What are the two classes of Helminths and their subclasses?
Helminths -> parasitic worms -> multicellular
Classes:
Nematoda: roundworms
-> Nematodes
Platyhelminths: flatworms with subclasses:
-> Trematodes: flukes (suckers)
-> Cestodes: tapeworms
What are STHs and who gets them?
STHs = Soil Transmitted Helminths
highly adapted to vertebrate hosts
among most prevalent negleted tropical diseases (NTD)
lifecycle: egg -> intermediate -> adult
-> associated woth pverty, sanitary infrastructure
Describe the life cycle of the Guinea worm (GW). Which parasite stage infect humans?
Which factors influence GW eradication?
water filtration devices -> reduce infection
treat water source -> vector control
containment of human and animal cases -> prevent transmission
cash reward for case report -> raise awareness
List two examples of nematoda
Trichuris spp. (whipworm)
Acaris spp. (roundworm)
Describe the life cycle of Trichuris ssp. (whipworm)
Oral ingestination of embryonated eggs
Eggs hatch in large-intestine (bacteria-driven)
L1 larvae -> gut epithelial cells
L1/L2 larvae = intra-epithelial
L3 and L4 -> inner gut lumen
Adult worms -> large intestine
unembryonated eggs -> fecies
eggs develop -> (10-15 days) embryonated eggs (infective) -> external environment
Describe the lifecycle of Ascaris spp.
Oral ingestion of embryonated eggs
Eggs hatch -> L3/L2 -> small intestine
L3 -> liver
L3 -> lung
Cough -> swallow -> small intestine
Adult worms in small intestine
Shedding of unembryonated eggs
Develop in external environment -> infective embryonated eggs
Which drug classes are efficient against Ascarids and Trichuris spp.?
Benzimidazole:
Mebendazole
Albendazole
What are current strategies for STH control?
Mass drug administration (MDA) programs:
treatment in schools
health education
clean water sources
Which hookworm genus infects humans?
Ancylostoma duodenale
Necator americanus
Explain differences in pathology between zoonotic and human-specific hookworm infections?
zoonotic: accidental host -> larvae die after couple of days
human-specific: blood suckers in the small intestine -> Anemia
How are hookworms transmitted?
-> human feces
Cutaneous route: Penetration of the skin by infective filariform larva (L3)
Oral route: Ingestion of L3 larva present in the soil, occurs less frequency. Larva develops directly into adult worms
Transmammary transmission: Breast feeding by mothers to infants
Describe the life cycle of hookworms
L3 penetrate skin (or ingestion)
L3 -> blood stream
-> Lung -> cough -> swallow -> intestine
Adult -> small intestine
eggs -> feces
Soil -> develop to Rhabiditform L1
L1 -> L3 -> 5-10 days -> infectious
How can you differentiate between Necator and Ancylostoma worms?
Ancylostoma
Necator
Shape
C
S
Teeth
cutting teeth
cutting plates
Transmission
oral > skin
skin > oral
What is the current strategy for hookworm control?
typical antihelminitic drugs from MDA -> low success rate & resistance over time
development of vaccine on the way
What are microfilariae?
Microfilariae (MF): smaller forms of Filariae
Filariae:
Nematodes of the superfamily Filarioidea
live in cavities -> never intestine
dont lay eggs -> release MF
Where do microfilariae reside during day/night?
day: larger vessels, deep tissue blood
night: surface vessels -> feeding time of (mosquito) vectors
Describe gross pathologies of filarial worms?
-> Tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE)
asthma-like symptoms
Which immune evasion strategies of filarial worms exist?
Inflammation -> modifies lymphatic drainage
How to diagnose MFs?
time-sensitive collection -> when they are in blood stream
thick and thin blood films
Giemsa, Wright-Giemsa, and Delafield’s hematoxylin
Which factors define pathology in lymphatic filariasis (LF)?
lymphatic vessels (LV) -> remove fluids, proteins form extracelular space
Adult worms nest in LV -> response regulates severity of disease
What are filarial nematode symbionts?
Filariae can carry a symbiotic partner -> Wolbachia
Give some examples for human-specifc Filariae
Loa Loa -> eye worm
Wucheria bancrofti -> elephantantiasis -> giant testicles
Onchocerca volvulus -> river blindness
Describe the life cycle of Wucheria bancrofti/ Brugia malayi
L3 in vector (mosquito) -> Transmission to human
Adult filariae -> release of microfilariae (MF)
Vector -> uptake of MF
MF -> L2 in vector
L2 -> L3
Give examples of vectors for Filariae
mosquitoes (W. bancrofti and Brugia spp.)
black flies (O. volvulus)
deer flies (L. loa).
Why can antibiotics kill Onchocerca volvulus?
They kill the endosymbiont Wolbachia which also causes the parasite to die
how was Trichinella Sp. discovered
by Rudolph Virchow
checked larval stages on human cadaver with white flecks
fed an old dog infected human meat
found adult enternal stages of larvae in autopsie of dead dog
Trichinella Sp. is viviparous. What does it mean? and who is the dead-end host
viviparous = gives birth to live offspring instead of laying eggs (=ovoparous)
dead-end host = human
Trichinella Sp. produces nurse cells. What are they?
= unique consequence of host cells association with infections of L1 larvae of T.spiralis
morphologically distinct from any other cell type
functions: nourish and protect from host immune response
—> can survive in human host up to 30 years
where are Cestoidae in host?
How do they look?
in intestine or tissues
polyzoic organisms: scolex, head, no mouth, no intestine
use hooks or suckers
—> infection mostly over food
Why is Echinococcus dangerous for humans?
Disease: Cystic Echinococcus
grow unlimited, producing protoscolices and daughter cysts
—> spontaneous cystic rupture —> abaphylactic shock
How to diagnose Echinococcus?
Imaging testing like CT-scan
ultrasonography
MRI (only CE)
serological test (only AE)
Which Echinococcus species are pathogenic for humans?
Granulosus —> causes CE, less serious
Multilocularis —> cause AE, mortality 50-70%
How can we treat CE vs. AE?
CE (Cystic echinococcal disease) —> multiple liver cysts
albendazole as neoadjuvant agent (used before other treatments) —> inactivate cysts and reduce cystic wall tension
AE (Alveolar echinococcal disease)
albendazole —> suppress progess of infection (no cure!!)
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