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Toxoplasmosis Toxoplasmosis

Toxoplasmosis - PowerPoint Presentation

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Toxoplasmosis - PPT Presentation

Toxoplasmosis is a zoonotic disease caused by infection with the protozoan  Toxoplasma gondii Toxoplasmosis may cause flulike symptoms in some people but most people affected never develop signs and ID: 491116

infected infection antibodies toxoplasmosis infection infected toxoplasmosis antibodies risk parasite immune fetal gondii igg igm host contaminated tests congenital

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Slide1

ToxoplasmosisSlide2

Toxoplasmosis

is a

zoonotic disease caused by infection with the protozoan Toxoplasma gondiiToxoplasmosis may cause flu-like symptoms in some people, but most people affected never develop signs and symptoms.For infants born to infected mothers and for people with weakened immune systems, toxoplasmosis can cause extremely serious complications.

ToxoplasmosisSlide3

T

oxoplasma

gondiiAn obligate intracellular parasitic protozoan.T. gondii is capable o f infecting virtually all warm-blooded animals(lack of host specificity).

 Cats are the definitive hosts in which the parasite can undergo sexual reproduction.

During infection two forms of parasite may form:

Tackyzoit: Rapidly growing form (acute infection).Bradyzoit: Slowly growing form in cysts ( chronic infection).Tissue cysts formed in any organ especially brain, eyes and strained muscles.Slide4

Life cycle of T.

gondiiSlide5

Infection

Eating

undercooked, contaminated meat .Eating food that was contaminated by knives, utensils, cutting boards and other foods that have had contact with raw, contaminated meat (cross contamination).Drinking water contaminated with Toxoplasma

gondii

.Slide6

Mother-to-child (congenital) transmission.

Accidentally swallowing the parasite through contact with cat feces that contain

Toxoplasma.Receiving an infected organ transplant or infected blood via transfusion, though this is rare.Slide7

Is toxoplasmosis serious

?

Toxoplasmosis is usually nothing to worry about because the immune system is normally strong enough to fight the infection and stop it from causing serious illness. After getting the infection, most people are immune to it for the rest of their life.However, it can lead to serious problems in:women who become infected while they're pregnant .people with weak immune systems.Slide8

congenital

toxoplasmosisApproximately 10-20% of pregnant women infected with T gondii become symptomatic, The most common signs of infection are

lymphadenopathy

and fever.

When a mother is infected with T gondii

 during gestation, the parasite may be disseminated hematogenously

to the placenta. When this occurs, infection may be transmitted to the fetus

transplacentally

.Slide9

If infection was shortly

before conception (within a few weeks before) :carries a one percent risk or below of transmission to the baby, but there is a risk of miscarriage if the baby does become infected.If infection was in the first trimester (week one to 12)carries about 10-15 percent

risk of transmission to the baby. A baby infected at this stage has a risk of being miscarried or stillbirth.

I

nfection during pregnancySlide10

If infection was in the second trimester (week 13 to 28):

about 25 percent risk of transmission. A baby infected at this stage is less likely to be miscarried, but is still at risk of developing severe symptoms as: Hydrocephaly (water on the brain)Calcifications of the brainRetinochoroiditis (inflammation of the retina)blindnessMicrocephaly.Neurological disorders.Slide11

If infection was in the third trimester (week 29 to 40)

Risk of transmitting the infection rises again if toxoplasmosis is caught at this stage of pregnancy, and may be as high as 70–80 percent.Most babies infected will be apparently healthy at birth, but a large proportion will develop symptoms later in life, usually eye damage and Neurological problems .Slide12

R

etinochoroiditis

(ocular toxoplasmosis)Retinochoroiditis usually results from reactivation of congenital infection,

or a part of

acute infection

.When the organism reaches the eye through the bloodstream, depending on the host's immune status, a clinical or subclinical focus of infection begins in the retina.Slide13

 As the host's immune system

responds, the

cyst forms which is resistant to the host's immune system, and a chronic, latent infection ensues.The cyst remains in the normal-appearing retina. Whenever the host's immune function declines for any reason, the cyst wall rupture, releasing organisms into the retina, and the inflammatory process starts. If an active clinical lesion is present, healing occurs as a retinochoroidal scar. Slide14

D

iagnosis

 serologic tests. Amplification of specific nucleic acid sequences (i.e., polymerase chain reaction [PCR]).Histologic

demonstration of the parasite and/or its antigens (i.e.,

immunoperoxidase stain).Isolation of the organism.

