1 / 89

Infectious Diseases Immunology

Infectious Diseases Immunology. LATG: Chapters 10-11. Health Maintenance. Maintaining lab animal health requires Proper environment. Proper food and water. Disease prevention program. Disease detection program. Contingency plan if disease is detected. Disease Prevention.

salena
Télécharger la présentation

Infectious Diseases Immunology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Infectious DiseasesImmunology LATG: Chapters 10-11

  2. Health Maintenance • Maintaining lab animal health requires • Proper environment. • Proper food and water. • Disease prevention program. • Disease detection program. • Contingency plan if disease is detected.

  3. Disease Prevention • Type of program depends upon species. • Rodents--primarily review of vendor data and procedures in place to prevent introduction and spread of disease. • Nonrodents--As for rodents but may also have other facets such as vaccinations, dewormings etc.

  4. Disease Detection • Like NORAD, PADDS (Pfizer Animal Disease Detection System) relies on • Early warning system--technicians who check animals daily. • Early response--veterinary technicians who evaluate reported problems. • Final response--delivered after evaluation and consultation with veterinarian and PI.

  5. Disease Detection • A rodent sentinel program is in place to screen for potential viral, bacterial and parasitic contaminants. • In the rare instance of an actual infection steps are taken to evaluate the extent of the infection and eliminate it.

  6. Pathogenic Organisms • Life forms that have the potential to cause disease under the proper conditions. • Text classifications • Bacteria • Fungi • Viruses • Parasites

  7. Biology Influencing Organisms • In laboratory animal science we are also very concerned with biology influencing organisms. • These organisms may or may not cause clinical disease. • Biological systems can be influenced even by subclinical infections.

  8. Viruses • Small particles made up of nucleic acid and a protein capsule. • Viruses may also be covered by an envelope • Many viruses can infect laboratory animals, most do not cause clinical disease. • Viruses are divided into two main classes. • DNA viruses • RNA viruses

  9. DNA Viruses of Mice • Mousepox (Ectromelia) • Minute virus of mice • Cytomegalovirus • Polyoma virus • Mouse parvo virus

  10. DNA viruses of rats • Polyoma virus (in nude rats) • Adenovirus • Kilham rat virus • Rat parvo virus

  11. RNA viruses of mice • Mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) • Sendai • Lymphocytic choriomeningitis • Reovirus • Hantavirus • Retroviruses--mouse leukemia virus and mouse mammary tumor virus

  12. RNA viruses of rats • Sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV) • Sendai • Pneumonia virus of mice • Hantaan virus

  13. Bacteria • Many bacteria in nature are beneficial. • In nearly all mammals there are more bacterial cells than mammalian cells • Consist of a cell membrane, a cell wall and cytoplasm.

  14. Bacteria • Classified by • Morphology • Size • Staining characteristics • Formation of spores • Nutrient requirements • Biochemical reactions • All are prokaryotes

  15. Bacterial Morphology • Cocci (spherical) • Pairs--Diplococci • Chains--Streptococci • Clusters--Staphylococci • Rods, may be straight or slightly curved • Spiral shaped

  16. Bacterial Staining Characteristics • Classified into Gram negative and Gram positive groups • Gram positive--dark blue/violet stain, due to a thick cell wall • Gram negative--red stain, due to a thin cell wall with high lipid content

  17. Fungi • Many fungi in nature are beneficial • Used to make • bread • beer • wine • antibiotics • A few fungi are pathogenic • All are eukaryotes

  18. Beneficial fungus • Saccharomyces cervisae

  19. Fungi • Pathogenic species classified into • Superficial mycoses • Systemic mycoses

  20. Superficial mycoses • Infect superficial tissues; skin, hair and nails. • Commonly called “ringworm” • See scaliness and alopecia (hairloss), sometimes redness

  21. Systemic mycoses • Infect deep tissues; lung, bone, CNS, GI tract. • Often associated with certain geographic areas • Lower Sonoran desert--Coccidioides immitis • Central and southeastern US--Blastomyces spp.

