Title: Filariae
1Filariae
- Filariasis is one of the five major
parasitic disease in China and also one of the
six major tropical diseases to which WHO devotes
much attention (malaria, shistosomiasis,
filariasis, leishmaniasis, trypanosomiasis) .
Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi are found
in China.
2- Eight Species of Filariae Parasitizing Humans
- __________________________________________________
___________________________ - Species Site of inhabitation
Vector Pathogenesis
Distribution - __________________________________________________
_____________________ - W. bancrofti lymphatic tissues
mosquito lymphatic damage worldwide - __________________________________________________
__________________ - Brugia malayi lymphatic tissues mosquito
lymphatic damage Asian - __________________________________________________
_____________________ - Brugia timori lymphatic tissues
mosquito lymphatic damage Island of
timor _____________________________________
_______________________________ - Onchocerca subcutaneous eye black fly?
river blindness Africa - volvulus
- __________________________________________________
_____________________ - Loa loa subcutaneous deer
fly?? skin swellings Africa - __________________________________________________
_____________________ - Dipetalonema subcutaneous midge??
indefinite Africa - streptocerca
- __________________________________________________
_____________________ - Dipetalonema thoracic and midge??
indefinite Middle and - perstans abdominal cavities
South America
3I. Morphology
- 1. The adults are white and thread-like
worms. The female is about 5-10 cm and the male
2.5-4 cm. - 2. The microfilaria ranges from 177-296µm
in length. They are encased in a sheath. A large
number of body nuclei are seen in the stained
specimen. A nerve ring with no nuclei can be seen
at the anterior 1/5 of the body. The
morphological differences between bancroftian and
malayan microfilariae are the following
4Adult worm of filaria
5- Morphological Differences of Microfilariae
between W. bancroti and B. malayi - __________________________________________________
______________ - Species W. bancrofti
B. malayi - __________________________________________________
______________ - Appearance graceful, sweeping
curves irregular, stiff curves - __________________________________________________
______________ - Size larger 244-296 7
µm smaller 177-230 6 µm - __________________________________________________
______________ - Cephalic space shorter(11 or12)
longer(21) - (lengthwidth)
- __________________________________________________
______________ Nuclei body nuclei
equal sized, clearly unequal sized,
coalescing, - defined, countable
uncountable - __________________________________________________
______________ - Terminal nuclei no
two - __________________________________________________
______________
6Microfilaria of W. bancrofti and B. malayi
7Microfilaria of W. bancrofti
8Anterior part and posterior part of bancroftian
microfilaria
9Microfilaria of W. bancrofti showing its
appearance
10Bancroftian microfilariabody nuclei equal sized,
clearly, defined, countable without caudal
nucleus
11Microfilaria of W. bancrofti
12- Microfilaria of B. malayi the body nuclei is
unequal sized, coalescing,uncountable. The
cephalic space is longer with two caudal nuclei.
13Microfilaria of B. malayi
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15II. Life Cycle
- 1.Biohelminth intermediate hosts(vector)
are mosquitoes, bancroftian filaria is
transmitted by Culex pipiens pallens in which the
larval development takes 10-14 days, the
development of malayan filaria in Anopheles
sinensis requires 6-6.5 days - 2. Infective stage filariform larva(L3)
- 3. Infective route by skin( the wound
bitten by mosquito )
16- 4. Site of inhabitation lymphatic tissue
- 5. Life span 4-10 years
- 6. Microfilariae may survive 1-3 months
- 7. Viviparous
- 8. Nocturnal periodicity The microfilariae
present in the peripheral blood during daytime is
very low in density. The number of microfilariae
gradually increase from evening to midnight.
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18Proboscis of a mosquito containing filariform
larvae
19A large number of 3rd stage larvae of a filarial
sp emerging from the proboscis of a mosquito.
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22III. Clinical manifestation
- 1. Acute stage
- The symptoms are due to allergic reaction. It
begins with a chill followed by a high fever. It
is called filarial fever. The lymphangitis(????),
lymphadenitis(????)may occur, orchitis(???)and
inflammation of spermatic cord are only found in
infection of W. bancrofti.
23- 2. Chronic stage
- The manifestations are caused by lymphatic
lesion. - (1) Elephantiasis Lymph edema may occur in
the limbs, scrotum, breast, vulva and etc. - (2) Chyluria only caused by W. bancrofti.
- (3) Hydrocele is only found in infection of
W. bancrofti.
24A patient of elephantiasis
25Elephantiasis of leg due to filariasis
26- Elephantiasis due to Brugia malayi. Pitting does
not occur in this stage (solid edema)
27- Elephantiasis due to Brugia malayi, complicated
by severe dermatitis and secondary bacterial
infection
28- This lady has elephantiasis of the right leg and
edema in the left
29- Hydrocele is only found in infection of W.
bancrofti.
