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Symbiosis
living together of unlike organisms
association of two species for food and shelter
Commensalism
“eating at the same table” in Latin
one species benefits from the relationship without harming or benefiting from the other
Commensalism
What type of symbiosis?
Entamoeba coli living in intestinal lumen and does not harm
Mutualism
a symbiosis where two organisms benefit from each other
“give and take”
Mutualism
What type of symbiosis?
Termites and flagellates, where flagellates have enzymes (Lignin & cellulose) to digest wood
Parasitism
symbiosis where an organism lives in or on another for its survival and usually at the expense of the host
Parasitism
What type of symbiosis?
Entamoeba histolytica gets nutrition from human host and causes amebic dysentery (blood in stool)
ONE HEALTH - GIDA
Geographically Isolated and Disadvantaged Areas
public health initiative wherein we should also take care of other organisms and the environment for parasites not to circulate in the community
Endoparasite
Ectoparasite
Erratic
3 types of parasite acc. to habitat
Endoparasite
= INFECTION
parasite inside the host’s body
located in organs and circulates around the body
EX. Ascaris lumbricoides
giant intestinal roundworm / nematode
also erratic parasite
Ectoparasite
= INFESTATION
parasite on the surface of the body
EX. Lice
head, body, and pubic lice
humans as their only host
sucks blood, skin gets itchy
Erratic
a parasite in an organ which is not its usual habitat
Obligate
Temporary
Intermittent
Facultative
Accidental / incidental
Permanent
Spurious
Types of parasites acc. to relationship between host and parasite
Obligate parasite
type of parasite that requires host otherwise it dies
cannot survive in any other manner in the absence of its host
ex. Soil transmitted helminths
Temporary parasite
parasite that lives on host for short amount of time
obligatory at one or more stages of their life cycle but free living at others
Intermittent parasite
parasites that visit their host during feeding time for nourishment
mosquitoes
Facultative parasite
parasite that may exist in free-living state or as a commensal and become parasitic when they need to
can survive w/o host
ex. hot springs in Laguna
Accidental or Incidental parasite
parasite that establishes itself in a host in which it does not usually live
ex. a parasite of the pig but human ingested the feces
Permanent parasite
parasite that remains on / in the body of host for its entire life
Spurious parasite
parasite that is free-living
passes thru the digestive tract w/o infecting the host
Commensal / Non-pathogenic
Disease-causing / Pathogenic
Types of parasite acc. to pathogenicity
Definitive or Final
Intermediate
Paratenic
Reservoir
Vectors
Types of Host
Definitive or Final Host
type of host that has the adult or sexually mature stage of parasite
ex. human - host for lymphatic filarial worms - elephantiasis
Intermediate Host
type of host that has the larval stages or asexual stage of parasite and will leave the host eventually
First Intermediate Host
type of IH that has early larval stage
ex. snail
Second Intermediate Host
type of IH that has infective larval stage
ex. snail, fish, vegetable, crabs, ants
Paratenic or Transport Host
type of host that has undeveloped or arrested state of development parasite
parasite does not develop to later stages but remains alive and can infect other hosts
ex. Paragonimus westermani
wild boar - ingested a parasite but it doesn’t develop further
Reservoir Host
type of host that can hold the parasite and can spread disease
it allows the parasite’s life cycle to continue
alternative host of a parasite
Zoonosis
an infectious disease that has jumped from a non-human animal to humans.
Preadaptation (evolutionary changes)
parasite undergoes this change due to increased resistance to enzymes of the host
Vectors
responsible for transmission
spreads the parasite
ex. blood feeding arthropods
Biologic Vector
a vector that is an intermediate host
ex. mosquitoes - blood meal
Mechanical or Phoretic Vector
type of vector that does not bite
serve as bridge that transfers infection
ex. flies, lice, cockroaches
on their feet, transfers cysts from feces to food/drink that humans eat
Oral
Skin penetration
Arthropod bites (vector borne)
Congenital
Transmammary
Diff. modes of transmission
Oral
most common MOT
contaminated food and water - most common source of infection
portal of exit: anus (fecal-oral route)
ex. tapeworms
scolex (head) should be killed in deworming
ex. E. histolytica, Giardia duodenalis, Clonorchis, Opisthorchis, Haplorchis
Taenia solium
pig tapeworm
Taenia saginata
cow tapeworm
Dibothriocephalus latus
fish tapeworm
Skin penetration
MOT examples:
Hookworms, Strongyloides - Filariform larvae (Infective stage)
Schistosoma sp. enter skin via water - Cercariae (Infective stage)
Arthropod bites (vector borne)
MOT thru mosquito, fly, ticks, bugs
Mosquito
Anopheles:
Malaria - unicellular, protozoans
Filariasis - microscopic worms
Litoralis - found in brackish water
Aedes aegypti
dengue
zika virus
yellow fever
Anopheles mosquito
mosquito that lives in rural or forest
wants clean streams of water
Aedes mosquito
mosquito that lives in urban or cities
wants decaying matter
African trypanosomiasis
“african sleeping sickness”
disease caused by Trypanosoma brucei
tsetse fly - bites humans
Fly
what causes:
Onchocerciasis
Loiasis
Leishmaniasis - South America
Tick
Babesiosis
Bug (Reduviid)
Chagas’ disease
at night, “kissing bug” likes to bite near the mouth, suck blood then poop
Congenital Transmission
MOT where a mother gets infected while pregnant and is passed to the baby
ex. Toxoplasma gondii - in cat feces; cats as their host
Transmammary
The transfer of infective larval stages of helminths via the mammary glands.
