Parasitology Flashcards

1
Q

Protozoa
“animal-like”

A

-unicellular heterotrophic
-lack photosynthetic capability
-motile
-reproduce by asexual fission

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2
Q

T/F Examples of protists are algae, slime molds, & water molds

A

True

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3
Q

Subphylum Mastigophora

A

-include flagellated protozoa
-Giardia lamblia, Leishmania species, Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense, & Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, Trypanosoma cruzi

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3
Q

Subphylum Sarcodina

A

-Move by pseudopodia
-Entamoeba histolitica produces diseases in humans

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3
Q

Phylum Apicomplexa (Sporozoa)

A

-Flagella
-Includes Plasmodium species (Malaria), Toxoplasma gondii (Toxoplasmosis), Cryptosporidium parvum (Cryptosporidiosis)

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3
Q

Phylum Ciliophora

A

-Cilia
-Cilia completely covers organism; found near oral cavity & helps propel food into opening (cytosome)
-Includes Balantidium coli (causes ulcers in large intestines)

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4
Q

Phylum Microspora

A

-Polar filament
-Microsporidium (Diarrhea): intracellular protozoan infection of immune compromised individuals

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5
Q

Protozoa Environment

T/F Majority of protoza are free-living (found in marine, fresh water & terrestrial habitats) while some are parasitic (hosts ranging from algae to humans).

A

True

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6
Q

T/F Protozoa are:
-Essential decomposers
-Require large amounts of moisture
-Important part of food chain by: eating bacteria, maintaining ecological balance in soil, & reduce sewage solids

A

True

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7
Q

Structure of Protozoa

A

-Lack cell wall (shape determined by material beneath plasma membrane

-Have membrane bound nucleus & organelles

-lack photosynthetic chloroplasts

-Have Cilia, flagella (diff from prokaryotes), pseudopodia, or polar filaments

-Pull in food, water, H2O from outside (readily diffuse thru cell membrane)

-Pinocytosis or Phagocytosis

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8
Q

Protozoa Reproduction

A

-require more than 1 habitat or host
-polymorphic: can be found in morphologically distinct forms @ diff stages of life
-can exist as trophozite (vegetative/feeding form) or as cyst (resting, infectious form when protozoa lacl nutrients, moisture, oxygen, etc.)

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9
Q

Protozoa Reproduction

Asexual &/or Sexual reproduction common

A

Binary fission: DNA replication followed by division of 2 cells longitudinally (flagellates) or transversely (ciliates)

*if protozoa has both flagella & cilia the method of replication decides how they’re classified

Multiple fissions (Schizogony): Multiple DNA divisions resulting in a cell w/many single-celled infectious organisms

*Release of these parasites at regular intervals produce the characteristic cyclic symptoms of malaria

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10
Q

Blood & Tissue Protozoa

Leishmaniasis

A

-zoonotic protozoa carried by rodents, dogs, & foxes; transmitted to humans by bite of sandfly

-Promastigote (flagellated motile form) invades macrophages & transforms into nonmotile amastigote. Amastigotes multiplies in phagocytic cells in the lymph node, spleen, liver, & bone marrow

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11
Q

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (L. tropica and L. mexicana)

A

-Skin ulcer develops at site of bite due to skin destruction following activation of intact Cell-Mediated Immunity (ulcer takes about a year to heal)

-Diffuse
*Nodular lesions diffuse across body due to inactive CMI response.
*Untreated infections can last for years

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12
Q

Mucocutaneous Leishmaniasis (L. braziliensis)

A

-Initial dermal ulceration heals. However, ulcers appear in the mucous membranes of the nose and mouth that may erode the nasal septum, soft palate and lips if left untreated

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13
Q

Visceral Leishmaniasis -Kala-azar (L. donovani)

A

-Common in young malnourished children

-Fever, anorexia, weight loss, & abdominal swelling (from enlargement of the liver (hepatomegaly) and spleen (splenomegaly) due to invasion of fixed reticuloendothelial cells (fixed phagocytic cells) of these organs

-Often fatal

14
Q

African Sleeping Sickness

A

-Following bite, the trypomastigote (flagellated motile form) spreads via the bloodstream to the lymph nodes and CNS

-Initial painful skin ulcer heals w/n two weeks followed by fever,headache, dizziness, and lymph node swelling that takes place due to systemic spread

-fevers are intermittent due to variable surface glycoproteins (VSG)

-CNS symptoms develop
-Daytime drowsiness (thus sleeping sickness), slurred speech, problems walking, coma, death

15
Q

How many forms of African Sleeping Sickness are there?

A

Two forms:

-West African Sleeping Sickness (Trypanosoma brucei gambiense)
**Notable for slowly progressing symptoms

-East African Sleeping Sickness (Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense)
**More severe with death occurring w/n weeks

16
Q

Chagas’ Disease

A

-Trypanosoma cruzi

-Trypomastigotes tunnel into the human host, transform into amastigote which invades skin, macrophages, lymph nodes, and spread in the blood to distant organs

-A hard, red area develops at site of entry followed by systemic spread with fever, malaise, and swollen lymph nodes.

-infected include the heart and CNS.

17
Q

Chaga’s Disease can occur in these 3 phases:

A

-Acute phase – fever, malaise, swollen lymph nodes, meningoencephalitis, acute myocarditis (resolves in about a month)

-Intermediate phase – low levels of parasites in blood and positive antibody responses against T. cruzi but NO Symptoms (most people remain here for life)

-Chronic phase – organs primarily affected are the heart, colon, esophagus)
dementia, megacolon, megaesophagus, heart damage, heart failure

18
Q

Plamodium species (Malaria)

A
  • ~200 million global cases of malaria leading to a mortality of more than one million people per year

-Periodic episodes of high fever and shaking chills (paroxysms), followed by periods of profuse sweating (occurs when the red blood cells burst and release merozoites)

-Tertian malaria - P. vivax and P. ovale – every 48 hrs

-Quartan malaria - P. malaria – every 72 hrs

-**P. falciparum – most common and deadly; irregular episodes