mosquitoes
cause by 5 plasmodium species
malaria
enables plasmodium genus but not species identification
thick blood film examination
to quantify parasites and enables plasmodium species identification
thin blood examination
p. falciparum
p. vivax
p. ovale
p. malariae
p. knowlesi
plasmodium species
- anaemia and jaundice
due to RBC lysos during release of merozoites
falciparum and knowlesi: infect RBCs of all ages
vivax and ovale: infect young RBCs
malariae: infect old RBCs
- spleen trap and lyse infected RBCs
- cylic fever and rigor
malaria symptoms
impair oxygen delivery
- brain: cerebral malaria
- kidney: blackwater fever, acute renal failure
- lung: acute respiratory distress syndrome dysfunction
rosette-shape cell clumps
falciparum malaria
latent infection and malarial relapse
vivax and ovale
- ingesting mammalian meat containing tissue cysts
- transfuse blood containing tachyzoites infected-white blood cells
- organ transplantation with organs containing tissue cysts
- ingest food/drinks contaminated with faeces of cats with oocytes
- faecal-oral route by oocysts
- congenital transmission: tachyzoites can cross placenta
toxoplasmosis: tissue infections
ocular toxoplasmosis
cutaneous toxoplasmosis
congenita toxoplasmosis
toxoplasmosis: tissue infections
transmitted by sandflies
L. donovani
L. tropicana
L. mexicana
L. braziliensis
Leishmania sp.
- damage to reticuloendothelial system (liver, spleen, and bone marrow)
- fever, weakness, and weight loss
- hyperpigmentation of skin (kala-azar=black fever)
- post-kala-azar: macular, maculopapular, and nodular rashers
leishmania donovani
- forest rodents are main reservoirs
- lesions are confined to the skins: granulomatous, necrotic ulcer forms at the bite site (become superinfected with bacteria)
- L. tropical and L. mexicana
cutaneous leishmaniasis
- forest rodents are main reservoirs
- lesions at mucous membranes, cartilage, and skin
- begins with a papule at bite site, metastatic lesions form at mucocutaneous junction of the nose and mouth: disfiguring granulomatous and ulcerating lesions destroy nasal cartilage
- leishmania braziliensis
mucocutaneous leishmaniasis
causes west african sleeping sickness
neurological manifestations progressing to coma and death develop
Winterbottom sign (swelling of posterior cervical lymph node at the neck)
chronic african trypanosomiasis
T. b. gambiense
causes east african sleeping sickness
somnolence, inability to eat, tissue wasting, unconsciousness and death
acute african trypanosomiasis
T. b. rhodesiense