ex. Ancylostoma and Strongyloides
travel to the lymphatics
Autoinfection
transfer of a life cycle stage of the parasite from one site to another inside the same host / “getting infected again”
ex. E. vermicularis - inhalation of airborne eggs
pinworm
inhaling hands after itching (pruritus) the butt with layed eggs
Trichomonas vaginalis
acquired thru sex
“ping pong disease”
males are asymptomatic
Signs:
offensive frothy discharge
+/- vulvitis or vaginitis
strawberry cervix - the parasite bites the cervix
Epidemiology
the study of distribution, and occurrence of disease
How what when why
Movement of disease across a population
Incidence
number of new cases or infections
Prevalence
number of old and new cases or infections
total population
Intensity of Infection
refers to burden of infection, which is related to the number of worms per infected person
counts the worms through the eggs and get proximate number
fecal analysis technique
Worm Burden
checked thru eggs
count eggs to approximate number of adult worms
this serves as guide for deworming
higher values means difficult to deworm (ascaris)
Morbidity
number of people with disease - population
how worse the disease - individual
Mortality
number of people that died - population
risk of an individual to die - individual
Deworming
the use of anthelmintic drugs in an individual or a public health program
Paralyzes the muscles of the parasite
Disease eradication
permanent reduction to zero of worldwide incidence of infection caused by specific agent as a result of deliberate efforts
ex. smallpox
the world wala na itong certain disease
Disease elimination
reduction to zero of incidence of disease in a defined or small geographic area as a result of deliberate efforts
Sporadic
disease that occurs infrequently and irregularly
every once in a while, appears occassionally
Endemic
constant presence and/or prevalence of a disease or infectious agent within a geographic area, steady, moderate level
stays in the place where the host is
ex. Malaria in Palawan; Dengue in tropical countries
Epidemic
increase in the incidence, often sudden in the number of cases of a disease often above what is normally expected in the population of an area
Pandemic
epidemic that spread over countries or continents = GLOBAL
Prevention (quarantine)
done before a disease
suspected to have a disease but not yet confirmed
Control (isolation)
confirmed to have disease and should be isolated to gain control over the development of the infection and provide treatment
Creation of enzymes
Invasion and destruction of host tissue
Depriving the host of essential nutrients and substances
3 Mechanisms by which parasites cause injury
HOOKWORM
this parasite sucks blood because it needs iron
FISH TAPEWORM
parasite that sucks blood for Vitamin B12 (humans need it for formation of RBCs)
Fasciolopsis buski (giant intestinal fluke)
may produce severe local damage to the intestinal wall by means of its powerful suckers
E. histolytica
parasite that erodes the intestinal wall
has proteolytic enzyme for destroying tissues
Plasmodium falciparum (malarial parasite)
parasite that invades and multiplies in RBCs which get destroyed in the process
Ascaris lumbricoides
parasite that may perforate the bowel wall, cause intestinal obstruction if present in large numbers, and ectopically may invade the appendix, bile duct, or other organs
Genetic make-up of host - Duffy antigen helps protect against malaria
Nutritional status of host
Immunity of the host
Factors that affect outcome of Infection in the host
Parasite fails to become established in host.
It becomes established and host eliminates infection.
It becomes established, host begins to overcome infection but not totally successful. -- remnants of parasite and may regrow
It becomes established, host tries to eliminate it but damages itself.
It becomes established and kills the host.
Possible outcomes of parasite to host interactions
Physical barriers
the 1st line of defense against pathogens
skin
mucous membranes
components of bodily fluids
physiologic functions of the body
Innate immune response
this immune response where the body detects and eliminates pathogens through non-specific mechanisms
ex. Phagocytosis - macrophage & dendritic cells
Acquired immune response
the host is exposed to parasite antigens which stimulate the immune response
ex. T & B cells
Resistance to infection
this permits survival of parasites upon entering blood and tissues
ex. cuticle and skin resist macrophage
Immune suppression
parasites reduce the immune function of the macrophages, hence defective processing of antigen
Antigenic variation
Changes in the antigenic molecules of parasite exposed to the immune system over the course of an infection.
ex. Trypanosoma brucei infection - variant surface glycoproteins
Plasmodium - antigenic diversity
Host mimicry
Parasites that are molecular mimics express proteins which resemble host proteins
a structural similarity between parasite and host components kaya hindi namumukaan ng body
ex. Echinococcus granulosus - larval stages carry P blood group antigens
Schistosoma sp. - can acquire antigenic molecules from host, the body cannot differentiate self from non-self
Intracellular sequestration
process of binding or confining in an intracellular area such that they are separated from other components of a biological system
ex. Leishmania & Plasmodium
Type 1
immediate type hypersensitivity
allergies
eosinophils involved
what type of immune reaction?
Type 2
immune complex formation
requires antibodies
what type of immune reaction?
Type 3
cytotoxic reactions of antibody
T cells
what type of immune reaction?
Type 4
delayed hypersensitivity
ex. eczema (chronic)
what type of immune reaction?
Protozoans
unicellular eukaryotic organisms
Phylum Sarcomastigophora
what phylum?
amoeba
atrial flagellates
hemoflagellates
Phylum Ciliophora
what phylum?
ciliates
Balantidum coli
Phylum Apicomplexa
what phylum?
plasmodium
babesia
intestinal coccidians
tissue coccidians
Encystation
from trophozoite to cyst
Excystation
from cyst to trophozoite
TROPHOZOITE
motile stage
feeding stage
vulnerable
has locomotor apparatus
pesudopod - false feet
flagellum
cilia
CYST
non-motile stage
non-feeding stage
no locomotor apparatus
Circular
Stable, Stronger, Stationary
infective stage of protozoan
METAZOANS (HELMINTHS)
the worms
Nematodes
roundworms
elongated and cylindrical
Ascaris lumbricoides
Trematodes
flukes
leaf-like shape
Fasciola hepatica
Cestodes
tapeworms
ribbon-like segmented
Taenia solium