Other rarely used methods

include:

demonstration

of

antigen

in serum and body

fluids.

A

toxoplasmin

skin

test.

antigen-specific

lymphocyte

transformation

.Slide15

Serologic testing:

Different serological tests often measure different antibodies that possess unique patterns of rise and fall with time after

infection.A combination of serological tests is frequently required to establish whether an individual has been more likely infected in the distant past or has been recently infected. Slide16

IgG

antibodies: IgG antibodies usually appear within 1–2 weeks of acquisition of the infection, peak within 1–2 months, decline at various rates, and usually persist for life.The most commonly used tests for the measurement of IgG antibody are the Sabin-Feldman Dye Test (DT), ELISA, IFA, and the modified direct agglutination

test.

IgM

antibodies: IgM antibody titres rise from 5 days to weeks following acute infection, reaching a maximum within 21 days and decline more rapidly than

IgG.

The

most commonly used tests for the measurement of

IgM

antibody

are ELISA kits,

the IFA test, and the

immunosorbent

agglutination

assay

(ISAGA)

.Slide17

IgA

Antibodies:

IgA antibodies may be detected in sera of acutely infected adults and congenitally infected infants using ELISA or ISAGA methods.It appears in sera when the parasite attacks the eye (toxoplasmic chorioretinitis).In a number of newborns with congenital toxoplasmosis and negative IgM antibodies, the serological diagnosis has been established by the presence of IgA and IgG antibodies.

Note:

Ecteric phase is the period when switching b/w IgG and IgM production

, results in low levels of both.Slide18

IgE

Antibodies:

IgE antibodies are detectable by ELISA in sera of acutely infected adults, congenitally infected infants.The duration of IgE seropositivity is less than with IgM or IgA antibodies and hence appears useful as an adjunctive method for identifying recently acquired infections.Slide19

Histologic

diagnosis

:Diagnosis also can be made by direct observation of the parasite in stained tissue sections from biopsy.Immunoflorscence stain and sabin field man stain can be used. These techniques are used less frequently because of the difficulty of obtaining these specimens.Isolation:Parasites can also be isolated from blood or other body fluids by animal inoculation or cell cultures, but this process can be difficult and requires considerable time.Slide20

PCR:

Molecular

techniques that can detect the parasite's DNA in the amniotic fluid can be useful in cases of possible mother-to-child (congenital) transmission.Amniocentesis:to identify T. gondii in the amniotic fluid by PCR (the most sensitive and specific), done if serologic testing cannot confirm or exclude acute infection, and if there are abnormal ultrasound findings suggestive of toxoplasmosis infection.Fetal blood sampling (cordocentesis):was previously the gold standard for diagnosing fetal infection but no longer, because of the associated higher fetal riskSlide21

Ocular disease is diagnosed based on the appearance of the lesions in the eye, symptoms, course of disease, and often serologic testing and measuring the level of

IgA

.Slide22

TREATMENT

There are 2 goals of drug therapy for toxoplasmosis, depending on whether or not fetal infection has occurred.

If maternal infection has occurred but the fetus is not infected, spiramycin is used for fetal prophylaxis (to prevent spread of organisms across the placenta from mother to fetus).If fetal infection has been confirmed or is highly suspected, pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine are used for treatment and decrease in disease severity.Slide23

Prevention

Do not eat undercooked meat.

Wash hands after handling raw meat.Keep children's play areas free from cat and dog feces.Wash your hands thoroughly after touching soil that may be contaminated with animal feces.Slide24

Thank you…