  22. Parasites • Large group of single cell (protozoans) and multi-cell (metazoans) animals which must coexist on another animal during some part of their life cycle • A parasite must also have the potential for causing disease in the host

  23. Parasites • Websites of interest • Parasites and Parasitological Resources • http://www.biosci.ohio-state.edu/~parasite/home.html • Identification and Diagnosis of Parasites of Public Health Concern • http://www.dpd.cdc.gov/DPDx/Default.htm

  24. Parasite Lifecycles • “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.” Sun-tzu, “The Art of War” • Knowing the life cycle of a parasite is the key to knowing how to prevent and treat infestation.

  25. Parasite Lifecycles • Life cycles can be direct or indirect. • Direct--parasite eggs/larva can infect definitive host • Indirect--parasite needs to pass through an intermediate host prior to infecting the definitive host

  26. Parasite Hosts • Definitive host--the species of animal responsible for housing the reproductive stage of the parasite • Intermediate host--the species of animal responsible for housing any of the non-reproductive stages of the parasite • Disease can occur in both types of host

  27. Protozoan Parasite • Amoebas • Flagellates • Ciliates • Sporozoa

  28. Toxoplasma gondii • A sporozoan parasite • Definitive host--cat • Intermediate host--almost any other mammal or bird • Causes self-limiting diarrhea in cats • May cause severe disease in immunosuppressed intermediate host

  29. Toxoplasma gondii • Trophozoites in lung fluid from an HIV-infected person • Tissue cyst from a cat

  30. T. gondii life cycle

  31. Other protozoa • Giardia • Trypanosome

  32. Metazoan Parasites • Trematodes--Flukes • Cestodes--Tapeworms • Nematodes • Arthropods--insects, ticks, mites

  33. Cestodes--Tapeworms • Parasites which inhabit the GI tract of the definitive host • May cause lesions in many different tissues in the intermediate host • Do not have their own digestive system • Life cycle often indirect but may also be direct

  34. Echinococcus granulosus

  35. Tapeworm tissue cysts Cysts in a baboon heart

  36. Hymenolepis (Rodentolepis) nana • A tapeworm of rodents and humans • Has a direct life cycle

  37. Nematodes--The “Roundworms” • Worms that are round in cross-section • Body structure contains a GI tract as well as reproductive organs • Both direct and indirect life cycles • May live in many tissues in both the intermediate and definitive hosts

  38. Ascarids • Common intestinal parasite of dogs, cats, swine and humans • Also called roundworms • Both direct and indirect life cycles • Infections in humans can result in visceral larval migrans or ocular larval migrans

  39. Toxacara canis life cycle

  40. Toxocara canis • Adults • Egg

  41. Dirofilaria immitis Heartworm • A nematode parasite that lives in the right side of the heart in dogs and occasionally cats • Life cycle of this parasite requires passage through mosquitoes • Infection can cause heart failure

  42. Heartworm life cycle

  43. Acanthocephalans • Thorny headed worms • Seen in pigs and nonhuman primates

  44. Arthropod parasites • Large group of external parasites that include • Insects • Ticks • Mites

  45. Arthropod parasites • In lab animal science most likely to see • Mites • Lice • Fleas

  46. Mites • Parasites in the arachnid family • Have eight legs in the adult stage • Live on the skin, sometimes deep in the hair follicle • May be zoonotic

  47. Sarcoptic mange mite • Sarcoptes scabiei with multiple subspecies • Infest a multitude of species • Infestation is also called “scabies” • Can cause intense pruritis • Infestation is worse if animal is immunosuppressed

  48. Sarcoptic mange in a dog

  49. Scabies in a person

  50. Prevention of Infectious Disease • In all cases it’s easier to prevent diseases than to treat them • Principles of prevention are simple and usually more cost-effective than treatment

More Related