Parasitic Infection in GI Tract
Parasitic Infection in GI Tract
Parasitic Infection in GI Tract
IN GASTROINTESTINAL
TRACT
Taniawati Supali
Department of Parasitology
Faculty of Medicine
University of Indonesia
Mature egg
Adult worms
Ascaris lumbricoides
(roundworm)
Disease: Ascariasis
Epidemiology
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Pathogenesis
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Life cycle
Infection occurs when host ingests the
mature eggs. The eggs hatch in the small
intestine of host.
The immature parasite penetrates the
intestinal wall, enters the lamina propria,
penetrates a capillary, and is carried by
the portal circulation to the liver.
It then migrates via the blood stream to
the heart and into the pulmonary
circulation. The larva migrates up the
bronchi into the trachea and across the
epiglottis.
It is swallowed, finally reaching the lumen
of the small intestine again, then molts to
be adult worm.
Clinical Symptoms
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Diarrhea
Intestinal obstruction due to numerous of adult
worms
Diagnosis:
Egg
Treatment:
Albendazole
Mebendazole
Pyrantel pamoat
Piperazine citrate - used for intestinal
obstruction because it paralyzes the
worms
Ancylostoma duodenale
Hookworms
Necator americanus
Epidemiology
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Route of infection
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Life cycle
The filariform larvae penetrate the
cutaneous tissues, usually through a hair
follicle. Then the larvae enter capillaries
and are carried passively through the
bloodstream to the capillaries of the lungs.
The 3th stage larvae break out of the
alveolus capillaries and then crawl up the
bronchi and trachea, over the epiglottis,
and into the pharynx.
They are then swallowed, and proceed into
the stomach. Two molts take place in the
small intestine resulting in the
development of adult worms.
Pathogenesis
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Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
Head of A. duodenale
Head of N. americanus
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Diagnosis:
Treatment:
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Albendazole
Mebendazole
Adult worm
Egg
Trichuris trichiura
(Whipworm)
Disease: Trichuriasis
Epidemiology
It has a worldwide distribution.
The prevalence is estimated to be over 1 billion.
It is coincident with infections caused by Ascaris
lumbricoides and hookworms.
The whipworm is especially prevalent in areas of high
rainfall and high humidity.
It is a fecal oral transmission
Life cycle
The first stage of larva hatches in
the small intestine, penetrates
the columnar epithelium, and lie
just above the lamina propia.
The immature adult emerges and
is passively carried to the large
intestine, where it re-embeds itself
in the columnar cells and induces
its essential niche.
Adult worms live in the transverse
and descending colon.
Pathogenesis
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Diagnosis
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Clinical symptoms
Treatment
Albendazole
Mebendazole
Prevention
Proper disposal of feces
Egg
Adult worm
Oxyuris vermicularis
(Pinworm)
Disease: trichuriasis
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
The embryonated eggs are swallowed
& hatch into the 2nd stage larvae once
they reach the small intestine.
Development to the 3th & 4th stages
also occurs here.
The adult worms take up residence in
the large intestine.
Eggs can hatch on the skin at the site
of deposition, and the 2nd stage larvae
can crawl back through the anus into
the rectum, and the colon where they
develop into reproducing adults
Retro infection
Clinical symptoms
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Diagnosis
Anal swab
Treatment
Albendazole
Mebendazole
Pyrantel pamoat.
Prevention
Strongyloides stercoralis
Disease: Strongyloidiasis
Epidemiology
It is distributed in tropical
and subtropical countries
Fecal oral transmission
Life cycle
Free-living cycle: The rhabditiform larvae passed in
the stool becoming infective filariform larvae or free
living adult males & females that mate & produce
eggs from which rhabditiform larvae hatch. The
filariform larvae penetrate the human host skin to
initiate the parasitic cycle.
Parasitic cycle: Filariform larvae in soil penetrate
the human skin, & are transported to the lungs
where they penetrate the alveolar spaces; are
carried through the bronchial tree to the pharynx, are
swallowed & then reach the small intestine. In the
small intestine they molt twice and become adult
female worms. The females live threaded in the
epithelium of the small intestine and by
parthenogenesis produce eggs, which yield
rhabditiform larvae.
The rhabditiform larvae can either be passed in the
stool (Free-living cycle), or can cause
autoinfection. In autoinfection, the larvae become
infective filariform larvae, which can penetrate either
the intestinal mucosa (internal autoinfection) or the
skin of the perianal area (external autoinfection).
Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
Cross-sections of female S. stercoralis
(blue arrows) in small intestine tissue
Diagnosis
Treatment
Albendazole
Ivermectin not registered for
human use in Indonesia
Larva
Adult worm
Proglotide
Egg
Taenia sp
(Tapeworm)
Disease: taeniasis
Taenia sp
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Taenia saginata
Epidemiology: cosmopolitan
Taenia sp
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Life cycle
Eggs or gravid proglottids are passed with
feces.
