Term
alpha proteins of hsv replication encode? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
beta proteins of hsv replication encode? |
|
Definition
proteins for viral replication |
|
|
Term
gamma proteins of hsv replication encode? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
what is LMP-1 (latent infection membrane protein)? |
|
Definition
in EBV, interacts with TNF and may inhibit apoptosis (leading to B-cell immortality) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
helps maintain latent EBV infection by binding to the EBV viral promoter oriP |
|
|
Term
EBV infection occurs first in which area of the body? which cell surface protein is involved in infection? |
|
Definition
nasopharynx then lymphocytes via CD21 |
|
|
Term
which genes of high-risk hpv are associated with immortalization and transformation functions? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which proteins are used in hpv vaccine? |
|
Definition
structural capsid proteins L1 |
|
|
Term
HPV E6 protein. what is the significance? |
|
Definition
its an oncogene protein that binds p53 and promotes its degradation (inhibits apoptosis) |
|
|
Term
HPV E7 protein. what is its significance? |
|
Definition
hpv oncogene protein, binds to p105RB |
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|
Term
fungi dont have peptidoglycan but instead have? |
|
Definition
glucans, mannoproteins, chitin |
|
|
Term
what is the name of the special media used to culture fungi? and what's in it? |
|
Definition
sabouraud's dextrose agar - acid-balanced, glucose, room temp incubation, use of bacterial inhibitors (bc lots of fungi take a while to grow and can easily be outgrown by bac colonies) |
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|
Term
give 2 examples of vegetative conidiation |
|
Definition
arthroconidia and chlamydoconidia (develop directly from hyphal cells) |
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|
Term
give 2 examples of aerial conidiation |
|
Definition
condidiophores (i.e. ascomycetes) and sporangioconidia (i.e. zygomycetes) also micro and macro conidia |
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|
Term
describe some characteristics of ascomycetes |
|
Definition
"sac" fungi; yeast and mold (septate hyphae branching at acute angles); dimorphic species, includes most of the major pathogens |
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|
Term
describe some characteristics of basidiomycetes. |
|
Definition
"club" fungi; mushrooms, rusts, smuts, some yeast; a few are infectious, others cause toxinoses (fungal intoxication!) |
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|
Term
describe some characteristics of zygomycetes. |
|
Definition
very fast growing, primitive molds with broad, aseptate hyphae branching at right angles - agents of the most acute fungal infection, rhinocerebral zygomycosis |
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|
Term
what is a special stain that will allow us to get the best visualization of specific structures in tissue sections (fungi)? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
what is calcofluor white and how does it work? |
|
Definition
it is a stain that we use to visualize fungal cell walls (namely, chitin) --> under black light this stain fluoresces bright blue |
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|
Term
what is india ink prep used for? |
|
Definition
it is a negative stain used to show polysaccharide capsule of fungi. used esp to identify CRYPTOCOCCUS NEOFORMANS which is an impt OI in aids patients. |
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|
Term
in what situations would a delayed-type hypersensitivity skin test for fungi be useful? |
|
Definition
epidemiology, to r/o particular dx, indicator for possible immunodeficiency |
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|
Term
visualization of germ tubes identifies which fungal organism? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
describe the dermatophyte test medium |
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Definition
selective against other species. tests dermatophyte ability to grow and produce an acid rxn on keratin-based agar medium. medium yellow @ acid-pH --> dermatophytes present? --> digest keratin (alkaline rxn) --> color change to red |
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|
