CHAPTER 1.Ppt-2 Parasitology
CHAPTER 1.Ppt-2 Parasitology
CHAPTER 1.Ppt-2 Parasitology
1. INTRODUCTION
TO
Medical Parasitology
OUTLINE
Definition of Medical Parasitology
History and scope of Medical Parasitology
Importance of Parasitology
Concepts related to Medical Parasitology
Epidemiology of parasites.
General life cycle of parasites
Parasitic diseases
Host immunity & immune - evasion of parasites
Taxonomy and nomenclature of parasites
Learning Objectives
At the end of this chapter the student will be able to:
Define common terms used in Medical Parasitology
Describe scope of Medical parasitology
Explain host-parasite relationship
Discuss the epidemiology of parasites
Explain the general life cycles of parasites
Explain briefly host immunity & immune – evasion
mechanisms by parasites
Describe classification of medically important parasites
Introduction to Medical Parasitology
1.1. Definition
Medical Parasitology (Greece: Para = beside, Sitos = food)
The study of the parasites of man and their medical
consequences.
It is a subject that researches:
The biological features of medically important parasites,
The relationship between the human being and the
parasites,
The diagnosis, treatment and prevention & control of the
parasitic diseases.
1.2. History and scope of Medical Parasitology
I. History of Parasitology
Clear documentation of A.lumbricoides, D.medinensis &
Taenia spp was found in Papyrus Ebers (1550BC) & other
ancient Egyptian writings; also aware of schistosomes
Aristotle familiar with helminths involving dogs, fish & pigs
Aristophanes recognized A.lumbricoides, Taenia spp & E.
vermicularis
Arabs- familiar with D.medinensis
History….
Aretaeus- human hydatidosis
Anthony Fitzherbert(1470-1538)- F.hepatica
Ancient Chinese believed a man should harbor at least
3worms to remain in good health
18thc Europe many regarded the presence of worms in
children as being beneficial to their health
Reports of fanciful or imaginary worms causing all
manner of disease(s)
Parasites were implicated in the 17th c in the etiology of
many diseases, including syphilis & plague
II. Scope of Medical Parasitology
Medical Protozology
(single celled animals)
Medical helminthology
(worms)
Medical Parasitology
Medical Arthropodology
Importance ….
Six major tropical diseases to which WHO pays great
attention include:
Malaria,
Schistosomiasis,
Filariasis,
Leishmaniasis,
Trypanosomiasis and
Leprosy.
Five of them are parasitic diseases except leprosy.
All the above diseases are prevalent in Ethiopia
Burden
500,000-1,000,000 deaths/year
Malaria - 500,000,000 infected
2,500,000 deaths/year
Filariasis - 250,000,000 infected
Trypanosomiasis - 25,000,000 infected
65,000 deaths/year
Leishmaniasis - 1,200,000 infected
1.4. Concepts related to Parasitology
1.4.1. Symbiosis
Any association between two different organisms, in which
one partner lives in or on another one’s body and interact.
Each organism is called a symbiont.
3 types:
Mutualism
Commensalism
Parasitism
Mutualism
Permanent association between two different
organisms that life apart is impossible (one cannot
survive in the absence of the other.
Two partners benefit each other,
The mutuals are metabolically dependent on one
another;
Commensalism
Close relationship between two different organisms from
which one benefits and the other neither benefits nor
suffers.
E.g. E. Coli and man.
Parasitism
The association between two different organisms in
which one (the parasite) derives benefit from the other
(the host), usually to obtain food or physical support.
Parasitism can have minor or major effects on the
survival of the host.
E.g. Ascaris lumbricoides and man.
1.4.2.Parasite and types of parasites
I. Parasite
It is a small organism which lives in or on the host (larger
organism)
In parasitism, parasite is the benefited partner which
obtains nourishment and shelter (niche) from the host
The parasite harms the host and has a much higher
reproductive capability compared to its host.
II. Types of Parasites
Euryxenous parasites:
Those with a broad host range.
Stenoxenous parasites:
Those with a narrow host range
Other types of parasites
Aberrant parasite:
Found in locations in the host where they normally do
not occur.
E.g. Ascaris larvae may migrate to the brain
Incidental parasite:
Occurs in hosts where it does not normally occur;
E.g., Fasciola normally does not occur in man but is
incidental if found in human’s liver.
1.4.3.Hosts and types of hosts
other.
Classification
1. Biological vectors:
E. g. Plasmodium vivax
Trophozoite - the active, motile feeding stage of an
apicomplexan parasite, and the motile stage of flagellate
protozoa.
E.g. Giardia spp.
Cyst – A stage in the life cycle of certain parasites
(protozoan), during which they are enveloped in a
protective wall.
It is usually the infective stage. Its functions are
protection, transmission and multiplication.
1.5. Epidemiology of parasite
Epidemiology: The study of the patterns of diseases
within populations
For parasites, this includes:
Host range – what can it infect?
Geographic range – where is it?
Is it a zoonotic agent?
Can it infect humans?
Does it have a reservoir?
Does it have a nidus?
1.5.1. Distribution of parasites and its determinant factors
Distribution
Parasite occur globally
The majority occur in tropical regions,
Factors
Filariae Lymphatic filariasis and 120 million Not fatal but 40 million
elephantiasis disfigured or
incapacitated
Trypanasoma cruzi Chagas disease (cardiovascular) 13 million 14,000
1. Contaminated soil:
Soil polluted with human excreta is commonly
responsible for exposure to infection with
geohelminthes
2. Contaminated water: may contain
a. Cercarial stages of blood flukes,
b. Viable cysts of Amoeba, flagellates etc…
c. Cyclops containing larva of D. medinensis
d. Fresh water fishes which are sources for fish
tape worm, and intestinal flukes infection
e. Crab or cray fishes that are sources for lung fluke
f. Water plants which are sources for F. buski.
3. Raw or Insufficiently cooked meat of pork, beef and fish
• Trichinella spiralis, Taenia species, D.latum.
Classified as:
If the parasite:
Has complex life cycle,
Requires biological vectors and/or
One or more intermediate hosts
Route of Transmission
I. Ingestion of infective stage of parasites:
In food, water or hands contaminated with faeces,
E.g. E. histolytica, E. vermicularis, etc.
In raw or undercooked meat,
E.g. T. saginata, T. solium, T. spiralis
In raw or undercooked fish, crab, or water vegetation
E.g. intestinal flukes
Water containing Cyclope e.g., D. medinensis
II. Skin penetration when in Contact with:
Faecally polluted soil,
1 3
1.6.1. Simple or direct life cycle
I. Nonspecific immunity
Macrophage endocytosis
Common for bacteria and small protozoa
Inflammation
1.9.1. Taxonomy
1.9. Taxonomy and nomenclature of parasites
1.9.1. Taxonomy
Taxonomy of metazoa
Nematodes (round worms)
Appear round in cross section,
Have body cavities, a straight alimentary canal and an anus
ending
Cestodes (Tapeworms):
Adults found in the intestine of their host
Have a head (scolex) with sucking organs, segmented
body but no alimentary canal
Each body segment is hermaphrodite
Trematodes:
Non-segmented, usually leaf-shaped, with two suckers