Cattle (T. saginata) and pigs (T. solium)
become infected by ingesting vegetation
contaminated with eggs or gravid
proglottids . In the animal's intestine, the
oncospheres hatch , invade the intestinal
wall, and migrate to the striated muscles,
where they develop into cysticerci.
Humans become infected by ingesting raw
or undercooked infected meat . In the
human intestine, the cysticercus develops
over 2 months into an adult tapeworm
which attach to the small intestine by their
scolex and reside in the small intestine.
The adults produce proglottids which
mature, become gravid, detach from the
tapeworm, and migrate to the anus or are
passed in the stool
Pathogenesis
Scolex of T. saginata with 4 large suckers
Clinical symptoms
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Head of Taenia sp
Proglottide
Adult worm
Cercaria
Schistosoma japonicum
(blood fluke)
Disease: schistosomiasis
Diagnosis
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Egg
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Praziquantel
Proglottid
Epidemiology
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Indonesia:
Life cycle
Eggs hatch & release miracidia ,
which swim and penetrate specific
snail intermediate hosts.
The stages in the snail include 2
generations of sporocysts & the
production of cercariae .
Upon release from the snail, the
infective cercariae swim, penetrate
the skin of the human host becoming
schistosomulae which migrate
through several tissues and stages to
their residence in the veins. Adult
worms in humans reside in the
superior mesenteric veins of the
small intestine. The eggs are moved
progressively toward the lumen of the
intestine.
Pathogenesis
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Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
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Chronic manifestation:
Intestinal & hepatic dysfunction
Abdominal pain
Bloody diarrhea
Diagnosis:
Egg
Treatment:
Control:
Adult worm
Egg
Fasciolopsis buski
(Intestinal fluke)
Disease: Fasciolopsiasis
Epidemiology
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Distribution:
Indonesia:
Kalimantan Selatan
Life cycle
Unembryonated eggs pass in feces
becoming embryonated in water &
release miracidia , which invade a
suitable snail intermediate host.
In the snail the parasites undergo
several developmental stages
(sporocysts, rediae, & cercariae ). The
cercariae are released from the snail
and encyst as metacercariae on
aquatic plants .
The mammalian hosts become
infected by ingesting metacercariae on
the aquatic plants. After ingestion, the
metacercariae excyst in the duodenum
and attach to the intestinal wall.
Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
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Diagnosis
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Treatment
Praziquantel
Egg
Trophozoite
Entamoeba histolytica
(Subphylum: sarcodina)
Disease : Amoebiasis
Morphology
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
Pathogenesis
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Amoebiasis
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Clinical disease:
Intestinal amoebiasis
Extra-intestinal amoebiasis
Parasite erode the wall of the large intestine, enter
the blood circulation of the submucosa
The parasites spread to extra-intestinal through portal
system (liver, brain) or percontinuitatum (lung, rectum).
Amoebiasis
Clinical symptoms:
1. Most of the infected individuals are
asymptomatic and some of them go on
becoming carrier.
2. Symptomatic amoebiasis consists of
acute amoebic dysentry, amoebic liver
abscess and amoeboma.
Amoebic dysentry
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Clinical symptoms
Bloody, mucous diarrhea
Fever
Abdominal pain
Diagnosis
Finding amoebic (hematophagous trophozoites) in stool
Clinical symptoms:
persisting fever
epigastric pain
rarely diarrhea
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Diagnosis
1. serology
2. aspirate microscopy to find trophozoites
Treatment
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Tissue:
Metronidazole
Chloroquine
Emetin hidrochloride
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Bowel lumen:
Paromomycin
Diloxanidefuroate
Cyst
Trophozoite
Giardia lamblia
(Subphylum mastigophora)
Disease: Giardiasis
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
Infection occurs by the ingestion of
cysts in contaminated water, food, or by
the fecal-oral route (hands or fomites).
In the small intestine, excystation
releases trophozoites (each cyst
produces two trophozoites).
Trophozoites multiply by longitudinal
binary fission, remaining in the lumen of
the proximal small bowel where they
can be free or attached to the mucosa
by a ventral sucking disk . Encystation
occurs as the parasites transit toward
the colon.
The cyst is the stage found most
commonly in nondiarrheal feces.
Because the cysts are infectious when
passed in the stool or shortly afterward,
person-to-person transmission is
possible.
Pathogenesis
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trophozoite
Symptoms
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Diagnosis
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Treatment
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Metronidazole
Tinidazole
Vegetative
Cyst
Balantidium coli
(ciliate protozoa)
Disease : Balantidiosis
Life cycle
Infection occurs when host ingests cysts
(parasite stage responsible for
transmission of balantidiasis) from
contaminated food or water. Following
ingestion, excystation occurs in the small
intestine, & the trophozoites colonize the
large intestine. The trophozoites reside
in the lumen of the large intestine of
humans and animals, where they
replicate by binary fission, during which
conjugation may occur. Trophozoites
undergo encystation to produce infective
cysts. Some trophozoites invade the
wall of the colon and multiply. Some
return to the lumen & disintegrated.