Term
fungal 'farmer's lung' is associated with what type of rxn? |
|
Definition
type III hypersensitivity (inhale conidia or mycelial elements occurring over long periods --> chronic lung disease) |
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|
Term
what is the most serious mushroom-poisoning toxin and what is the general development of sx? |
|
Definition
death angel mushroom (amanita phalloides, amatoxins/amanitin). severe GI sx --> full recovery --> liver failure --> death (death within several days d/t multiorgan failure) |
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|
Term
why is ergotism (st. anthony's fire) dangerous and where do we get it? |
|
Definition
fungal plant pathogen growing on food crops during growth or storage --> release toxins that cause disease upon ingestion. we get it from ingestion of RYE containing claviceps purpurea. --> choreic movements as sx |
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|
Term
what is the danger of aspergillus and where are they found? |
|
Definition
found in contaminated stored crops (esp peanuts) --> release aflatoxins (hepatotoxins in large doses, carcinogens in chronic low dose) |
|
|
Term
what 2 pathogens are responsible for superficial or cutaneous mycosis? |
|
Definition
c. albicans and dermatophyte molds |
|
|
Term
how are subcutaneous mycoses acquired? |
|
Definition
usually through skin breaks (usually in feet) followed by lymphatic spread |
|
|
Term
tinea is caused by which genera of dermatophytes? |
|
Definition
microsporum, trichophyton and epidermophyton |
|
|
Term
hair shaft infections can be subdivided... |
|
Definition
ectothrix (fungus on surface of shaft) and endothrix (fungus invading the shaft) |
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|
Term
chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) is a frequent manifestation of? |
|
Definition
autoimmune polyendocrinopathy syndrome type 1 (APECED) - central tolerance defect |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
allergic contact dermatitis, photoallergic dermatitis, eczematous drug eruptions, atopic eczematous dermatitis (unknown etiology) |
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|
Term
clinical features of eczematous dermatitis |
|
Definition
polymorphous, ill-defined pruritic lesions characterized by thickening and scaling of the skin with gray scales and moist crusts. erythema, edema, oozing and crusting (vesicles in severe cases) this is an ACUTE inflammatory disorder |
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|
Term
what is the histopathologic hallmark of eczematous dermatitis? |
|
Definition
spongiosis (intercellular edema of epidermis) --> abnormal keratinization with parakeratosis and serum in the cornified layer |
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|
Term
clinical features of psoriasis |
|
Definition
chronic relapsing disorder, red round plaques (elevated lesion) and patches (flat lesions) with white scale with elbows knees and scalp most commonly affected. |
|
|
Term
what are the histopathologic characteristics of psoriasis? |
|
Definition
microabsesses (munro's) in the epidermis, parakeratosis, psoriasiform epidermal hyperplasia, dilated blood vessels in dermis |
|
|
Term
clinical features of lichen planus |
|
Definition
pruritic purple papules commonly affecting flexor surfaces of wrist and ankles, also mucous membranes, genitals and nails. |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of lichen planus? |
|
Definition
lichenoid infiltrate (dense band-like infiltrate filling the papillary dermis, obscuring dermoepidermal junction) NO parakeratosis, thickened cornified and granular layers, degeneration of basal layer |
|
|
Term
clinical features of dermatophyte infections |
|
Definition
ring shaped lesions, peripheral scale erythema |
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|
Term
histopathologic characteristic of dermatophyte infections? |
|
Definition
fungal hyphae in cornified layer (periodic acid-schiff reaction stains organisms blue) |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristic of c. albicans? |
|
Definition
spores and pseudoseptate hyphae in cornified layer (PAS stain helpful) |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of HSV |
|
Definition
intraepidermal vesicles with epidermal necrosis and ballooning degeneration of the squamous cells. multinucleated keratinocytes |
