Micro: vector borne diseases

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20 Terms

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vector borne diseases

Infectious diseases caused by pathogens or parasites transmitted to humans via insects (e.g. mosquitoes, tsetse flies) or other invertebrates (e.g. snails); infected individuals are not directly infectious to other people; some vector-borne diseases also have reservoirs of infection in non-human vertebrates (i.e. they are zoonoses).

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Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus (EEEV)

Virus that infects horses and other mammals via bird vectors, is spreading due to climate change

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Lyme disease

Illness caused by the Borrelia burgdorferi virus

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Borrelia burgdorferi

virus that causes lime disease, carried by ticks

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Borrelia burgdorferi transmission

Vector borne via ticks from animal hosts
possibly transplacental

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signs and symptoms of lyme disease

begins 3-30d post bite Early localized infection: growing bulls-eye rash at site of tick bite, lymph node enlargement, flu-like symptoms.
severe cases can have permanent symptoms such as memory loss, meningitis, brain fog, neuropathy, facial paralysis, lyme carditis, arthritis, severe myalgia and perfuse rash, even leading to death if left untreated

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west nile

disease caused by the west nile virus

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west nile virus

virus that uses mosquitos as a vector between birds and humans

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west nile spread

bird to human via mosquitoes
human to human with blood exchange
transplacental and through breastmilk

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west nile in canada

becoming an increasing problem with climate change and more favourable mosquito environments

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signs and symptoms of west nile

can be asymptomatic in 70-80% of those infected
onset 2-15 days post infection including rash, myalgia, fever and headache
severe symptoms include paralysis, high fever, weakness, difficulty swallowing, which may be permanent

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Malaria

disease caused by the parasites Plasmodiums

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Plasmodiums

parasitic family that causes malaria
includes p. falciparum and p. vivax, p. malariae, p. knowlesi

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P. falciparum

species of Plasmodium that causes the most severe cases of malaria

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p. vivax

most common form of malaria

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signs and symptoms of malaria

begin 10-15 days post infection
mild: fever, chills, headache
p. falciparum infection; extreme myalgia, fatigue, decreased LOC, resp. distress, AKI, liver disease,
and high fever leading to seizures, death within 24hrs of onset

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Malaria treatment

Artemisinin Combination Therapy (only works on p. falciparum), choroquine (only works on p. vivax) and primaquine (can be added to regimens to prevent relapse)
but resistance is increasing steadily to meds

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malaria vaccine

RTS,S for children in p. falciparum endemic areas
Matrix-M (R21)

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Malaria chemoprophylaxis

preventative administration of medications before travelling to endemic areas for high risk groups

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malaria prevention

Physical: mosquito nets, insect repellants, clothing
vaccination and prophylaxis medication
eradication with genetic modification