0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views2 pages

Parasitology On Amoeba

This document describes the life cycles and characteristics of various amoeba species including Entamoeba histolytica and Entamoeba coli. E. histolytica has a 5 stage life cycle within the human host involving the ingestion of cysts, excystation in the small intestine, colonization and feeding in the cecum, and eventual encystation and shedding of cysts in feces. Diagnosis involves examining wet mounts of stool samples for motile trophozoites or cysts. E. histolytica can also cause hepatic amoebiasis through the presence of intestinal infection, clinical manifestations, and examination of abscess aspirates. The document provides details on the morphology, pathogenic
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views2 pages

Parasitology On Amoeba

This document describes the life cycles and characteristics of various amoeba species including Entamoeba histolytica and Entamoeba coli. E. histolytica has a 5 stage life cycle within the human host involving the ingestion of cysts, excystation in the small intestine, colonization and feeding in the cecum, and eventual encystation and shedding of cysts in feces. Diagnosis involves examining wet mounts of stool samples for motile trophozoites or cysts. E. histolytica can also cause hepatic amoebiasis through the presence of intestinal infection, clinical manifestations, and examination of abscess aspirates. The document provides details on the morphology, pathogenic
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

AMOEBA a. E.

coli - Wet mounts – NSS (I2 inhibits movement)


