Human Parasitology Exam 1

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140 Terms

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symbiosis

unlike organisms living together

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phoresis

one organism is mechanically carried on or in another species; "to carry"

-no dependence on the part of the symbiont (host)

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commensalism

one organism feeds on food not consumed by the host; one partner benefits and the other is neither helped or harmed

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mutualism

each member of the association benefits the other; one cannot survive without the other

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parasitism

one organism benefits (gains nourishment/habitat on or in the host), host is harmed

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protozoa

unicellular eukaryotes

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metazoa

multicellular eukaryotes

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platyhelminthes

flatworms including flukes and tapeworms

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nematodes

elongated worms with rigid cuticles

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arthropods

insects, ticks, fleas, lice, mites which either are parasitic or transmit parasites as vectors

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ectoparasites

live on, but not in their hosts (can still cause severe illness)

-in humans, attach and burrow in the skin

(all parasitic arthropods are ectoparasites)

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endoparasite

live within the body and tissues of their hosts

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intercellular parasites

(macroparasites)

-inhabit spaces in the host's body (ex: GI tract, muscle)

-longer generation time and tendency for reinfection

-intermediate hosts common

-larger

-not within cells (between muscle cells)

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intracellular parasite

(microparasites- very small)

-inhabit within cells inside host's body

-shorter generation time and infection time

-typically rely on vector for transmission

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infectious diesase

caused by transmittable parasitic agents including bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa and a variety of metazoans

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infection

usually implies replication of agent resulting in a growing number of pathogens

(generally caused by endoparasites)

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infestation

characterized by a constant number of pathogens

-severity of disease often depends on infection dose

(generally caused by ectoparasites)

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obligate parasite

(most common)

-cannot complete life cycle without spending at least part of time in parasitic relationship

-may have a free-living stage outside any host (in capsule or cyst for protection)

*have to spend some portion of life in the host (can't survive without spending part of their life in host)

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facultative parasite

not normally parasitic but can become so when accidentally ingested or invaded

-often severe consequences

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accidental or incidental parasite

a parasite that enters or attaches to the body of a species of host different from its normal

-may not survive long

-may be extremely pathogenic

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permanent parasite

lives entire life within or on their hosts

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temporary or intermittent parasite

(micropredator) parasites that only feed on the host and then leave

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definitive host

host in which a parasite reaches sexual maturity

-parasite infects a single host

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intermediate host

host in which some development of the parasite occurs but in which it does not reach sexual maturity

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vector

a living carrier that transports a pathogenic organism from an infected to a non-infected host

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paratenic or transport host

host that harbors a parasite in an arrested state of development even though the parasite remains alive and viable, ready to infect a subsequent suitable host

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reservoir host

alternate animal host from which the parasite can be transmitted to humans or domestic animals

-makes parasite control very difficult

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carrier host

one that has contracted an infectious disease, but who displays no symptoms but can transmit it to others (asymptomatic carrier)

-have had the pathogen potentially without having symptoms and then harbored the organism within their body and can transmit it to others

ex: typhoid fever - typhoid mary mallon

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sylvatic

forest dweller

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hyperparasite (epiparasite)

an organism that parasitizes another parasite. common in insect-eating insects

ex: a protozoan (the hyperparasite) living in the digestive tract of a flea living on a dog

(the parasite's parasite)

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parasitoid

an organism that, during its development, lives in or on the body of a single host individual which it sterilizes, kills, and sometimes consumes.

-common in insects

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prepatency

infected but parasite presence can not be detected yet (false negatives)

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patency

established infection, parasite stages can be detected

-(malaria parasites in blood smears, worm eggs in feces, etc.)