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|
Term
demographic of people affected with pemphigus? level of morbid/mort? |
|
Definition
(autoimmune) high level of morbidity/mortality, pt 35-65 |
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|
Term
demographic for pemphigoid? morbid/mort rate? |
|
Definition
(autoimmune) low morbiditiy and mortality, adults over age of 60 |
|
|
Term
clinical features of pemphigus? |
|
Definition
flaccid blisters, easily rupture, arise on NORMAL skin, affects head/trunk/mouth |
|
|
Term
clinical features of pemphigoid? |
|
Definition
tense pruritic blisters that arise on erythematous edamatous plaques, commonly on groin/axilla/flexural surfaces of extremities |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristic of pemphigus? and pathophys |
|
Definition
intraepidermal vesicles above basal cell layer, discohesion of keratinocytes (acantholysis) auto-abs attack desmosomes |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of pemphigoid? |
|
Definition
subepidermal vesicles with eosinophils, split occurs in lamina lucida of the basement membrane zone comple. epidermis basically lifted off of the skin. hemidesmosome = target |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
auto-abs attack bullous pemphigoid ag1 and 2 (lamina lucida) --> unhinges epidermis from basal cell layer |
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|
Term
where do basal cell carcinomas typically appear? |
|
Definition
almost exclusively on hair-bearing areas esp sun-damaged skin of the face |
|
|
Term
what are the most important predisposing factors for basal cell carcinoma? |
|
Definition
light skin color and prolonged exposure to light |
|
|
Term
clinical presentation of basal cell carcinoma? |
|
Definition
elevated tumor nodule with elevated, pearly, shiny, ulcerated edges. outgrows blood supply. |
|
|
Term
are basal cell carcinomas dangerous? |
|
Definition
LOCALLY destructive, do NOT metastasize. can be dangerous IF they gain entry into the orbit or to any nerves that innervate the face (can damage brain and cause death, rare) |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of basal cell carcinoma |
|
Definition
proliferation of atypical basaloid cells forming nests/lobules in DERMIS. basal cells show peripheral palisading of nuclei; nests exhibit artifactual retraction from surrounding stroma. |
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|
Term
who is most at risk for actinic keratoses? |
|
Definition
severely sun-damaged skin in older ppl (excessive exposure to sunlight for many years w/o protection) |
|
|
Term
clinical presentation of actinic keratoses? |
|
Definition
commonly seen on face, dorsum of hands and bald portions of scalp in men. multiple, elevated scaly red patches |
|
|
Term
are actinic keratoses dangerous? |
|
Definition
should be viewed as earliest stage in evolution of squamous cell carcinoma aka pre-cancerous. it is slow-developing so if it's caught early enough it can be treated before it turns cancerous. |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of actinic keratoses? |
|
Definition
thickened cornified layer, stains way more pink (usually more blue) d/t keratin overproduction, nuclei much larger and darker than normal (in lower 1/3 of epidermis) |
|
|
Term
where would we most expect to find squamous cell carcinomas? |
|
Definition
anywhere on the skin and mucous membranes. often on sun-damaged skin (assoc. with pre-existing actinic keratoses), on longstanding scars (esp burn scars) |
|
|
Term
when are squamous cell carcinomas more likely to metastasize? |
|
Definition
LOW propensity to metastasize when they're on sun-damaged skin; HIGH propensity on lip, scars, chronic sinus tracts, eyes, mouth, genitals (up to 30%) i.e. in areas involving mucocutaneous junctions bc can gain entry into lymphatics/blood |
|
|
Term
clinical presentation of squamous cell carcinomas? |
|
Definition
elevated, irregular, hyperkeratotic neoplasms, often ulcerated |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of squamous cell carcinoma? |
|
Definition
collections of very pink staining cells forming irregular nests, lobules, and strands within inflamed stroma (bc abn cells are proliferating, trying to produce keratin), pleiomorphic nuclei (nuclei stain with diff colors and sizes bc chr all messed up, all cells have diff # of chr), dyskeratosis |
