Paralec 1
Paralec 1
Paralec 1
● Includes scientific study of life cycle and reproductive ● Relationship that gives benefit to the parasite, but
behavior, the ways in which they cause disease and the without reciprocating and without giving injury to
importance of the laboratory for diagnosis and the host.
methods of halting their multiplication ➔ Example:
CLINICAL PARASITOLOGY
Entamoeba coli
2. MUTUALISM
BIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS
SYMBIOSIS
1
3. PARASITISM
3. RESERVOIR HOST
● Relationship that is beneficial to one (parasite) at the
expense of the other (host). ● Harbors a parasite that lives within or on body surface
➔ Example: long enough to serve as the source of infection.
4. PARATENIC HOST
HOST - PARASITE RELATIONSHIP ● Responsible for transmitting the parasite from one
host to another.
➔ Example: MOSQUITO, FLIES
A. HOST
● Paratenic Host
● Reservoir Host
1. DEFINITIVE HOST
2. INTERMEDIATE HOST
2
★ Lymphatic filariasis
- Lower extremities- Wuchereria bancrofti
- Upper extremities- Brugia Malayi PERMANENT PARASITE
2. MECHANICAL VECTOR
TEMPORARY PARASITE
● Only transport the parasite
➔ Example: Flies and Cockroaches ● It lives on the host only for a short period of time.
SPURIOUS PARASITE
C. PARASITES
● It is a free-living organism that passes through the
● Any organism that lives inside or on the body surface digestive tract without infecting the host.
of another organism (host) which is usually larger
organism that provides physical protection (shelter)
and nourishment (food) for survival.
● Infection ● Infestation
INFECTION
ACCIDENTAL PARASITE
3
AUTO-INFECTION
ARTHROPODS
● It results when an infected individual becomes his
own direct source of infection.
➔ Example: Enterobiasis ● Malaria
◆ Causes of Enterobius vermicularis ● Filariasis
pinworm (layman's term kigwa)- it is ● Leishmaniasis
a familial disease. ● Trypanosomiasis
● Babesiosis
CONGENITAL TRANSMISSION
NOMENCLATURE
FOODBORNE
● Cestodes ● Phylum
● Trematodes ● Class
● Intestinal Protozoans ● Orders
● Families
DRINKING CONTAMINATED WATER ● Genera(genus)
● Entamoeba histolytica ○ Ascaris
● Giardia lamblia ● Species
○ lumbricoides
INGESTING RAW OR IMPROPERLY COOKED
FRESHWATER FISH LIFECYCLE
● Clonorchis
● Opistorchis
● Haplorchis
● Most parasitic organisms attain sexual maturity in
SKIN EXPOSURE TO SOIL (Ex. Beach) their definitive hosts.
● Hookworms
● Strongyloides ● Some spend entire lives within a host with one
generation after another.
ENTER SKIN VIA WATER
● Schistosoma (Ex. River)
4
● Some are exposed to the external environment before
being taken up by an appropriate host. TREATMENT
CURE RATE
EPIDEMIOLOGIC MEASURES
● It refers to the number of previously positive subjects
found to be egg negative on examination of stool or
EPIDEMIOLOGY urine sample using a standard procedure at a set time
after deworming.
● Usually expressed as percentage
● The study of patterns, distribution, and occurrence of
disease.
EGG REDUCTION RATE
INCIDENCE
● It is the percentage fall in eggs counts after
● The number of new cases of infection appearing in a deworming based on examination of a stool or urine
population in a given period of time. sample using a standard procedure at a set time after
a treatment.
PREVALENCE
SELECTIVE TREATMENT
● The number of individuals in a population estimated to
be infected with a particular parasite species at a
given time. ● It involves individual-level deworming with a selection
● Usually expressed as percentage for treatment based on a diagnosis of infection or an
● Existing cases assessment of the intensity of infection, based on
presumptive grounds.
CUMULATIVE PREVALENCE
★ If the rectum goes down to anus it is called RECTAL
PROLAPSE caused by the trichuris trichiura infection.
● The percentage of individuals in a population infected
with at least one parasite.
TARGETED TREATMENT
INTENSITY OF INFECTION
● It is a group-level deworming where the group to
● It refers to the burden of infection that is related to the be treated may be defined by age, sex, or other
number of worms per infected person. social characteristics irrespective of infection status.
● It can be measured directly or indirectly.
● Worm burden
● DIRECTLY
UNIVERSAL TREATMENT
○ Counting expelled worms during treatment
MORBIDITY
PREVENTIVE CHEMOTHERAPY
● Clinical consequences of infections or diseases that
affect an individual's well being. ● It is the regular, systematic, large-scale intervention
● Develop of the diseases involving the administration of one or more drugs to
selected population groups with the aim of reducing
morbidity and the transmission of selected helminth
infections.
5
ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION
COVERAGE
● It involves interventions to reduce environmental
● It refers to the proportion of the target population health risks.
reached by an intervention.
EFFICACY SANITATION
● It is the effect of a drug against an infective agent in ● It is the provision of access to adequate facilities for
ideal experimental conditions and isolated from any the safe disposal of human excreta.
context. ● It is usually combined with access to safe drinking
water.
EFFECTIVENESS
DISEASE ERADICATION DISEASE ELIMINATION
● It is a measure of the effect of a drug against an
● Permanent reduction ● It is a reduction to
infective agent in a particular hos t, living in a
to zero of the zero of the
particular environment with specific ecological,
worldwide incidence incidence of a
immunological, and epidemiological determinants.
of infection caused by specified disease in
● Qualitative and Quantitative diagnostic tests
a specific agent, as a a defined
● Cure Rate & Egg Reduction Rate
result of deliberate geographic area as
efforts. a result of deliberate
efforts.
DRUG RESISTANCE
● Continued
interventions /
surveillance
● It is a genetically transmitted loss of susceptibility to a
drug in a parasite population that was previously
sensitive to the appropriate therapeutic dose.