parasitic infection Flashcards

1
Q

define infection

A

invasion by and growth of
pathogenic microorganisms
within the body

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2
Q

define disease

A
a disordered or incorrectly functioning
organ, part, structure, or system of
the body resulting from the effect of
genetic or developmental errors,
infection, poisons, nutritional deficiency
or imbalance, toxicity, or unfavorable
environmental factors; illness;
sickness; ailment.
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3
Q

what is a parasite?

A

organism living in or on the host and
dependent on the host for nutrition - causing
damage

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4
Q

what are the 2 different types of parasites?

A

endoparasites; protozoa, metazoa

ectoparasites

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5
Q

what is a protozoa? give an example

A

single celled organism

amoeba, coccidiae, ciliae, flagellates

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6
Q

what is a metazoa?

give an example

A

multicellular orgamisms

roundworms, flatworms, flukes

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7
Q

what are the 2 different types of amoeba?

A
  •   Entamoeba histolytica

*   Entamoeba dispar

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8
Q

give 3 examples of coccidia and the diseases they cause

A

plasmodium –> malaria
toxoplasma –> toxoplasmosis
cryptosporidium –> diarrhoea

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9
Q

what are the main symptoms of malaria?

A

Fever, headache, chills, vomiting, muscle pain
Paroxysm (cycle in 4-8hrs)

Complications of malaria:
Severe anemia (destruction of red cells)
Cerebral malaria (swelling of the brain,seizures, coma)
liver failure
Shock 
Pulmonary edema
abnormally low blood sugar 
kidney failure
swelling and rupturing of the spleen
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10
Q

how might someone get infected by toxoplasma?

A

Humans can become infected by any of several routes:
• eating undercooked meat of animals harboring tissue cysts
• consuming food or water contaminated with cat feces
• by contaminated environmental samples
• blood transfusion

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11
Q

what are the concequenses of toxoplasma infection?

A

worse in immuncocompromised patients

Immunocompromised patients may develop central nervous system disease, brain lesions, pneumonitis or retinochoroiditis among other risks.

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12
Q

what are the symptoms of cryptosporidium

A

Causes diarrhoea, fever, nausea, vomiting in humans; very common in HIV+ patients presenting with diarrhoea.

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13
Q

give an example of a ciliate?

A

balantidium coli

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14
Q

what are the symptoms of balantidium coli infection?

A

symptomless in most people
–> problem as may stay in person for a long time undetected

Immunocompromised patients may experience more severe signs and symptoms: persistent diarrhea, dysentery, abdominal pain, weight loss, nausea, and vomiting. If left untreated, perforation of the colon can occur.

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15
Q

give an example of a flagellate

A

giardia lamblia

trichomoniasis (sexually transmitted)

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16
Q

what are the symptoms of giardiasis?

A
Acute symptoms: 
Diarrhea
Greasy stools that tend to float
Stomach or abdominal cramps
Upset stomach or nausea/vomiting
Dehydration (loss of fluids)
17
Q

what are the symptoms of trichomoniasis infection?

A

Females10-50% are asymptomatic.
=> vaginal discharge, vulval itching, dysuria, or offensive odour, but these are not specific for TV.
Occasionally the presenting complaint is of low abdominal discomfort or vulval ulceration.

Males
15 to 50% of men are asymptomatic
=> discharge and/or dysuria.

ComplicationsDetrimental outcome on pregnancy and is associated with preterm delivery and low birth weight.

18
Q

what are some different examples of parasitic worms?

A
  •   Roundworms (Nematodes): Ascaris, hookworm, Filaria, Strongyloides
  •   Flatworms (Cestodes): Taenia (Tapeworms)
  •   Flukes (Trematodes): Schistosoma
19
Q

what are the symptoms of ascarasis infection?

A

often symptomless
large number: abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction
larvae may cause localised reaction in organs

20
Q

what are the main symptoms of hookworm infection?

A

iron deficiency anaemia- caused by blood loss at site of intestinal attachment
cardiac complications
GI and nutritional/metabolic symptoms
resp symptoms

21
Q

what are the symptoms of taenia infection?

A

Most people => no symptoms or mild symptoms. Patients with T. saginata taeniasis often experience more symptoms (size of the worm up to 10m) that those with T. solium or T. asiatica (~3 m).

Tapeworms can cause digestive problems including abdominal pain, loss of appetite, weight loss, and upset stomach.
The most visible sign of taeniasis is the active passing of tapeworm segments

22
Q

what is the most common cause of aquired epilepsy worldwide?

A

taenia solium infection

23
Q

give an example of a trematode (fluke)

A

schistosomiasis

24
Q

what are the symptoms of schistosomiasis

A

Within days: possible rash or itchy skin. Within 1-2 months; fever, chills, cough, and muscle aches but most people have no symptoms at this early phase of infection.

eggs produces travel to intestines, liver or bladder causing inflammation or scarring

repeatedly infected children : anaemia, malnutrition, learning difficulties

25
Q

what is an ectoparasite?

A

parasite that lives on the outside of the host

26
Q

give some examples of ectoparasites

A

Pediculus humanus capitis (head louse),

Pediculus humanus corporis (body louse, clothes louse)

Pthirus pubis (“crab” louse, pubic louse)

27
Q

what are examples of diseases caused by Leishmania parasite?

A

Visceral Leishmaniasis

cutaneous leishamaniasis

diffuse cutaneous
leishmaniasis

mucoocutaneous/ mucosal leishmaniasis