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incubation period

time between infection and the development of symptoms

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acute disease

can lead to crisis which can resolve in spontaneous healing, chronic infection, or death

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convalescence

period after healing, absence of infections agents, no symptoms, in certain cases immunity to reinfection

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density

average number of parasites per host in a sample of hosts; also referred to as abundance

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intensity

number of parasites in an infected host

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prevalence

fraction or percentage of a single host species infected at a given time

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incidence

number of new infections per unit time divided by the number of uninfected hosts at the beginning of the measured time

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aggregated population

a situation in which most of the parasites occur in a relative minority of hosts and most host individuals are either uninfected or lightly infected

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immunology first line of defense

barriers to entry

-skin: keratin, dryness, defensins, acid mantle

-mucous membranes: lines digestive, respiratory, urinary, reproductive tracts; mucus, lysozyme

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immunology second line of defense

innate: several nonspecific defense

mechanisms; effective against a broad range of pathogens

- PRRs

- Leukocytes, Macrophages (phagocystosis), NK cells

- cytokines, complement system, fever, inflammation

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immunology 3rd line of defense

adaptive/acquired = the immune system

- systemic, specific and leaves the body with memory

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PRRs

Pattern Recognition receptors- TLR's, dendritic cells

-recognize structures unique to microbes and required for their survival

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B cells

humoral immunity

-mediated by antibodies that do not directly destroy a pathogen

-indirect: Abs assault the pathogen

-only works against the extracellular stage of infections

*3 stages: recognition, attack, memory

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T cells

cellular immunity

-lymphocytes that directly attack and destroy foreign cells or diseased host cells

-means of ridding the body of pathogens that reside inside human cells, where they are inaccessible to antibodies

-kills cells that harbor them

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dendritic cells (DCs)

antigen-presenting cells

-process antigen material and present it on the cell surface to cell of Adaptive Immune System

-act as messengers between the innate and the adaptive immune systems

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phagocytes

phagocytic cells with a voracious appetite for foreign matter

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neutrophils

*most abundant white blood cell

-wander in connective tissue killing bacteria

-phagocytosis and digestion

-produce a cloud of bactericidal chemicals

-create a killing zone

-kill more bacteria with toxic chemicals than phagocytosis

-kill off themselves in the process

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eosinophils

make up tiny amount of WBC's

-stand guard against parasites, pathogens, etc.

-particularly active at killing helminthes

-found especially in mucous membrane

-produce superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and toxic proteins to kill

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basophils

smallest amount of WBC's

-produce chemicals called leukotrienes

-at a site of infection the leukotrienes from the basophils will call for backup at site (neutrophils/eosinophils)

-increased blood flow brings more blood cells into the area

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lymphocytes

adaptive immunity

25-45% of WBC's

T cells, B cells, NK cells

-immune surveillance and specific immunity

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monocytes

3-8% WBC's

-emigrate from the blood into C.T. and transform into macrophages

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macrophage system

all the body's avidly phagocytic cells, except leukocytes

-wandering and fixed macrophages

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complement system

a group of 30 or more globular proteins that make powerful contributions to both innate and acquired immunity

-synthesized mainly by liver

-circulate in blood in inactive form, activated by pathogen

*pathogen destruction by inflammation, phagocytosis, cytolysis

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cytolysis

cell bursts

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NK cells

natural killer cells

-continuously patrol body looking for pathogens and diseased host cells

-not phagocytic

-release chemicals called perforins that poke holes in the target cell membrane (which can no longer maintain homeostasis); dies by apoptosis

-macrophages engulf and digest dying cells

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pyrexia

fever

-promotes interferon activity

-elevates metabolic rate and accelerates tissue repair

-inhibits reproduction of bacteria and viruses

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major processes in inflammation (3)

1. mobilization of body defenses

2. containment and destruction of pathogens

3. tissue cleanup and repair

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cytokines

*chemical messengers

chemicals that regulate inflammation and immunity

-secreted mainly by leukocytes

-alter the physiology or behavior of receiving cell

-include interleukins, tumor necrosis factor, chemotactic factors, and more

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3 differences between adaptive immune response and innate response

specificity, memory, systemic (involves entire body)