|
|
Term
where would we expect to find malignant melanomas? |
|
Definition
trunk of fair-skinned men and lower legs of fair skinned women. rarely, on eyes and mouth. |
|
|
Term
what are the risk factors for malignant melanomas? |
|
Definition
family hx of malignant melanomas, dysplastic or large congenital nevi (nevus= mole, benign, melanocyte grows abn, benign collection of melanocytes in nests within epidermis dermis or both), fair skin, freckling, light hair, excessive exposure to UV light, hx of blistering sunburns and immune suppression |
|
|
Term
histopathologic characteristics of malignant melanomas? |
|
Definition
poorly circumscribed proliferation of atypical melanocytes wtihin epidermis arranged as irregular nests along dermoepidermal junction and extending to higher levels of epidermis. |
|
|
Term
what are some malignant signs of a melanoma just by observation? |
|
Definition
brown, black and white. >6mm diameter, irregular border |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
when you see a primary melanoma with satellite spots. indicates that the primarily lesion has disseminated through the lymphatics and is going back and causing re-growth. bad prognosis. |
|
|
Term
what's an example of natural passive immunization? |
|
Definition
transplacental transfer of maternal IgG |
|
|
Term
what's an example of artificial passive immunization? |
|
Definition
antitoxins and antivenoms, also pooled human IgG (IVIg) for prophylaxis against infections in immunodeficiency disease |
|
|
Term
what's an example of natural active immunization? |
|
Definition
person's own immune response to antigens of an infectious agent |
|
|
Term
what's an example of artificial active immunization? |
|
Definition
innoculation of the pathogen itself, its antigens, or other cross-reacting pathogens or antigens or nucleic acids encoding antigens |
|
|
Term
how is prevention of infection different from prevention if disease? |
|
Definition
prevention of infetion involves removing the protected individual from the chain of transmission in the population |
|
|
Term
when would we use immunization as a means of treating an ongoing disease? |
|
Definition
when the natural immune response to the pathogen is poorly protective and where there is a lack of good tx alternatives |
|
|
Term
what are some examples of vaccines we use today that are live-attenuated? |
|
Definition
measles, mumps, chickenpox, and polio (until recently) |
|
|
Term
describe the IPV (inactivated poliovirus vaccine) |
|
Definition
killed mixture of the 3 serotypes (SALK vaccine). parenterally given, results in circulating abs (IgG). this did not provide mucosal immunity against the virus and did not prevent infection of intestinal cells when the immunized person later encountered wild poliovirus, but it did stop the viremic phase of infection and prevented symptomatic CNS infection (fatal) |
|
|
Term
describe OPV (oral poliovirus vaccine) |
|
Definition
SABIN vaccine. mixture of one attenuated variant of each of the wild strains. provides stimulation of the normal course of inf --> induces mucosal immunity in the GI tract, rendereing immunized resistant to inf by wild virus as well as to symptomatic disease. reduces the spread of virus in the population. opv itself spreads in the population after immunization, extending benefits of vaccine to non-immunized people. |
|
|
Term
what is the major downside of OPV? |
|
Definition
two of the viral strains is stable but the third is not --> exhibits reversion to virulence at a measurable but low rate --> few cases of paralytic disease every year |
|
|
Term
what is the major live-attenuated bacterial vaccine? |
|
Definition
bacille-calmette-guerin (BCG) vaccine against TB (attenuated variant of mycobacterium bovis). |
|
|
Term
what are 3 examples of a killed-pathogen vaccine? |
|
Definition
influenza virus vaccine, rabies virus vaccine, pertussis vaccine |
|
|
Term
why is protection only partial in killed-pathogen vaccines for diseases like influenza and pertussis? |
|
Definition
killed-pathogen vaccines work fine for diseases that depend on extensive spread through body before sx produced. influenza and pertussis produce sx much earlier, so the protection will cause a lesser version of the disease but will not prevent sx altgoether |
