Lecture 14 Vector-Borne Diseases with Focus on Malaria
vivax/ovale: Less than ___ % of Parasitemias affect humans.
1%; 20,000-50,000
How long is the incubation period?
1-4 weeks
What are three ways that pregnant women in high risk zones for malaria can protect themselves?
1. Insecticide treated nets 2. Intermittent Preventative treatment 3. Effective and prompt case management of malarial illness.
falciparum: Between _ and _ % of Parasitemias affect uphumans.
10-15%
Malaria causes ___ to ____ million cases per year worldwide.
300- 500 million
At least ____ of the world's population lives in endemic areas.
40%
What is Chemoprophylaxis?
A medication taken at regular intervals to kill one or more of the morphological forms (life stages) of the malaria parasite and therefor prevent the onset of clinical illness.
What are the "three big" killers worldwide?
AIDS, Malaria, TB
Prodromal Symptom
An early symptom that might indicate the start of a disease before specific symptoms occur.
Define Reservoir:
An organism or a population that directly or indirectly transmits a pathogen while being virtually immune to its effects.
The malaria infected ____ mosquito introduces sporozoites into a human host.
Anopheles (the female)
Pathogen for Lyme Disease
Bacteria
An example of Chemoprophylaxis:
Chloroquine for trophozoites and RBC schizonts
Does control increase or lower the number of cases? Is transmission increased or reduced?
Control lowers the number of cases; transmission is reduced.
Pandemic
Epidemic has gone international.
Clinical Cure
Eradication of RBC trophozoites and schizonts
Pathogen for river blindness
Helminths (worms)
Vectors: Mosquito and blackfly Pathogen:
Helminths - worms
What is the dormant stage of P. vivax called?
Hypnozoites
Where can the dormant stage of P. vivax and P. ovale persist?
In the liver
ITN stands for...
Insecticide treated bed net
Endemic
Large number of cases all or most of the time with a particular group of people or in a particular area.
Epidemic
Large number of cases in a population over a short period of time.
______ infect red blood cells.
Merozoites
What are the four classifications for Vector-Borne Diseases?
Mosquito-borne Mouse-borne Louse-borne Tick-borne
Aboviruses are carried by...
Mosquitos
West Nile is carried by...
Mosquitos
Can a vector convey a disease by itself?
No
Does a person receive sterile immunity after being infected with Malaria?
No
Is there a durable immunity?
No
Is there a vaccine for Malaria?
No
Are reservoirs affected by the pathogens which they transmit?
No.
What parasite causes Malaria?
Plasmodium
Which is the most widespread of the two: Plasmodium vivax or Plasmodium falciparum?
Plasmodium vivax
Which of the two is found in endemic areas and some temperate areas: Plasmodium vivax or Plasmodium falciparum?
Plasmodium vivax
Main damage is in ___ Cells.
RBC
Schizogony
Red cell lysis
RBM stands for..
Roll Back Malaria
Is premunition for Malaria short lived or long lived?
Short Lived
Define Agent:
Single necessary cause of a disease
Mortality from Malaria is primarily in _____ _______ among children less than ____ years old.
Subsaharan Africa five years old
Lyme disease is carried by...
Tick, lice, mite and flea
Typhus is carried by...
Tick, lice, mite and flea
Pathogen= Bacteria Vectors=
Tick, mite, lice, flea
How does a vector spread infection?
Transmits pathogens from one host to another.
True or False: Immunity develops slowly
True
True or False: Only RBC trophozoites and schizonts cause disease.
True
True or false: falcuparum causes the more severe disease between itself and vivax:
True
How many hosts does the parasite life cycle involve?
Two
Pathogen for West Nile:
Viruses
Vector= Mosquito Pathogen=
Viruses
Can mosquitos carry malaria?
Yes
What is partial immunity?
You may obtain the disease, but it won't be serious or fatal.
Describe the sporozoite stage.
a motile sporelike stage in the life cycle of some parasitic sporozoans (e.g., the malaria organism) that is typically the infective agent introduced into a host.
What is a Vector?
a vector is an organism that does not cause disease itself but which spreads infection by conveying pathogens from one host to another.
When does Prodrome start?
at the end of incubation and before the first paroxysm
How can P. vivax and P. ovale causes relapses?
by invading the bloodstream weeks, or even months later.
In Eradication, there is the ____ of disease carrying agents for all but a contained few.
elimination
Radical cure
eradication of RBC trophozoites and schizonts and hepatic schizonts
_______ is the most sever species and causes cerebral malaria
falciparum
Sexual erythrocytic stages=
gameocytes
Relation between the two: Lower parasitemia, (more/less) severe symptoms
less
Sporozoites infect ___ cells.
liver
Pathogen= Protozoa Vectors= tse-tse fly, triatomine bug, ________, and _____
mosquito and sandfly
Define Premunition
naturally acquired protective immunity
Elimination: reduced number of ___ infection in a _____ _______.
new; defined area
Is transmission increased or reduced in elimination?
reduced
Sporozoites mature into___
schizonts
Why don't relapses occur when malaria is transmitted through blood transfusions?
through vivax/ovale; Because there is no dormant stage when one gets malaria by blood transfusion because it doesn't go to the liver.
Where is Plasmodium falciparum primarily found?
tropics and subtropics