Title: Protozoal and Fungal Diseases
1Protozoal and Fungal Diseases
2How to cause an infection.
- Pathogen must have
- Host
- Access to a reservoir
- Carriers
- Means to leave the reservoir
- Way of attaching to the host
- Mechanism to enter hosts tissues
- Ability to avoid hosts defenses
- Ability to reproduce inside host
- A way to return to the reservoir
3General Principles
- Zoonosis
- Infectious disease transmitted between humans and
animals - Rabies, herpes, SARS
- Vector
- Incubation time
4Protozoa
5Parasitology
- Study of eucaryotic parasites, protozoa and
helminths - Cause 20 of all infectious diseases
- Less prevalent in industrialized countries
- Increasingly common in AIDS patients
6Typical Protozoan Pathogens
- Single-celled, animal-like microbes, most having
some form of motility - Estimated 100,000 species
- _at_ 25 are important pathogens
- Life cycles vary
- propagate by simple asexual cell division of the
active feeding cell (trophozoite) - undergo formation of a cyst
- complex life cycle that includes asexual and
sexual phases
7Protozoan Classification
- Phyla grouping based on method of motility,
reproduction, and life cycle - Mastigophora
- primarily flagellar motility, some flagellar and
amoeboid - sexual reproduction
- cyst and trophozoite
- Sarcodina
- primarily ameba
- asexual by fission
- most are free-living
- Ciliophora
- Cilia
- trophozoites and cysts
- most are free-living, harmless
- Apicomplexa
- motility is absent except male gametes
- sexual and asexual reproduction
- complex life cycle all parasitic
8Infective Amebas
9Entamoeba histolytica
- Amebiasis
- Alternates between a large trophozoite
- has a large nucleus and lacks most other
organelles - Motile by means of pseudopods and a smaller
nonmotile cyst - Humans are the primary hosts
- Ingested
- Carried by 10 of world population
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11Entamoeba histolytica
- Cysts swallowed and travel to small intestine
- alkaline pH and digestive juices stimulate cysts
to release 4 trophozoites - Trophozoites attach, multiply, actively move
about and feed - Asymptomatic in 90 of patients
- Ameba may secrete enzymes that dissolve tissues
and penetrate deeper layers of the mucosa - Causing dysentery, abdominal pain, fever,
diarrhea and weight loss
12Entamoeba histolytica
- Life-threatening manifestations are
- Hemorrhage
- Perforation
- Appendicitis
- Amebomas
- Tumor-like growths
- May invade liver and lung
- Severe forms of disease result in 10 fatality
rate - Effective drugs are iodoquinol, metronidazole,
and chloroquine
13Amebic Infections of the Brain
- Caused by Naegleria fowleri and Acanthamoeba
- Ordinarily inhabit standing water
- Primary acute meningoencephalitis is acquired
though nasal contact with water or traumatic eye
damage - Infiltration of brain is usually fatal
14An Intestinal Ciliate Balantidium coli
- An occupant of the intestines of domestic animals
such as pigs and cattle - Acquired by ingesting cyst-containing food or
water - Trophozoite erodes intestine and elicits
intestinal symptoms - Healthy humans resistant
- Rarely penetrates intestine or enters blood
- Treatment tetracycline, iodoquinol,
nitrimidazine or metronidazole
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16The Pathogenic Flagellates
17Trichomonads Trichomonas species
- Small, pear-shaped
- 4 anterior flagella and an undulating membrane
- Exist only in trophozoite form
- 3 infect humans
- T. vaginalis
- T. tenax
- T. hominis
18Trichomonas vaginalis
- Causes an STD called trichomoniasis
- Reservoir is human urogenital tract
- Strict parasite
- 3 million cases yearly
- Female symptoms
- foul-smelling, green-to-yellow discharge
vulvitis cervicitis urinary frequency and pain - Male symptoms
- urethritis, thin, milky discharge, occasionally
prostate infection - Metronidazole
19Giardia lamblia
- Giardiasis
- Pathogenic flagellate
- Cysts are small, compact, and multinucleate
- Reservoirs include beavers, cattle, coyotes,
cats, and humans - Cysts can survive for two months in environment
- Usually ingested with water and food
- 10 to 100 cysts
20Giardia lamblia
- Cysts enter duodenum, germinate, travel to
jejunum to feed and multiply - Causes giardiasis
- diarrhea, abdominal pain
- Diagnosis difficult because organism is shed in
feces intermittently - Treatment quinacrine or metronidazole
- Agent is killed by boiling, ozone, and iodine
21Hemoflagellates Vector-Borne Blood Parasites
- Obligate parasites that live in blood and tissues
of human host - Cause life-threatening and debilitating zoonoses
- Spread in specific tropical regions by
blood-sucking insects that serve as intermediate
hosts - Have complicated life cycles and undergo
morphological changes - Categorized according to cellular and infective
stages
22Trypanosoma species and Tropanosomiasis
- Distinguished by their infective stage
- trypomastigote
- elongate, spindle-shaped cell with tapered ends,
eel-like motility - 2 types of trypanosomiasis
- T. brucei
- African sleeping sickness
- T. cruzi
- Chagas disease
23Trypanosoma brucei
- African Sleeping Sickness
- Spread by tsetse flies
- Biting of fly inoculates skin with
trypomastigotes - Multiplies in blood and damages spleen, lymph
nodes and brain - Harbored by reservoir mammals
- Two variants of disease caused by 2 subspecies