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|
Term
what are the most prominent examples of subunit vaccines? |
|
Definition
toxoids and capsular polysaccharides |
|
|
Term
what kind of diseases do we use subunit vaccines for? |
|
Definition
for the kind of bacterial infections whose ill effects are totally or mostly attributable to protein toxins produced by the bacteria (diptheria, tetanus) |
|
|
Term
how do adjuvants work to stimulate immunity? |
|
Definition
induce inflammation (stimulation of lys proliferation and activation by early cytokines such as IL-1); by facilitating uptake and presentation of ags via complex formation; and by prolonging the presence of ag in tissues by formation of insoluble depots such as ag in mineral oil |
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|
Term
what are 3 ways we're trying to mimic the effects of an intracellular infection to improve induction of CMI in vaccines? |
|
Definition
use of micelle-forming immune-stimulatory complexes to deliver ags directly into the cytosol; use of recombinant live viruses to express ags from other pathogens during an intracellular inf; immunization with genes encoding such ags in the form of naked molecules of dna or rna |
|
|
Term
what happens after anthrax spores are inhaled? |
|
Definition
travel to alveoli, ingested by macrophages, carried to mediastinal lymph nodes --> hemorrhagic necrotizing mediastinitis w/systemic toxemia and bacteremia --> death |
|
|
Term
what 4 bacterial virulence factors are involved in the pathogenesis of anthrax? |
|
Definition
antiphagocytic capsule, lethal factor (cytolytic toxin, induces release of pro-inflammatory factors like TNF-a), edema factor (alters IC signaling --> changes in water homeostasis and immune func), protective antigen (binds to cellular receptor, facilitates uptake of LF and EF by cells) |
|
|
Term
what do you treat anthrax with? |
|
Definition
fluoroquinolones (cipro), tetracyclines (doxy), amoxicillin |
|
|
Term
how do we treat a botulism attack? |
|
Definition
there is no infection so antibiotics play no role in tx. toxoid vaccine exists, but would have to be given in advance of attack (antitoxin), and risk of attack is not high enough to justify immunization. |
|
|
Term
what are the 3 forms of plague? |
|
Definition
bubonic (massive lymphadenopathy), pneumonic (from vector-acquired bubonic or septicemic plague by hematogenous spread or by inhalation), septicemic. unlike other bioterrorist threats, pneumonic plague spreads efficiently person-to-person --> 2ndary spread after an attack expected |
|
|
Term
what are the bacterial virulence factors for plague? |
|
Definition
yersinia outer membrane proteins (yops - invasive cytotoxic outer membrane proteins), proteinaceous capsule, thrombolytic protease (activates plasminogen), endotoxin |
|
|
Term
what do you treat plague with? |
|
Definition
streptomycin, gentamycin, doxy, cipro, chloramphenicol |
|
|
Term
what are the 2 class A bioterrorist agents that can be spread person to person? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what's the tx for smallpox in bioterrorist attack? |
|
Definition
vaccine can be used for post-exposure prophylaxis |
|
|
Term
what are the 7 presentations of tuleremia? |
|
Definition
ulceroglandular (skin), glandular (vector), oculoglandular (eye), oropharyngeal (ingestion or inhalation), typhoidal (systemic febrile illness with enteric involvement), septic |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
streptomycin, gentimicin, doxy, chloramphenicol, cipro |
|
|
Term
what are 4 classes of viruses that can lead to hemorrhagic fevers? |
|
Definition
flavivirus (yellow fever), filoviruses (ebola and marburg viruses), arenaviruses (lassa), bunyaviruses (rift valley fever) |
|
|
Term
tx for hemorrhagic fever? |
|
Definition
ribavirin for arenaviruses and bunyaviruses |
|
|
Term
how do we test for toxoplasmosis |
|
Definition
serologic testing - sabin-feldman test: methylene blue + accessory factor + serum --> clear if infected (d/t antisera) and blue if non-infected (no antisera); or indirect fluorescent antibody test |
|
|
Term
how do we dx leishmaniasis? |
|
Definition
smear and stain (giemsa), culture scrapings from lesion margin, positive leishmanin skin test (montenegro test) demonstrates DTH |
|
|
Term
how does toxoplasma gondii survive intracellularly |
|
