1 / 16

Onchocerca volvulus

Onchocerca volvulus. Ross Boreen and Ellyn Krieg. Taxonomy. Onchocerca volvulus is a filarial worm The diseases it causes is onchocerciasis Depending on where it infects the host it can be further classified as river blindness or filariasis

allan
Télécharger la présentation

Onchocerca volvulus

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. Onchocercavolvulus Ross Boreen and Ellyn Krieg

  2. Taxonomy • Onchocercavolvulusis a filarial worm • The diseases it causes is onchocerciasis • Depending on where it infects the host it can be further classified as river blindness or filariasis • It is one of the three nematode worms that causes subcutaneous filariasis • Loa loa • Mansonellastreptocerca • Onchocercavolvulus

  3. Geographical Range and Hosts • Found in 36 countries endemically with 30 of them being in sub-Saharan Africa commonly found in Central America as well • Roughly 80 million people are infected • In hyperendemic areas more than 90% of people can have the microfilariae

  4. Hosts • Definitive Host: Humans • Intermediate Host: Female Simulium flies (black flies)

  5. Morphology • Adults: • Found in pairs or groups • Slender and blunt at both ends • No lips or buccal capsule • Two circles of four papillae which surround the mouth • Males are 19 cm to 42 cm long • Females are 33.5 cm to 50 cm long • Male posterior end is curled ventrally and has four pairs of adanal and 6-8 pairs of postanal papillae • Microfilariae: • Unsheathed • Sharply pointed and curved tails

  6. Life Cycle

  7. Life Cycle Continued • Simulium fly introduces L3 larvae into the skin of a human as it takes a blood meal • In subcutaneous tissues the larvae develop into adults both male and female commonly forming nodules called onchocercomas • The adults can live in these nodules for 14-16 years. While here the female will produce up to 1000 microfilariae/day for up to 9 years. • Microfilariae travel throughout the skin and lymphatics of connective tissue, but can also be found in the peripheral blood in heavy infections. • Black fly ingests the microfilariae during a blood meal

  8. Life Cycle Continued • Microfilariae migrate from the midgut through the hemocoel to the thoracic muscles where they develop into L1 larvae. They then molt twice into L3 larvae • The L3 larvae migrates to the proboscis of the fly. • The L3 is transmitted to another human when the fly takes another blood meal. • The time the microfilariae takes to develop into an L3 larvae in the fly is about 10 days.

  9. Pathogenesis of Adults • Not very pathogenic, often no symptoms • Can cause subcutaneous nodules called onchocercomas over bony prominences • In African strains tend to be on lower body such as pelvic area, and some along the spine, chest, and knees • In Central America they are on the upper body with most being on the neck and head • Nodules are pretty benign just cause disfigurement with no pain • They are composed of collagen fibers surrounding the adult worms • Occasionally the nodule can degenerate to form an abscess or the worms can become calcified

  10. Pathogenesis of Microfilariae • Live ones cause little inflammation • Can cause a dermatitis or eye complications • Dermititis (Filariasis) • When they die they start to degenerate which causes severe dermatitis • Dermatitis thought to be caused by release of a type of bacteria called Wolbachia, which can be treated with doxycycline to help reduce inflammation • First sign is intense itching, which can lead to secondary bacterial infections and death of patches of skin • After the itching the, skin thickens, becomes discolored, and cracks, a process known as lichenification • Characterized by loss of elasticity making the patient look like they are aging prematurely • Lymph glands that serve the area of infected skin can become inflamed as well

  11. Riverblindness • Eye lesions take many years to develop so most often not found in anyone under 40 in Africa however in Central America can be found in younger adults • Microfilariae can invade many parts of the eye but do not cause many problems until they die • Once dead a similar inflammation reaction to the skin reaction occurs causing lesions • Most common cause of blindness is sclerosingkeratitis (a type of inflammation of the cornea that leads to hardening of the cornea) • Inflammation in the eye is the result of de-granulating eosinophils disrupting the arrangement of the cornea • Also causing inflammation is activation of toll-like receptor 4 by Wolbachia antigens which produces many proinflammatory cytokines

  12. Diagnosis • Most common method is a skin snip • Small piece of skin is pulled up and cut off with razor or scissors • Placed in saline on a slide and examined for emerging microfilariae • Nodules can be aspirated but only adults are found this way • DEC (diethylcarbamazine) as a confirmation of diagnosis

  13. Treatment • Removal of nodules can help with lowering rate of eye damage and rate of infection • Ivermectin now replacing DEC and suramin due to its low rate of serious side effects • A microfilaricide- a single dose eliminates the microfilariae however it does not kill the adults but stops the female from releasing microfilariae for a year • Repeated dosing of Ivermectin can slowly kill the female

  14. Prevention • Vector control • DDT • Avoid fast flowing rivers since vector breeding ground • Larvicide in fast flowing rivers • Combine with drug campaigns • Onchocerciasis Control Programme from ended in 2002 but prevented 125,000-200,000 people from going blind and protected 30 million people from ocular and skin lesions

  15. Review • What are the hosts for Onchocercavolvulus? • What are the two types of disease that the microfilariae can cause? • Where is Onchocercavolvulusfound? • What is the most common way to diagnose it? • What is the name of the drug patch that can be used to confirm infection with Onchocercavolvulus?

  16. References • http://www.dpd.cdc.gov/dpdx/html/frames/a-f/filariasis/body_Filariasis_o_volvulus.htm#Life%20Cycle • http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/SWILLIAM/fgn/pnb/oncvol.html • http://www.who.int/apoc/onchocerciasis/lifecycle/en/index.html • http://plpnemweb.ucdavis.edu/nemaplex/taxadata/Ovolvulus.HTM • Foundations of Parasitology Eight Edition by Roberts and Janovy

More Related