- T.b.gambiense Gambian strain West Africa
- T.b. rhodesiense Rhodesian strain East Africa
24Trypanosoma brucei
- Chronic disease symptoms are sleep disturbances,
tremors, paralysis and coma. - Blood, spinal fluid or lymph nodes
- Treatment before neurological involvement with
melarsoprol, eflornithine - Control involves eliminating tsetse fly
25Trypanosoma cruzi
- Chagas disease
- Endemic to Central and South America
- Reduviid bug (kissing bug) is the vector
- Bug feces is inoculated into a cutaneous portal
- Local lesion, fever, and swelling of lymph nodes,
spleen, and liver - Heart muscle and large intestine harbor masses of
amastigotes - Chronic inflammation occurs in the organs
(especially heart and brain) - Treatment nifurtimox and benzonidazole
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27Leishmania species
- Leishmaniasis
- Endemic to equatorial regions
- Promastigotes are injected with sand fly bite
- convert to amastigote and multiply
- if macrophage is fixed the infection is localized
- systemic if macrophage migrates
28Apicomplexan parasites
- Sporozoans
- Alternate between sexual and asexual phases and
between different animal hosts - Most form specialized infective bodies that are
transmitted by arthropod vectors, food, water, or
other means - Three important apicomplexan parasites
- Plasmodium
- Toxoplasma
- Cryptosporidium
29Plasmodium
- Malaria
- Dominant protozoan disease
- Obligate intracellular sporozoan
- 4 species
- P. malariae
- P. vivax
- P. falciparum
- P. ovale
- Female Anopheles mosquito is the primary vector
- blood transfusions, mother to fetus
- 300-500 million new cases each year
- 2 million deaths each year
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31Toxoplasma gondii
- Toxoplasmosis
- Intracelllular apicomplexan parasite with
extensive distribution - Lives naturally in cats
- harbor oocysts in the GI tract
- Acquired by ingesting raw meats or substances
contaminated by cat feces - Most cases go unnoticed
- Except in fetus and AIDS patients
- Can suffer brain and heart damage
- Treatment pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine
32Cryptosporidium
- An intestinal pathogen
- Infects a variety of mammals, birds, and reptiles
- Exists in tissue and oocyst phases
- 1990s
- 370,000 cases in Milwaukee, WI due to
contaminated water - filtration required for removal
- Ingestion of oocysts give rise to sporozoites
that penetrate intestinal cells - Causes gastroenteritis, headache, sweating,
vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea - AIDS patients may suffer chronic persistent
diarrhea - No effective drugs
33Fungal Diseases
34Fungi
- Eukaryotic
- Membrane-bound nucleus
- Heterotrophic
- Consumer
- Obtains Carbon through the consumption of organic
substrates - Dimorphic
- Can be presented in two different stages
- Change morphological form
35Fungal Organization
- Yeast
- soft, uniform texture and appearance
- Fungal Cell Structure
- Cell walls contain chitin instead of cellulose
- Energy reserve is glycogen
- Nonmotile
- Move toward food source by growing toward it
- Hyphae
- Filamentous fungi
- Mycelium
- hyphae may be divided by cross walls
- septate
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37Fungal Classification
- Subkingdom Amastigomycota
- Terrestrial inhabitants including those of
medical importance - Zygomycota
- zygospores sporangiospores and some conidia
- Ascomycota
- ascospores conidia
- Basidiomycota
- basidiospores conidia
- Deuteromycota
- majority are yeasts and molds
- no sexual spores known conidia
38Fungal Reproduction
- Primarily through spores formed on reproductive
hyphae - Asexual reproduction spores are formed through
- Budding or mitosis
- Sporangiospores
- Conidia
- Arthrospore
- Chlamydospore
- Blastospore
- Phialospore
- Microconidium or macroconidium
- porospore
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40Fungal Reproduction
- Sexual reproduction
- Spores are formed following fusion of male and
female strains and formation of sexual structure - Sexual spores and spore-forming structures are
one basis for classification - Zygospores
- Ascospores
- Basidiospores
41Zygospores
42Ascospores
43Basidiospores
44Opportunistic vs. Pathogenic
- Fungus is the primary problem
- Animal does not have to be immune suppressed to
be affected by the fungus
- Fungus is a secondary invader
- Animal has other pre-existing conditions
- However, the fungus may be there all the time
45Fungal Diseases
- True or primary fungal pathogen can invade and
grow in a healthy, noncompromised host - Ability to switch from hyphal cells to yeast
cells - Thermal dimorphism
- grow as molds at 30C and as yeasts at 37C
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47Emerging Fungal Pathogens
- Opportunistic fungal pathogen
- little or no virulence
- host defenses must be impaired
- Vary from superficial and colonization to
potentially fatal systemic disease - An emerging medical concern
- account for 10 of all nosocomial infections
- Dermatophytes may be undergoing transformation
into true pathogens
48Epidemiology of the Mycoses
- Most do not require a host to complete their life
cycles - infections are not communicable
- Dermatophytes and Candida sp
- naturally inhabit human body
- transmissible
- True fungal pathogens
- distributed in a predictable geographical pattern
- climate, soil.