Definition
prevents fusion of lysosome and endosome |
|
|
Term
how does leishmaniasis survive intracellularly? |
|
Definition
can survive in phagolysosome |
|
|
Term
how does trypanosoma cruzii survive intracellularly? |
|
Definition
escape from phagolysosome/phagosome |
|
|
Term
which form of trypannosomiasis protozoa are infectious for humans? |
|
Definition
metatrypomastigotes (in tsetse fly, epimastigotes transform into metatrypanomastigotes) |
|
|
Term
what is winterbottom's sign and what is it diagnostic for? |
|
Definition
characteristic of Gambian trypanosomiasis |
|
|
Term
pathogenesis of african trypanosomiasis |
|
Definition
fly bite --> metatrypanomastigote introduced to skin --> lodge in local tissue and multiply extracellularly --> inflammatory rxn subsides in 1-2 weeks (primary lesion seen in caucasions usually) --> trypomastigotes reach blood in 2 weeks of inf --> hyperplasia of vascular endothelium + perivascular infiltration by leukocytes and inflam of lymph nodes and hepatosplenomegaly |
|
|
Term
clinical presentation of african trypanosomiasis |
|
Definition
headache, frequent febrile paroxysms, extreme weakness, rapid weight loss, rapidly progressive, fatal. CNS involvement --> disturbed vision, mental confusion, delayed response to pain, emaciation, continuous sleep, death |
|
|
Term
describe antigenic variation in association with african trypanosomiasis |
|
Definition
parasite changes variant surface glycoprotein by random switching of VSG genes --> changed antigenic profile --> antibody response to VSG results in waves of parasitemia |
|
|
Term
diagnosis of african tryapnosomiasis |
|
Definition
sx, hx of exposure, parasites in blood, csf or lymph node aspirates, serology |
|
|
Term
how do we get infected with chagas disease? |
|
Definition
reduviidae insects - metatrypomastigotes in insect feces rubbed into bite wound, skin abrasions, or intact mucosa (esp conjunctiva; also via blood transfusion, congenital and oral transmission |
|
|
Term
2 things/signs that may happen at primary infection site of chagas disease |
|
Definition
romana's sign (in children, unilateral painless, erythematous edema around eye, with periauricular and/or submaxillary lymphadenitis); chagoma (erythematous, itching, desquamated and rarely ulcerated skin lesion) |
|
|
Term
what happens in chagas disease after we're introduced to the metatrypomastigotes? |
|
Definition
metatrypomastigotes enter macrophages --> transform into amastigotes and multiply --> transform into trypomastigotes and leave infected cell to infect other cells or to be picked up by insect (in insect --> transform to epimastigotes --> multiply in midgut --> go to hindgut and transform into metatrypomastigotes --> infect humans) |
|
|
Term
diagnosis of chaga's disease |
|
Definition
parasites in blood lymph or infected tissues; culture; animal inoculation; xenodiagnosis (feed uninfected bugs on pt --> examine insect gut for parasites); serologic tests |
|
|
Term
what efficiently kills all intracellular parasites? |
|
Definition
INF-y-treated (activated) macrophages |
|
|
Term
describe the pathogenesis of pneumocystis jirovecci (PCP) |
|
Definition
alveolar pathogen without tissue invasion --> extracellular trophozoites and cysts in pulmonary alveoli (along with cellular debris and macrophages) --> pulmonary injury from inflammatory response |
|
|
Term
describe the clinical presentation of PCP |
|
Definition
can be a chronic asymptomatic infection in immunocompetent; fulminant pulmonary and extrapulmonary disease in immunocompromised. pt experiences progressive dyspnea, nonproductive cough, low-grade fever and hypoxia) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
cysts and trophozoites in induced sputum or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid |
|
|
Term
toxoplasma gondii, leishmania spp., and trypanosoma cruzi are all intracellular parasites. what cells do they infect? |
|
Definition
toxoplasma and trypanosoma cruzii infect all nucleated cells (macrophages, smooth skeletal and cardiac muscle, neurons of CNS and PNS); leishmania spp only infect macrophages |
|
|
Term
chronic infection with trypanosoma cruzii leads to what sx? |
|
Definition
cardiomyopathy, megaesophagus and megacolon |
|
|
Term
pediculites aka lice - how many legs? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what do scabies insects look like? how are they spread? |
