Parasitology Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What is a parasite?

A

organism that lives in/on a host, getting its food at the expense of the host - can be obligate or facultative

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2
Q

What are three classes of parasites?

A

Helminths
Protozoa
Arthropods

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3
Q

What are the three classes of helminths?

A

Nematodes (round worms)
Trematodes (flat worms)
Cestodes (tape worms)

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4
Q

What are the three classes of protozoa?

A

Malaria
Flagellates
Amoebae

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5
Q

What are the three main classes of arthropods?

A

Lice
Ticks
Mites

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6
Q

Describe protozoa

A

Unicellular

Found on blood and tissue (arthropod vector) or intestines (faecal-oral route)

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7
Q

What parasite causes malaria?

A

Plasmodium falciparum

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8
Q

What is the vector for malaria transmission?

A

Anopheles mosquito

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9
Q

How can plasmodium falciparum be detected in the lab?

A

Using a Giemsa-stained blood film - think/thin

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10
Q

Describe how malaria is transmitted?

A
  • sporozoites injected under the skin
  • moves from blood to liver to mature
  • merozoites re-enter circulation and invade RBCs
  • sexual forms taken up by mosquitoes for further transmission
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11
Q

What parasite causes amoebic dysentery?

A

Entamoeba histolytica

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12
Q

Describe how amoebic dysentery presents clinically

A
  • trophozoite ingests RBCs using pseudopodia

- causes cysts/intestinal infections/liver abscesses

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13
Q

What parasite causes leishmaniasis?

A

Leishmania species - cutaneous/muco-cutaneous/visceral

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14
Q

Describe the symptoms of leishmaniasis

A
  • ulceration
  • fever
  • weight loss
  • hepato-splenomegaly (liver and spleen swelling)
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15
Q

How is a leishmania species transmitted?

A

Using a sand fly vector

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16
Q

Give examples of infections caused by nematodes

A

Enterobiasis

Ascaris lumbricoides

17
Q

How is ascaris lumbricoides transmitted?

A
  • eggs hatch in intestines
  • larvae move to the lungs where they are re-swallowed
  • worms develop in the small intestine
18
Q

Give examples of infections caused by cestodes

A

taenia saginata/solium

echinococcus

19
Q

How is taenia saginata transmitted?

A

Beef; cysts (worm formed) or eggs (cysts formed) in humans

20
Q

How is taenia solium transmitted?

A

Pork; cysts or eggs ingested

21
Q

How is echinococcus transmitted?

A
  • ingestion of dog faeces
  • eggs hatch and enter circulation
  • cysts firm in the liver
22
Q

Give an example of an infection caused by a trematode

A

Schistosomiasis

23
Q

Describe how a schistosomiasis species is transmitted

A
  • ova excreted by humans into water
  • miracidia released
  • snail penetrated
  • cercaria emerge
  • human penetrated
  • lung to liver to mature (on to bladder)
  • eggs causing bladder/intestinal imflammation
  • Katayama fever (acute febrile episode presents)
24
Q

How are parasite infections diagnosed?

A
  • helminths cause eosinophilia and elevated IgE levels
  • microscopy of faeces/tissue
  • serology to detect antibodies