vector borne diseases Flashcards
what are vector borne diseases
illnesses caused by parasites, viruses and bacteria that are transmitted by vectors
what is a vector
a living organism that transmits an infectious agent from an infected animal to a human or another animal
eg mosquitos, ticks, fleas, flies, lice
why do vector borne disease have complex etiology
have 3x wider range of carriers (host) compared to non-vector diseases - multiple species can be hosts or reservoirs
individual vector borne pathogen can be transmitted by multiple vector species
amplifying host
an organism in which an infectious agent that is pathogenic is able to replicate rapidly and to high concentrations
dead end/incidental/accidental host
an organism that generally does not allow transmission
4 taxa of pathogens transmitted by arthropods
nematodes
protozoa
bacteria (and rickettsia)
viruses
4 types of biological transmission
propagative
cyclopropagative
cyclodevelopmental
vertical and direct
propagative transmission
when the organism ingested in blood meal undergoes simple multiplication in the arthropod
eg Arboviruses replicate extensively in tissues of mosquitos, flies and ticks and are transmitted to new host in salivary fluid of arthropod
cyclopropagative transmission
the pathogen undergoes a development cycle as well as multiplication in the arthropod
eg malaria in which 1 zygote can give more than 200,000 sporozoites
cyclodevelopmental transmission
the pathogen undergoes a developmental change but does not multiply
eg a single microfilaria ingested by a mosquito may result in only one 3rd stage infective larva. in most cases, the number of infective larvae is lower than number of microfilaria ingested in blood
vertical and direct transmission
TOT - transovarial transmission
vertical
TST - trans-stadial transmission
venereal
co-feeding transmission
when infected and uninfected vectors feed in spatiotemporal proximity to each other on the same reservoir host
the host acts as a transient bridge that brings infected and uninfected ticks together in the same place and time to facilitate pathogen exchange
extrinsic incubation period
the period of time the pathogen needs to develop inside the arthropod and to progress to the stage at which it can become infective and can be transmitted
generally 7-14 days
depends on pathogen, vector, temp etc
successful mechanical transmission depends on
the degree of contact that vector has with the host and on feeding behaviour (tabanid flies)
successful biological transmission varies greatly among species and geographical strains and depends on
innate susceptibility to infection
host preference, blood feeding and resting behaviour of vector
population density of vector and human/animal host
longevity, flight behaviour and oviposition of vector population are intrinsic factors that depend on extrinsic factors eg wind, temp, rainfall etc