- Cases go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed
49Diagnosis of Mycotic Infections
- Diagnosis and identification require
- microscopic examination of stained specimens
- culturing in selective and enriched media
- Reverse important!!!!
- specific biochemical and serological tests
50Control of Mycotic Infections
- Immunization not usually effective
- Control involves intravenous amphotericin B,
flucytosine, azoles and nystatin - Surgical removal of damaged tissues
- Prevention limited to masks and protective
clothing to reduce contact with spores
51Pathogenesis of the Fungi
- Portal of entry
- primary mycoses
- respiratory portal inhaled spores
- subcutaneous
- inoculated skin trauma
- cutaneous and superficial
- contamination of skin surface
- Virulence factors
- thermal dimorphism
- toxin production
- capsules and adhesion factors
- hydrolytic enzymes
- inflammatory stimulants
52Characterization of Fungal Infections
- Systemic
- Subcutaneous
- Cutaneous
- Superficial
- Opportunistic
53Systemic fungal infections by true pathogens
541. Histoplasma capsulatum
- Histoplasmosis
- typically dimorphic
- distributed worldwide
- most prevalent in eastern central regions of US
- grow in moist soil high in nitrogen content
- inhaled conidia produce primary pulmonary
infection - may progress to systemic involvement of a variety
of organs chronic lung disease - amphotericin B, ketoconazole
55Histoplasma capsulatum
- All continents except Australia
- Ohio Valley
- Moist soils with increase in N content
- Bat guano
562. Coccidioides immitis
- Coccidioidomycosis
- distinctive morphology
- blocklike arthroconidia in the free-living stage
- arthrospores inhaled from dust
- Creates spherules and nodules in the lungs
- lives in alkaline soils in semiarid, hot climates
- endemic to southwestern US
- amphotericin B treatment
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583. Blastomyces dermatitidis
- Blastomycosis
- dimorphic
- free-living species distributed in soil
- midwestern and southeastern US
- inhaled 10-100 conidia convert to yeasts
multiply in lungs - symptoms include cough and fever
- chronic cutaneous, bone, nervous system
complications - amphotericin B
59Blastomyces dermatitidis
604. Paracoccidioides brasiliensis
- Paracoccidioidomycosis
- distributed in Central South America
- lung infection occurs through inhalation or
inoculation of spores - systemic disease not common
- ketoconazole, amphotericin B, sulfa drugs
61Subcutaneous Mycoses
621. Sporothrix schenckii
- Sporotrichosis (rose-gardeners disease)
- dimorphic
- very common saprobic fungus that decomposes plant
matter in soil - infects appendages and lungs
- Lymphocutaneous variety
- occurs when contaminated plant matter penetrates
the skin - pathogen forms a nodule
- spreads to nearby lymph nodes
- Potassium iodide orally
- Amphotericin B in unresponsive cases
63Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis
642. Chromoblastomycosis
- highly visible verrucous lesions
- etiologic agents are soil saprobes with
dark-pigmented mycelia spores - Fonsecaea pedrosoi, Phialophora verrucosa,
Cladosporium carrionii - produce very large, thick, yeastlike bodies,
sclerotic cells
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663. Mycetoma
- when soil microbes are accidentally implanted
into the skin - progressive, tumorlike disease of the hand or
foot due to chronic fungal infection - may lead to loss of body part
- caused by Pseudallescheria or Madurella
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68Cutaneous Mycoses
69Cutaneous Mycoses
- Dermatophytoses
- infections strictly confined to keratinized
epidermis (skin, hair, nails) - ringworm tinea
- 39 species in the genera Trichophyton,
Microsporum, Epidermophyton - communicable among humans, animals, soil
- infection facilitated by moist, chafed skin
70Examples of dermatophyte spores. (a) Regular,
numerous microconidia of Trichophyton. (b)
Macroconidia of Microsporum canis, a cause of
ringworm in cats, dogs, and humans. (c)
Smooth- surfaced macroconidia in
clusters characteristic of Epidermophyton.