|
Definition
microscopic, 4 pairs of legs, 2 anterior and 2 posterior, indistinct head. spread person to person or via fomites |
|
|
Term
how long do lice live? how many eggs produced each day? how long til maturation? |
|
Definition
live 30 days, 5-10 eggs/day, eggs hatch in 4-14 days, takes 12-28 days to mature |
|
|
Term
how long do scabies bugs live? where do they reide? how many eggs/day? how long til eggs hatch? larva become adults in a week? |
|
Definition
live for 8 weeks in cutaneous burrows/tunnels; 1-2 eggs at a time; eggs hatch in 3-5 days; larvae become adults in a week |
|
|
Term
what causes the itching in pediculosis? |
|
Definition
louse saliva produce pruritic papules |
|
|
Term
what causes the itching in scabies? |
|
Definition
fecal pellets, eggs and remains of dead mites provoke hypersensitivity rxns --> inflammation --> itching |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
infestation of the body with larvae of dipterous flies (flies deposit eggs or larvae in wounds, ulcers, sores, and orifices) |
|
|
Term
how do larvae cause damage in myiasis? |
|
Definition
debride necrotic tissue (in the wounds, ulcers, sores that they are deposited in) --> sometimes cause extensive damage to surrounding healthy tissue --> painful lesions |
|
|
Term
what is the toxin in scorpion venom? |
|
Definition
its a neurotoxin called chlorotoxin. crosses BBB --> targets glioma or primary brain tumor cells. we use it in imaging to localize tumors |
|
|
Term
what does scorpion venom stimulate? |
|
Definition
sustained release of acetylcholine and catecholamines (epi) --> initial cholinergic and later adrenergic sx |
|
|
Term
what happens at the site of the scorpion sting immediately after puncture? |
|
Definition
intense local pain, local edema, regional lymph node swelling and tenderness, blistering and necrosis |
|
|
Term
what are the early sx of a poisonous scorpion sting? |
|
Definition
salivation, vomiting, profuse sweating, alternating brady and tachycardia, abdnominal colic, diarrhea, loss of sphincter control, priapism, widely dilated pupils |
|
|
Term
what are the late sx of a poisonous scorpion sting? |
|
Definition
hypertension, pulmonary edema, respiratory paralysis, convulsions, hematemesis, hyperglycemia, acute pancreatitis, shock, coma, death |
|
|
Term
what is the danger in a black widow spider bite? |
|
Definition
(first, is a systemic arachnidism, does not produce local tissue necrosis) toxin = alpha-latrotoxin --> binds irreversibly to neurons --> sustained release and eventual depeletion of NT (acetylcholine and norepi) --> painful muscle cramps in extremities and trunk (other sx: salivation, vomiting, tachycardia, HA, resp or cardiac failure, possibly fatal) |
|
|
Term
whats the pathogenesis behind a brown recluse spider bite? |
|
Definition
(first, its NOT systemic, its local) it has a catalytic toxin that has enzyme activity --> cleaves extracellular matrix proteins --> pain, erythematous and pruritic bite site --> lesions resolve or become hemorrhagic/necrotic with blackeneed eschar --> necrotic ulcer |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
if attached for several days --> tick paralysis (tick salivary toxin --> inhibits acetylcholine release --> acute, ascending flaccid paralysis (gone as soon as tick removed, but if tick not removed, 10% mortality from resp paralysis) |
|
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Term
what is the pathogenesis of malaria (from bite to sx) |
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Definition
infected female bites human --> inject saliva and sporozoites --> sporozoites enter hepatocytes and multiply --> become merozoites infective of RBC --> successive progenies of merozoites in rbc --> major manifestations of malaria |
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Term
how does sexual reproduction of malaria take place in mosquito? |
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Definition
some merozoites in human RBC differentiate into gametocytes --> gametocytes ingested by mosquitos --> give rise to gametes in mosquito stomach where fertilization takes place --> zygote --> oocyst --> sporozoites develop in oocyst --> oocyst ruptures upon maturation --> sporozoites released migrate to salivary gland |
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