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Blood & Tissue Protozoa The Hemoflagellates

1. The document discusses several protozoan parasites that can infect humans, including trypanosomes, leishmanias, toxoplasma, babesia, and pneumocystis. 2. These parasites are transmitted by various vectors like insects, ticks, and cats and can cause diseases like African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, toxoplasmosis, and pneumocystis pneumonia. 3. The document provides details on the life cycles, transmission, clinical signs, diagnosis, and treatment of these important protozoan parasites.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
280 views19 pages

Blood & Tissue Protozoa The Hemoflagellates

1. The document discusses several protozoan parasites that can infect humans, including trypanosomes, leishmanias, toxoplasma, babesia, and pneumocystis. 2. These parasites are transmitted by various vectors like insects, ticks, and cats and can cause diseases like African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, toxoplasmosis, and pneumocystis pneumonia. 3. The document provides details on the life cycles, transmission, clinical signs, diagnosis, and treatment of these important protozoan parasites.

Uploaded by

setya setiana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Protozoa

Blood & Tissue Protozoa


The Hemoflagellates:
The family Trypanosomatidae contains only two genera
that parasitize humans.
 Genus Trypanosoma contains members that may be
found either in the circulating blood or intracellularly (in
cardiac muscle). African - blood; American - blood &
cardiac muscle.
 Genus Leishmania are always intracellular, principally in
cells of the reticuloendothelial system.
The Protozoa
Blood & Tissue Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Originally parasites of insects;
these now serve as
intermediate hosts.
 American trypanosomiasis -
transmitted by reduviid bugs.
 African trypanosomiasis -
transmitted by Glossina spp.
tsetse flies.
The Protozoa
Blood & Tissue Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
 "Old World” leishmaniasis -
transmitted Phlebotomus spp.
sandflies.
 American leishmaniasis -

transmitted by Lutzomyia spp.


sandflies.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Trypanosoma brucei
 Two subspecies: rhodesiense &

gambiense
Trypanosoma b. rhodesiense  Life cycles are essentially identical.

 Rhodesian form - primarily an animal

pathogen, transmitted to humans by


Glossina morsitans.
Trypanosoma b. gambiense  Gambian form - transmitted by Glossina
palpalis group of tsetse fly.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Trypanosoma brucei (both sub-species)
 Site of infection - organisms multiply in blood early in disease;
later found in lymph nodes and in the CNS.
 Disease - febrile episodes, night sweats, malaise, headache;
enlarged cervical lymph nodes (“Winterbottom’s sign”); final
stages - uncontrolled desire to sleep.
 Diagnosis - examine wet mounts of aspirates from sight of insect
bite; and/or blood (buffy coat) for presence of trypanosomes
(numbers of organisms peak during fever spikes).
 Morphology - Epimastigote is the developmental form in flies;
trypomastigote is the infective stage.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Trypanosoma cruzi
 Disease - American trypanosomiasis, Chagas'
disease.
 Transmission - trypomastigote in reduviid bug
feces is introduced through the skin following
the bug's bite.
 Morphology - exhibits a characteristic “C”
shape with an undulating membrane and
anteriorly extending flagellum; the amastigote
is oval, averages 3 to 5 microns in diameter
and contains a nucleus and rod-shaped
kinetoplast.
The Protozoa

The Hemoflagellates:
Trypanosoma cruzi
 Trypomastigote and epimastigote forms may be found
in humans. The amastigote is a tissue stage; the
trypomastigote is blood stage; the epimastigote is a
developmental stage in the bug.
 Pathogenesis - acute phase is 1- 4 month’s duration;
chronic phase may last decades.
 Clinical signs - Edema of eyelids (Romana’s sign).
Fever, headache, malaise, myalgia, megacolon,
megaesophagus. Cardiac manifestations.
The Protozoa

The Hemoflagellates:
Trypanosoma cruzi
 Epidemiology notes: most prevalent in South America
especially Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, and
Venezuela. Has been found in Central America. Five
cases have been confirmed in Texas; one in California.
There is great concern about transfusion-induced cases
in the blood banking industry.
 Reservoir hosts - many animals including dogs,
opossums, cat, armadillos, etc.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Genus Leishmania
Four pathogenic species.
 Speciation - based on clinical

symptoms and manifestations.