71Dermatophytoses
- Ringworm of scalp
- tinea capitis
- affects scalp hair-bearing regions of head
- hair may be lost
- Ringworm of body
- tinea corporis
- occurs as inflamed, red ring lesions anywhere on
smooth skin - Ringworm of groin
- tinea cruris
- jock itch
- affects groin scrotal regions
- Ringworm or foot hand
- tinea pedis tinea manuum
- spread by exposure to public surfaces occurs
between digits on soles - Ringworm of nails
- tinea unguium
- persistent colonization of the nails of the hands
feet that distorts the nail bed
72Ringworm Treatment
- Topicals
- ointments containing tolnaftate, miconazole or
menthol camphor - lamisil or griscofulvin 1-2 years
73Superficial Mycoses
74Superficial Mycoses
- Tinea versicolor causes mild scaling, mottling of
skin - Malassezia furfur
- White piedra is whitish or colored masses on the
long hairs of the body - Trichosporan beigelli
- Black piedra causes dark, hard concretions on
scalp hairs - Piedraia hortae
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77Hortaea werneckii
- Tinea nigra
- Dematiaceous yeast-like hyphomycete found in
tropical and subtropical areas - Extremely halophilic environments
- Slow growing
- Pale colonies that turn olive black
- Reverse is black also
- Leathery culture
78Opportunistic Pathogens
79Candida albicans
- Candidiasis
- widespread yeast
- infections can be short-lived, superficial skin
irritations to overwhelming, fatal systemic
diseases - budding cells of varying size may form both
elongate pseudohyphae true hyphae - forms off-white, pasty colony with a yeasty odor
80Candida albicans
- Normal flora of oral cavity, genitalia, large
intestine or skin - 20 of humans
- Account for 80 of nosocomial fungal infections
- Account for 30 of deaths from nosocomial
infections
81Candida albicans
- Thrush
- occurs as a thick, white, adherent growth
- mucous membranes of mouth throat
- Vulvovaginal yeast infection
- painful inflammatory condition of the female
genital region - causes ulceration whitish discharge
- Cutaneous candidiasis
- occurs in chronically moist areas of skin and
burn patients
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83Cryptococcus neoformans
- Crypotcoccosis
- widespread encapsulated yeast
- inhabits soils around pigeon roosts
- common infection of AIDS, cancer or diabetes
patients
84Cryptococcus neoformans
- infection of lungs leads to cough, fever, and
lung nodules - dissemination to meninges and brain
- causes severe neurological disturbance
- death
85Pneumocystis (carinii) jiroveci
- causes pneumonia (PCP)
- most prominent opportunistic infection in AIDS
patients - forms secretions in the lungs that block
breathing - can be rapidly fatal if not controlled with
medication - small, unicellular fungus
- pentamidine cotrimoxazole
86Aspergillus
- Aspergillosis
- very common airborne soil fungus
- 600 species
- 8 involved in human disease
- inhalation of spores causes fungus balls in lungs
and invasive disease in the eyes, heart, brain - amphotericin B nystatin
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88Zygomycosis
- Zygomycota are extremely abundant saprobic fungi
- found in soil, water, organic debris, food
- Genera most often involved are Rhizopus, Absidia,
Mucor - usually harmless air contaminants
- invade the membranes of the nose, eyes, heart,
brain of people with diabetes, malnutrition with
severe consequences
89Miscellaneous Opportunists
- Any fungus can be implicated in infections when
immune defenses are severely compromised - Geotrichum candidum
- geotrichosis
- mold found in soil, dairy products
- primarily involved in secondary lung infections
- Fusarium species
- soil
- occasionally infects eyes, toenails, burned skin
90Fungal Allergies Mycotoxicoses
- Fungal spores are common sources of atopic
allergies - Asthma
- farmers lung
- chronic sometimes fatal allergy of agricultural
workers exposed to moldy grasses - teapickers lung
- Bagassosis
- condition caused by inhaling moldy dust from
processed sugarcane debris - bark strippers disease
- caused by inhaling spores from logs
91Fungal Allergies Mycotoxicoses
- Fungal toxins lead to mycotoxicoses
- usually caused by eating poisonous or
hallucinogenic mushrooms - aflatoxin toxic and carcinogenic
- grains, corn peanuts
- lethal to poultry and livestock
- Stachybotrys chartarum
- sick building syndrome
- severe hematologic and neurological damage