30elephantiasis of the left leg and scrotum
31IV. Diagnosis
- The diagnosis depends on the symptoms,
signs and history of living in endemic areas, but
the confirmative diagnosis depends on the
demonstration of microfilariae. - 1. First choice method is thick blood
smear, taking blood at night from 9pm-2am. - 2. Millipore membrane filtration is used
for screening the patients or checking curative
effect in the endemic areas with the low
infective rate. - 3. Fresh blood smear used for mass
education. - 4. Immunological tests are only made
reference of the diagnosis.
32V. Treatment and Prevention
- Elimination the source of infection and
control mosquitoes. - 1. First choice drug is diethylcarbamazine (
DEC, Hetrazan ). - 2. DEC table salt (31000 ) are sold in
endemic areas. People take this salt over 6
months, resulting in an elimination or great
reduction of microfilariae in the blood stream,
for treating and preventing filariasis. - 3. Remove the giant elephantiasis of the
scrotum, chest and limbs. - 4. Eradicate mosquito breeding place and
control mosquitoes.It is important to protect
people from mosquito biting for controlling
filariasis.
33- VI. Epidemiology
- 1. Source of infection The people harbor
microfilariae in the blood stream. - 2. Vector Culex pipiens pallens, C. fatigans
for W. bancrofti, Anopheles sinensis, Anopheles
anthropophagus transmitting B. malayi. - 3. Distribution Filariasis of W. bancrofti is
world-wide distribution, while filariasis of B.
malayi is in Asia. In China, W. bancrofti
distributes in south of Yellow River 16 provinces
and city, while B. malayi in south of Yellow
River 13 provinces and city. B. malayi is not in
Shandong, Hainan and Taiwan. - 4. Reservoir host W. bancrofti is no reservoir
host, while cat, monkey may be the reservoir host
of B. malayi.
34Trichinella spiralis
- T.spiralis is the smallest human nematode
and a biohelminth. The adults and juveniles
(larvae) live in the same host, but they have to
change a host to complete their life cycle.They
cause trichinosis, a zoonosis, which is spread by
mammals kill each other. Human infections result
from eating raw meat.
35I. Morphology
- 1. Adults ?1.5mm, ?3-4mm, both have a single
set of reproductive organs and stichocytes
surrounding the esophagus. The secretions of
stichocytes are relative to digestion and
pathogenesis. - 2. Juvenile 1246 µm, one or more coil in
a cyst in the skeletal muscle fibers. The cyst is
about 0.25-0.5 0.21-0.42mm in size. This is
infective stage. There are stichocytes around the
esophagus.
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37Trichinella spiralis encysted larva
38T. spralis posterior end, male female
39II. Life cycle
- 1. Infective stage juveniles in cyst
- 2. Site of inhabitation adults in small
intestine(mainly in duodenum and jejunum),
juveniles in skeletal muscles - 3. Route of infection by mouth
- 4. Life span of female 1-2 months
- 5. Final host and intermediate host person
- 6. Reservoir host pigs, cats, dogs, mice
etc -
40 41- swallowed by
man digestive juice
- Juveniles in raw meat
duodenum -
cysts rupture -
-
-
penetrate mucosa, develop and molt - Larvae free from the cysts
?adults - return
to intestinal lumen ? - die
- Mate
give birth to
portal vein - ?burrow into mucosa
juveniles - ?
-
- Liver R.H lungs L. H
skeletal muscle cells
42III. Clinical manifestation
- The process of the pathogenesis may be
divided into 3 stages - 1. Invading stage(about 1 week) The damage
is mainly found in the intestine. In this stage,
abdominal pain, nausea,vomiting,diarrhea and
fever may occur. - 2. Migrating stage of the
juveniles(2-3weeks)The damage is mainly in the
skeletal muscles. In this stage, muscular pain
with high fever is main symptoms, especially in
active muscles. Wandering juveniles may also
cause pneumonitis, pleurisy, encephalitis,
nephritis and myocarditis etc. - 3. Encysted stage(4-16 weeks) In this
stage, only muscular pain present without other
symptoms. -
43IV. Diagnosis
- 1. Muscular biopsy 2. Examination of left
food and xenodiagnosis 3.Immunodiagnosis(1)
CPT(circumlarval precipitin test) (2) ELISA
(3) IHA - V. Treatment
- Albendazole and Mebendazole
- VI. Epidemiology
- Worldwide distribution. Lots of mammals can
serve as reservoir hosts. The spread of
trichinosis is due to mammals killing each other.
Humans get the infection by eating raw meat. - VII. Prevention
- 1. Quarantine of meat 2. Avoid eating raw meat
and feeding animals on raw meat.