Mature cysts are passed with feces
Habitat
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Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
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Asymptomatic
Symptomatic:
Chronic diarrhea, occasional dysentery
(diarrhea with blood or mucus), nausea,
colitis (inflammation of the colon),
abdominal pain, weight loss, deep
intestinal ulcerations, and possibly
perforation of the intestine (peritonitis)
Diagnosis
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Treatment
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Tetracycline
Vacuolar form
Blastocystis hominis
Disease: blastocystosis
Blastocystis hominis
Blastocystis hominis
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Clinical Symptoms
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Watery diarrhea
Abdominal pain
Perianal pruritis (itch)
Excessive flatulence
Treatment
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Cryptosporidium parvum
(Phylum apicomplexa)
Disease: cryptosporidiosis
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
Infection begins when the host ingests
sporulated oocysts containing four sporozoites.
The sporozoites excyst when the oocyst
reaches the small intestine. Sporozoites
parasitize epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal
tract. In these cells, the parasites undergo
asexual multiplication (schizogony or
merogony) and then sexual multiplication
(gametogony) producing microgamonts (male)
and macrogamonts (female). Upon fertilization
of the macrogamonts by the microgametes,
oocysts, develop that sporulate in the infected
host. Two different types of oocysts are
produced, the thick-walled, which is commonly
excreted from the host , and the thin-walled
oocyst , which is primarily involved in
autoinfection. Oocysts are infective upon
excretion, thus permitting direct and immediate
fecal-oral transmission.
Pathogenesis
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Clinical symptoms
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In immunocompetent patients:
In immunocompromised patients:
Diagnosis
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Treatment
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Nitazoxanide
Cyst
Cyclospora cayetanensis
(Phylum apicomplexa)
Disease: cyclosporiasis
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
Infection starts when the
sporulated oocysts are
ingested.
The oocysts excyst in the
gastrointestinal tract, freeing the
sporozoites which invade the
epithelial cells of the small
intestine.
Inside the cells they undergo
asexual multiplication and
sexual development to mature
into oocysts, which will be shed
in stools.
Clinical symptoms
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Diagnosis
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Oocyst
Treatment
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Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Isospora belli
(Disease: Isosporiasis)
Epidemiology
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Life cycle
Infection occurs by ingestion of
sporocysts-containing oocysts: the
sporocysts excyst in the small intestine
and release their sporozoites, which
invade the epithelial cells and initiate
schizogony . Upon rupture of the
schizonts, the merozoites are released,
invade new epithelial cells, and
continue the cycle of asexual
multiplication.
Trophozoites develop into schizonts
which contain multiple
merozoites. After a minimum of one
week, the sexual stage begins with the
development of male and female
gametocytes . Fertilization results in
the development of oocysts that are
excreted in the stool .
Clinical Symptoms
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Asymptomatic
Symptomatic : gastrointestinal complaints
(self limiting)
Diarrhea
Abdominal pain
Weight loss
Slight fever
Malabsorption of fat
Isospora belii
Diagnosis
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Oocyst
Treatment
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Sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim.
Excreted Form
Cryptosporidium sporulated
parvum
oocysts
4-5
4 sporozoites,
no sporocysts
8-10
2 sporocysts with
2 sporozoites each
Cyclospora
cayetanenis
unsporulated
oocysts
Isospora belli
unsporulated
2 sporocysts with
30 x 12
oocysts
4 sporozoites each
Microsporidium
Disease: Microsporidiasis
Life cycle
The infective form of microsporidia is the
resistant spore. The spore infects the host cell
The spore injects the infective sporoplasm
into the eukaryotic host cell through the polar
tubule. Then the sporoplasm undergoes
multiplication either by merogony (binary
fission) or schizogony (multiple fission). This
development can occur either in direct contact
with the host cell cytoplasm (E. bieneusi) or
inside a vacuole termed parasitophorous
vacuole (E. intestinalis). Either free in the
cytoplasm or inside a parasitophorous
vacuole, microsporidia develop by sporogony
to mature spores. During sporogony, a thick
wall is formed around the spore, which
provides resistance to adverse environmental
conditions. When the spores increase in
number and completely fill the host cell
cytoplasm, the cell membrane is disrupted &
releases the spores to the surroundings.
These free mature spores can infect new cells
thus continuing the cycle.
Organism(s)
Clinical presentation
Immunocompromised
host
Enterocytozoon
bieneusi
Immunocompetent
host
Self-limiting diarrhea
and traveler's diarrhea;
asymptomatic carriers
Encephalitozoon
Chronic diarrhea;
intestinalis
cholangiopathy
Self-limiting diarrhea;
asymptomatic carriers
Encephalitozoon
cuniculi
Not identified
hepatitis; peritonitis;
symptomatic and
asymptomatic intestinal
infection
E. bieneusi and E. intestinalis are the most common microsporidia causing diarrhea.
Clinical presentations in immunocompromised and immunocompetent hosts are the
same, however the diarrhea in immunocompromised host is more severe and prolonged
Enterocytozoon bieneusi
Encephalitozoon intestinalis
Encephalititozoon cuniculi
Diagnosis
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Treatment
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