 Diagnosis - finding amastigotes

in lesions; clinical signs and


symptoms determine the
“differential” diagnosis.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Leishmania tropica
 Distribution - Mediterranean
basin, India, Middle East, Asia &
Africa.
 Disease - Old World cutaneous
leishmaniasis; “Baghdad boil,”
“Oriental sore.”
 Diagnosis - identification of
intracellular amastigotes in
macrophages from active lesions.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Leishmania tropica
 Moist ulcers - Incubation period of several
weeks to months, followed by rapid
development of weeping ulcers that heal
within 6 months.
 Dry ulcers - Incubation period may last for
several years before appearance of a slowly
developing ulcer that is covered with a scaly
crust. May take years to heal.
 Healing of lesions of cutaneous
leishmaniasis signifies cell-mediated,
species-specific, lifelong immunity.
The Protozoa

The Hemoflagellates:
Leishmania mexicana
 Similar to L. tropica in that it causes cutaneous
leishmaniasis. Found in Central America,
Mexico, & Texas.
 Disease - New World cutaneous leishmaniasis,
chiclero ulcer.
 Diagnosis - identification of amastigotes at
periphery of lesion. Necrotic area at center of
lesion contains bacteria, few if any organisms.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Leishmania braziliensis
 Disease - Mucocutaneous
leishmaniasis, espundia.
 Disfigurement - erosion of oral,
nasal structures. Affects mainly
the mucous membranes and
cartilaginous areas of the nasal
and oral structures.
The Protozoa
The Hemoflagellates:
Leishmania donovani
 Disease - visceral leishmaniasis,
kala-azar (“black fever”).
 Pathogenesis - a viscerotropic
form, skin lesion seldom noticed;
in reticuloendothelial system,
organisms multiply; extensive
hyperplasia of parasitized tissue
impairs function of organs.
The Protozoa

Miscellaneous Others:
Toxoplasma gondii
 Definitive host - felines, domestic

cat is most important.


 Human infections are due to

ingestion of infective oocysts from


cat feces; ingestion of trophozoites
in undercooked or uncooked meat,
mother’s milk; congenital
transmission has been documented.
The Protozoa
Miscellaneous Others:
Toxoplasma gondii
 Infections are usually asymptomatic;
immune system keeps infection in
check; immunosuppression (HIV, etc.)
results in fulminating infection.
 Dangerous in pregnant women - the
organism can cross the placental
barrier and infect the fetus.
 Diagnosis - isolation of organism is
difficult; best diagnosed via
serological techniques.
The Protozoa
Miscellaneous Others:
Babesia spp.
 A widespread zoonosis,

transmitted via the bite of


infected hard ticks.
 Sexual reproduction takes place

in ticks. Asexual reproduction


takes place in a variety of
mammalian hosts.
The Protozoa
Miscellaneous Others:
Babesia spp.
 Multiplies within red blood cells; can
be confused with malaria ring forms.
Babesia rings are more pyriform,
multiplication results in pairs and
tetrads resembling a “maltese cross.”
 Pathology - Hemolysis is common,
resulting in anemia and jaundice.
Severe cases progress to renal
failure, hypotension, coma and death.
The Protozoa
Miscellaneous Others:
Pneumocystis carinii
 Classification of the organism is
uncertain (fungus or parasite).
 Pathology - “Interstitial Plasma-Cell
Pneumonia,” a highly fatal complication
of AIDS. The organism and infection are
widespread, similar to toxoplasmosis.
 Diagnosis - identification of cysts
(containing 8 trophozoites) or free
trophozoite forms in lung exudates;
sputum (AIDS patients); open lung
biopsy, bronchio-alviolar lavage (BAL).

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