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lymphocytes (3)

NK cells

T lymphocytes (T cells)

B lymphocytes (B cells)

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immunoglobulins

antibodies

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IgA

immunoglobulin A

-monomer in plasma, dimer in mucus, saliva, tears, milk and intestinal secretions

*epithelial protection

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IgD

Immunoglobulin

-monomer

-B cell Ag receptor

-functions in B cell activation by antigens

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IgG

immunoglobulin

-monomer

-80% circulating antibodies

-crosses placenta to fetus

-secreted in 2nd immune response

-complement fixation

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IgE

-monomer

-transmembrane protein on basophils/mast cells

* attracts eosinophils to parasitic infections

-stimulates histamine release (allergy, inflammation)

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IgM

-pentamer in plasma & lymph

-secreted in 1st immune response

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ADCC

antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

-particularly important against parasites

-eosinophils and neutrophils

-stimulate NK cells

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cytotoxic T cells

killer T cells

-take infected cells out of circulation

-poisonous to infected cells

-need help from helper cells

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Helper T cells

*very important

-stimulate other T cell populations, B cell populations, and nonspecific defenses

-crucial cells

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Regulatory T cells

bring things to an end and mediate immune response

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Memory T cells

descend from the cytotoxic T cells

-responsible for memory in cellular immunity

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APCs

antigen presenting cells

-show T cells what the foreign antigen looks like by covering themselves in it- specifically for helper T cells

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T(c) cells respond only to which proteins

MHC-1

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T(h) cells respond only to which proteins

MHC-II (only occur on APCs and display only foreign antigens)

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alimentary transmission route

fecal-oral transmission

-ingestion of raw or undercooked food or drinking water containing the infective stage of the parasite

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congenital transmission

through the placenta

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fomites transmission

a non-living object such as bedding, towels, toys that can carry disease-causing organisms

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parenchymatous/albuminous degeneration

tissue damage (cloudy swelling)

-accumulation of watery fluid, granule accumulation, indistinct nuclei, pale cytoplasm

*swollen cells

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fatty degeneration

tissue damage

-accumulation of fat in non-fatty cells, yellowish color

-usually related to liver

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necrosis

tissue degeneration

-local death of cells or tissue inside living tissue/body

-well-defined, structureless, dark

-usually liver

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hypertrophy

tissue changes

-abnormal increase in cell volume/size and organ size usually due to engorgement by intracellular parasites

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hyperplasia

tissue changes

-increase in number of cells and organ size

-often involves liver, endocrine glands, glandular epithelium, lymph nodes

-cells divide

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metaplasia

tissue changes

-substitution of one cell type for another within an organ without the intervention of stem cells

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neoplasia

tissue changes

-abnormal cell growth in a tissue, producing entirely new entity (tumor); may be benign or malignant

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euprotista

unicellular eukaryotes

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plasmamella

cell membrane

ectoplasm/endoplasm

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contractile vacuoles

pump out excess water

-volume and osmotic regulation

-freshwater protozoans

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trichocysts and toxicysts

hair-like structures that come shooting out (protection and feeding)

- Cover body of some parasites

-protection, feeding

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cilia

tiny beating hair

-Supported by microtubules

-Propel cell through the water

-Sweep material through surface of cell

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flagella

-Bend and rapidly straighten to propel or pull cell through fluid

-Largest of protozoans

-Pretty common

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pseudopodia

move cell towards food

-branch-like feet

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lobopodia

broad with round tips, clear ectoplasmic area

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filopodia

lack hyaline cap

-very slender, often branched

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reticulopodia

very elaborate, thin branching filaments

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luminal amoebiasis

carrier is asymptomatic and producing large quantities of cysts into the environment

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invasive amoebiasis

acutely symptomatic but shedding noninfective trophozoites

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Giardia cysts

-can survive outside the host (cyst walls = protection)

* infective

-excyst in small intestine --> divide into 8 metacystic trophozoites