Medical Parasitology: "The
Medical Parasitology: "The
Medical Parasitology: "The
Who is a parasite?
Parasites are
usually much
smaller than their
hosts, they also do
no kill before eating.
Parasites can be
ECTOPARASITE: live on,
but not in their hosts
(they can nevertheless
cause severe illness). Eg
lice
ENDOPARASITE: live
within the body and
tissues of their hosts.
Trypanosomes (which
cause sleeping sickness)
within the blood of an
infected animal.
TEMPORARY PARASITE
PERMANENT PARASITE
FACULTATIVE PARASITE
OBLIGATORY PARASITE
Disease terminology
Prepatency: infected but parasite presence can not
be detected yet
Patency: established infection, parasite stages can
be detected (malaria parasites in blood smears,
worm eggs in feces etc.)
Incubation period: time between infection and the
development of symptoms
Acute disease can lead to crisis which can resolve in
spontaneous healing, chronic infection or death
Convalescence: Period after healing, absence of
infectious agents, no symptoms, in certain case
immunity to reinfection
Epidemiology
Although parasitic infections occur globally, the
majority occur in tropical regions, where there is
poverty, poor sanitation and personal hygiene
Often entire communities may be infected with multiple,
different organisms which remain untreated because
treatment is neither accessible nor affordable
Effective prevention and control requires "mass
intervention strategies and intense community
education. Examples include:
General improved sanitation: pit latrines, fresh water
wells, piped water
Vector control: insecticide impregnated bed nets,
spraying of houses with residual insecticides,
drainage, landfill
Mass screening and drug administration programmes
which may need to be repeated at regular intervals
CLASSIFICATION
Parasites --- two main groups:
1. Protozoa
2. Metazoa (Helminthes)
Protozoa are further divided into:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Sarcodina (amebas)
Sporozoa (sporozoans)
Mastigophora (flagellates)
Ciliata (ciliates)
Platyhelminthes (flatworms)
Trematodes (flukes)
Cestodes (tapeworms)
2. Nemathelminthes (roundworms)
PROTOZOA
Single-celled Eukaryotes
Free-living or parasitic
2 forms:
1. Cyst form (infective for humans) &
2. Trophozoite form
1.
2.
3.
1. Intestinal protozoa
i.
ii.
iii.
3.
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
ENTAMOEBA
HISTOLYTICA
Occurs worldwide,
endemic in tropics & subtropics
ROUTE OF TRANSMISSION:
fecal-oral route
BY contaminated food & water
MORPHOLOGY
E. histolytica has 2 stages:
1. Trophozoite
Non-infective stage
Found in intestinal & extra-intestinal lesions
diarrhoeal stools
Motile (amoeboid movement) & ingest
RBCs.
Mature trophozoite has a single nucleus,
even lining of peripheral chromatin &
prominent nucleolus (karyosome)
2. Cyst:
Infective form for humans
Mature cyst has 4 nuclei (diagnostic
feature)
Found in non-diarrheal stools
Not killed by chlorination
Readily killed by boiling or filtration of
water
DISEASES:
E. histolytica causes:
1. Asymptomatic infection (90%)
2. Acute intestinal amebiasis (Amebic
Dysentery)
3. Chronic amebiasis
4. Amebic liver abscess
5. Infrequently abscess in brain, lungs
& other organs
LIFE CYCLE
Cysts (infective stage) in contaminated food
or water excystation in intestinal tract
trophozoite (ileum) --- each divides to form 8
trophozoites colonize cecum & colon
invasion of epithelium till muscularis layer
(flask shaped ulcers) reaches sub mucosa--- portal blood liver abscess.
Some trophozoites in intestine encyst
passed in stools contaminate food & water.
Clinical presentation
1. Acute intestinal amebiasis: dysentry,
lower abdominal discomfort, tenesmus,
& flatulence.
2. Chronic amebiasis
3. Amebic abscess: if in liver, cause
right upper quadrant pain, weight loss,
fever & a tender, enlarged liver.
LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS:
1.
i.
i.
Stool Examination:
(Formed stools contain cysts & diarrheal stools
contain trophozoites)
Wet mount in saline, Iodine-stained, or fixed
trichrome stained preparation
For motile trophozoites, stools should be examined
within 1 hour.Trophozoite of E. histolytica is
differentiated from other amoeba (E.coli) by:
Nucleus of trophozoite
For cysts, at least 3 samples should be collected.
Size of cyst & number of its nuclei. (Newly formed
cyst has 2 nuclei, glycogen mass & chromidial bars)
Other tests
Detection of E. histolytica antigen
in stool
PCR assay.
Serology to diagnose invasive
amebiasis (IHA indirect
hemagglutination test)
PREVENTION
Purification of water supplies
Good personal hygiene (esp. hand
washing)
Prohibit use of night soil
Cook vegetables
AMOEBIC
DYSENTERY
BACILLARY
DYSENTERY
Gradual onset
Copious amount
of stools
Offensive odor
Dark red
Few pus cells
Trophozoites of
E. histolytica
seen
Acute onset
Small amount of
stools
Odorless
Bright red
Many pus cells
Not seen
AMOEBIC
LIVER ABSCESS
PYOGENIC LIVER
ABSCESS
Gradual onset
Malaise to acute
presentation
Organism
responsible is E.
histolytica
trophozoites of
E. histolytica
sticking to wall of
abscess.
Anchovy sauce
Organism may be
E.coli, anaerobes
eg Bacteroides
Many pus cells
No trophozoites