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The Weird, Wild World of Parasites

The Weird, Wild World of Parasites. DISCLAIMER Parasitologists do not usually include bacteria, fungi, or viruses in what they study , but of course many bacteria and fungi, and all viruses, fit into the definition of parasites – “organisms” that benefit at the expense of other organisms.

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The Weird, Wild World of Parasites

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  1. The Weird, Wild World of Parasites

  2. DISCLAIMER Parasitologists do not usually include bacteria, fungi, or viruses in what they study, but of course many bacteria and fungi, and all viruses, fit into the definition of parasites – “organisms” that benefit at the expense of other organisms. The most typical definition of parasite includes such organisms as protists, flatworms, nematodes, and arthropods that live in or on other organisms. Humans are hosts to over a hundred different kinds of parasites (not all at the same time!). Just about any wild (or domestic) animal you encounter will have parasites. Even most people that live in quite sanitary environments have at least some parasites on or in them. We will emphasize the most common and/or harmful examples. Note that leeches are omitted as parasites; they are more-or-less temporary visitors that feed on blood but are not permanent residents. I guess the same could be said for ticks and fleas.

  3. Katherine Hepburn checks out Humphrey Bogart’s leech collection. (Some say leeches are not parasites, but they look like it to me.)

  4. Blood-sucking ticks carry several rickettsial diseases such as Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Rickettsias are very small prokaryotic organisms. Of course, one really killer bacterial disease, bubonic plague, is transmitted by fleas from rats. Lyme disease vector Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever vector A gang of fleas having dinner together.

  5. HARMFULNESS OF PARASITES TO HUMAN BEINGS Six important tropical diseases defined by WHO: 1 Malaria 2 Schistosomiasis 3 Filariasis parasitosis 4 Leishmaniasis 5 Trypanosomiasis 6 Leprosy

  6. GENERAL PARASITOLOGY Main Stuff to Know

  7. The association between the parasite and the host may be: Symbiosis Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism • Medical parasitologyis the science that deals with parasites that affect human. • The parasiteis an organism that lives at the expense of the host. • The hostis the animal species which harbours the parasite.

  8. Mutualism Symbiosis (Living together) • Both partners benefit from the relationship. • Permanent relationship, organisms can’t exist separately.

  9. Commensalism Parasitism • One partner benefits (commensal) while the other (host) is unaffected. • The parasite lives at the expense of the host, shelter from it and causes harm to it

  10. Types of parasites Protozoa Helminthes • Endoparasite: Lives within the body (infection).

  11. Arthropods • Ectoparasite: Lives on the outside of the body (infestation).

  12. Obligate parasites: Completely dependent upon its host and can not lead a free life. • Facultative parasites: Capable of leading both a free living and parasitic existence. • Accidental parasite: Can establish itself in a host in which it does not ordinarily live. • Temporary parasite:Free living but seeks the host from time to time for food.

  13. Permanent parasite: Remains all or most of its life in or on the host. • Coprozoic or spurious parasite: Free living parasite passing through alimentary tract without infecting the host. • Opportunistic parasite: Produces disease in immunocompromised hosts and does not affect immunocompetent individuals.

  14. Types of hosts Remarks • Final or definitive host:harbours the mature stage of the parasite. • Intermediate host:harbours the immature stage of the parasite. • Reservoir host:animal (other than man) that harbours the same species of parasite as man and constitutes a source of infection tohim. • Diseases of animals that are transmitted to man are calledzoonotic diseases. • Vectoris arthropod that transmit a parasite to its host.

  15. Source of parasitic infection Food and water Soil Animal reservoir host Arthropods Air-borne - Raw vegetables. - Meat. - Fish. - Water. - When it is contaminated with animal or human excreta.

  16. Mode of infection Oral route Skin penetration Contact Sexual Congenital Inhalation Accidental laboratory infection

  17. Why Parasites are Particularly Unpleasant 1. Effects of Parasites on Host A. Stealing nutrition (eats your food) B. Physical trauma (chews holes in you) C. Toxins (fill you with irritating/harmful chemicals) a) Lytic necrosis: Dissolving you w/enzymes b) Tissue reaction: rashes, itchiness, swelling END NOTES HERE - the rest are examples and images

  18. Protists

  19. The most deadly parasite for humans has been a protist (Plasmodium) that causes malaria. More people have died of malaria than any other cause. Even now malaria kills 1-2 million people each year. A fairly close relative, Toxoplasma, is much less dangerous. In fact, almost everyone has it living in them without any noticeable effects. It is only a problem to those with weak immune systems – fetuses and AIDS sufferers. Other protists shown here include Giardia, Cryptosporidium (which killed over 200 people in Milwaukee), and Trypanosoma (African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease). There are many others that could have been included. Many parasites, not just protists, have different parts of their life cycle in different kinds of hosts. As you go through the examples, note the different hosts involved.

  20. Anopheles mosquito and Plasmodium (causative agent of malaria) in and among red blood cells.

  21. Life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii (Toxoplasmosis)

  22. Toxoplasma is found in many people without any symptoms – exceptions are fetuses and AIDS sufferers.

  23. Giardia – commonly found in swimming pools; lacks mitochondria and has an amusing appearance. Causes intense diarrhea and is readily transmitted within households.

  24. Cryptosporidium in human intestinal lining. This protist sickened thousands and killed 200 in Milwaukee in 1993. Cryptosporidium merozoites breaking out

  25. Blood-sucking conenose (Triatoma) - vector for Chaga’s disease (Trypanosoma cruzi). It is now thought that Charles Darwin contracted this, causing him to be a near invalid most of his life.

  26. Life cycle of Trypanosoma spp. – cause of African Trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness)

  27. Tsetse fly (Glossina) Causative agent of African sleeping sickness (Trypanosoma, sp.)

  28. Flatworms

  29. Some flatworms are free-living animals such as the planaria. However, most flatworms are parasites such as flukes and the tapeworms. Most flukes and tapeworms have quite complex life histories with multiple hosts. In many tapeworms there is an alternation between herbivore and carnivore hosts. The herbivore gets the parasite by consuming plants on which fecal wastes bearing eggs or other stages have been deposited. Once in the herbivore host the parasite often forms cysts within muscles or other tissues; it is passed on when the host is eaten by a carnivore. In the carnivore the parasite forms the adult tapeworm that lives in the intestine. If a human ingests eggs, etc., the result can be devastating, inasmuch as the parasite can form cysts just about anywhere – heart, lung, brain, bones, etc. You can see the result on a subsequent slide showing hydatid cysts of Echinococcus, the dog tapeworm.

  30. Life cycle of Fasciola hepatica (Sheep Liver Fluke)

  31. Fasciola – 2 species of sheep liver fluke

  32. Fasciola miracidium (from eggs in water; penetrate snail host) Immature stages of Fasciola Fasciola cercaria (penetrate vertebrate host in water) Fasciola redia (emerge from sporocysts in snail)

  33. Once a male finds a female he never lets her go – even if she drops dead. (live in large veins in abdomen) Cercaria (larva) of Schistosoma

  34. Taenia solium – scolex (how it holds on in the gut) Tapeworm cyst in human brain Taenia solium – cysts in human eye (cysts can be just about anywhere in body)

  35. Echinococcus – dog tapeworm. Actual size is only 3 to 6 mm in length.

  36. Hydatid cysts (Echinococcus) in a monkey Each cyst is filled with thousands of small parasite units.

  37. Hydatid cyst in human brain (left) Human kidney with hydatid cysts (arrows)

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