• Pseudopodial locomotion: • LC: (5 stages) - Preservative:
- Rootlike, finger-like or tongue like 1. Mature cyst Ingested – infective stage 1) MIF (Merthiolate iodine formaldehyde)
- Locomotor organelle (ameboid) 2. Stomach (gastric juices on cystic wall) 2) PVA (Polyvinyl alcohol)
- Procurement of food (pseudopodial encirclement) → Holozoic (ingest 3. Small intestine (Excystation) 3) Schaudinn’s fixative
organic matter) 4. Enclosed Metacyst (w/o wall, 8-nuclei) escapes Cyst W #2) & 3) – for permanent staining
Subkingdom: Protozoa 5. Metacyst – cytop. division - Permanent mounts – IH or Trichome stain
Phylum: Sarcomastigophora 6. Metacystic trophozoites 2. Solid or formed feces – CYST (carriers/chronic patient)
Subphylum: Sarcodina 7. Large intestine (cecum) – maturation to troph (feeding st) - Should include a portion of any fleck of mucus
Family: Endamoebidae 8. Mature troph multiply by binary fission adherent to feces or blood
• Strictly parasitic in GIT (alimentary canal) 9. Encystation start – unfavorable condition in cecum - Wet mounts – NSS or I2
• Small; binary fission 10. Undigested food extruded - If only few cysts → conc. → by ZnSO4 centrifugal
• Lack contractile vacuoles 11. Precyst – spherical flotation method → cyst on surface → troph killed
• Most undergo encystation 12. Precyst secrete tough wall → Encystation complete b. Saline-purged specimens (for TROPH)
Genus: 13. Uninucleate cyst - Provide mat for (+) diagnosis if routine fecal exam has
Achromatic 14. Nuclear division been rewarding
Karyosome Chromatin thread 15. Binucleate cyst (Young cyst) - Na2SO4 (Glauber salts) or phosphosoda preferred
(connect K-NM) 16. Quadrinucleate cyst - After purgation → discard earlier fecal evacuations →
17. Octanucleate cyst (Mature cyst) pipette sedimented el. of mucus & tissue cells from 2 nd &
Entamoeba
Numerous 18. Passed out w/ feces 3rd bowel movement onto slide → coverslip → examine
Small, center of N Present b. E. histolytica c. Sigmoidoscopy material
granules line NM
• LC: (5 stages) - Scrapings from suspected sites of amoebic ulceration by
1. Mature cyst ingested gentle pressure from long handled curette or loop
Endolimax
2. Stomach - 1/3 of scrapings are from sigmoidorectal area
Thin layer, periph,
Large, blot-like Present 3. Excystation – duodenum - Look for typical lesions
inconspicuous
4. Enclosed metacyst (4 nuclei) escapes its cystic wall - NSS suspension immediately – for motile TROPH
5. Metacyst – cytoplasmic division → 4 metacystic troph - Punch biopsy – fix, section & stain 1st before examining
Iodamoeba Large (1/2 Nuc. 1 layer of
Radiating (Amoebulae) d. Culture – last resort
Diameter) Periendosomal
Rich in chroma granules, no
achromatic 6. Cecum (colonize & feed) → maturation to troph - Study metabolism, pathogenicity & production of
(endosome) periph. chroma
fibrils 7. Mature troph – binary fission antigens for serodiagnosis
8. Start of encystation – unfavorable envi - Inoculum – troph / cyst from feces or mat from c
• Parasitic amoeba (accdg to pathogenicity & habitat):
9. Undigested food extruded out - Medium: dibasic medium of Boeck & Drbohlav (egg slant
A. Nonpathogenic
10. Troph rounds up → Precyst base w/ isotonic overlay = Locke egg serum)
a. Mouth (gingivalis → easy to transfer)
11. Precyst secretes cystic wall - Diamond’s medium TYI-S-33 → reveal E. histo if
b. Intestinal (coli, nana, buetschlii, dispar, hartmanni)
12. Uninucleate cyst (has glycogen mass & chroma. bodies) microscopic exam has failed
B. Pathogenic
13. 2 nuclear divisions → binucleate → quadrinucleate (mature) B. Hepatic Amoebiasis
a. Intestinal (histolytica)
14. Mature cyst a. Presence of Intestinal amoebiasis
• 2 main stages:
- 2 significant sizes for strains: b. Clinical manifestations, inc. WBC, liver function tests
Trophozoite Cyst
a) Large race – ave. diameter: > 10µ, generally virulent (BSP, ALP)
- Chromatoidal bars – crystallized b) Small race - < 10µ (cyst: 5-9µ; troph: 12-15µ) c. Aspiration of abscess – punch/needle biopsy
- Bacteria & food particles,
ribonucleoproteins in cytop. ➢ Commensal, non-pathogenic, “E. hartmanni” - Troph recovered in 1/3 of cases
ingestion (feeding stage)
Only protein source 15. Passed out w/ feces - Content of abscess (choco colored, “anchovy sauce”)
- RBC
- Glycogen vacuole– carb source → mix of sloughed liver tissue & blood or degenerated
- Motility (living state) • Divided into 2:
- Both are lost in mature cyst liver cells, RBC, leukocytes (sometimes)
1. Non-invasive – E. dispar
- Irregular – cytop. extension - Nonpathogenic in man d. X-ray: exhibit damage extent
- Smooth & rounded walls
Most → undergo fixation - In experimental animals: produce intestinal lesions e. Seroimmunologic test:
- Multinuclear (old); young = 1
- Uninuclear - Difficult to distinguish from E. histo (done by culture & 1. Complement fixation
A. Entamoeba biochemical methods) 2. FAT of Goldman
• 3 grps accdg to no. of nuclei in mature cyst: 2. Invasive (?) 3. Indirect hemagglutination (IHA) – more sensitive
1. 1 – E. polecki (pigs, monkey, man) • Strains of E.histo – differing in pathogenicity – distinguished • Contamination thru:
2. 4 – E. histo from nonpathogenic by isozyme analysis 1. Polluted H2O supply – cyst viable in damp soil (8 days), cool
3. 8 – E. coli • Diagnosis: (12 days), H2O (9-30 days), H2O at -4°C (3 months)
• Gingivalis – no encysted form A. Intestinal Amoebiasis 2. Unclean handling of infected indivs (formites, hands, clothes)
• Natural parasites of GIT of vertebrates & invertebrate hosts except a. Stool exam by direct smears & stained mounts 3. Droppings of flies & other insects
E. moshkovskii (sewage H2O & plants) 1. Diarrheic/dysenteric/liquid feces - TROPH - Cysts unchanged in intestine of flies & cockroach
• Inhibit large intestine of vertebrate hosts except gingivalis (man’s - Non-fecal mat: blood & mucus (pick out) - Viable in their feces & vomitus for 48 hrs.
mouth) & bovis (cow mouth) - w/in 30 mins. after voiding (if not, troph disintegrates) - Filth flies (Musca domestica) & cockroaches – mechanical
• Exclusive lumen dwellers exc. E. histo (invade tissue) & E. - do at 3-4 day intervals, not daily vectors of cysts (sticky, bristly appendages carry cyst from
invadens (invade tissue – reptiles) fresh stool; their habit of vomiting & defecating when
feeding → MoT) FREE-LIVING AMOEBA
4. Human excreta in veggie gardens • Order: Schizopyrenida
5. Carelessness in personal hygiene in children’s asylums, • Fam: Valkamphidae
mental hospitals, prisons & other congested areas • Genus:
• Transmission – sexually transmitted disease (oral – anal route) A. Naegleria
- Human carrier (cyst passers) – sources; show no symptoms a. N. fowleri = N. aerobia
• Pathogenicity - Cause of primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM)
1. Intestinal amoebiasis – localized in colon (colonize & feed) - From lakes, swimming pools (dive - troph → nasal passages
- multiply in crypts → olfactory nerves → cribriform plate → cranium)
- attachment mediated by amoebal galactose or N-acetyl-d- - Uninucleate cyst
galactosamine adherence lectins - 2 forms:
- when ingesting starch granules (rice) 1. Flagellate
- utilize mucous secretions as food ✓ 2 long flagella at one end
- Metabolize anaerobically w/ enteric bacteria ✓ Elongated
- Once they invade tissue – cause lysis ✓ Form pseudopods
- Don’t depend on bacteria – obtain their nourishment thru 2. Ameboid
absorption of dissolved tissue juices ✓ Single blunt lobopodium
- Encystation – not in tissue or outside intestinal lumen → B. Acanthamoeba
specimen taken outside lumen will contain troph only a. Several species (i.e. culbertsoni)
- Affect other organs (liver, brain, lungs, spleen - Can’t tolerate hot H2O as A
- Cause chronic infection of skin or CNS in:
E. coli E. histo 1. Immunocompromised hosts
Nuclear divisions 3 2 2. Agents of keratits (corneal inflammation) w/ contact lenses
Infective stage Mature cyst Young cyst & meningoencephalitis
Metacystic troph 8 4
c. E. hartmanni – LC, morpho & appearance identical to E. histo
except size (like E. nana)
Troph: - don’t ingest RBC
- motility less vigorous than histo
- Nuc: like coli in char. of its chromatin & karyosome
Cyst: - glycogen mass
- chromatoidal bodies (short w/ tapered ends; rice-grain
shaped or thin, bar-like)
d. E. dispar
B. Endolimax
a. E. nana - Same stage & LC as E.coli
C. Iodamoeba
a. I. buetschlii
Amoebic Dysentery Bacillary Dysentery
Gross Appearance Gelatinous mixture of Mucopurulent mass
blood, mucus & feces streaked w/ blood
Amt Copious Small
Odor Offensive (fishy) Inoffensive
Color Dark red Bright red
Reaction Acidic Alkaline
Microscopic
Ghost cells
None 95% degenerated
(WBC remnants)
Macrophages Rare Present
Never clumped,
RBC Clumped
discrete
Charcot-Leyden
crystals (in stools Present Absent
w/ parasitic infxn)
Bacteria Numerous Nil to none
Pus cells Scanty numerous

You might also like