Parasites transmitted by vectors Often very specific vector-parasite relationships Biomphalaria sp. - Schistosoma mansoni Anopheles sp. – Plasmodium falciparum.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Infectious Disease Epidemiology EPIET Introductory Course, 2006 Lazareto, Menorca Prepared by: Mike Catchpole, Johan Giesecke, John Edmunds, Bernadette.
Advertisements

What is Epidemiology? (1)
Concept of Pest & Pest Outbreak Dr. Jamba Gyeltshen 19/8/2011.
In biology – Dynamics of Malaria Spread Background –Malaria is a tropical infections disease which menaces more people in the world than any other disease.
Understanding the Reproduction Definition Understanding the Reproduction Definition.
Population dynamics of infectious diseases Arjan Stegeman.
 A public health science (foundation of public health)  Impacts personal decisions about our lifestyles  Affects government, public health agency and.
Host population structure and the evolution of parasites
16/10/2010Dr. Salwa Tayel1. 16/10/2010Dr. Salwa Tayel2 Associate Professor Family and Community Medicine Department King Saud University By.
Characteristics of Parasite Populations A. General Definitions recall characteristics of ‘populations’ population biology of human parasites = epidemiology.
27/9/2010Definitions in Epidemiology (Dr. Salwa Tayel) 1.
Introduction to EPIDEMIOLOGY Daniel Cothran BIOL 422 – Microbiology 10/19/2009.
Infectious Diseases Presented by: M. Alvarez
Epidemiology and Public Health Introduction, Part I.
Epidemiology Principles of Epidemiology A. Epidemiology is the study of the factors influencing the frequency and distribution of diseases 1. communicable.
Introduction to Pathogens
Environmental Hazards and Human Health, Part 2. Causes of global deaths.
Descriptive Epidemiology
1 2. Basic Concepts of Disease in Populations Peter Davies/Cord Heuer.
Methods to Study and Control Diseases in Wild Populations Steve Bellan, MPH Department of Environmental Sci, Pol & Mgmt University of California at Berkeley.
Vital & Health Statistics
Multiple Choice Questions for discussion. Part 2
Infection & Disease Unit 5. Stages of clinical infections 1. incubation period time from initial contact to first signs of symptoms 2. prodrome period.
SIR Epidemic Models CS 390/590 Fall 2009
32.1 The Science of Epidemiology
 A public health science (foundation of public health)  Impacts personal decisions about our lifestyles  Affects government, public health agency and.
Unit 12-13: Infectious Disease Epidemiology. Unit Learning Objectives: 1.Understand primary definitions used in infectious disease epidemiology.
10/10/2009Dr. Salwa Tayel1. 10/10/2009Dr. Salwa Tayel2 Associate Professor Family and Community Medicine Department King Saud University By Infectious.
SBM 2022 Medical Parasitology & Entomology Lecturer: Sr. Norazsida Ramli.
Patterns of Microbe-Human Interactions in Causing Infection and Disease.
The more you know…. Diseases Diseases can disrupt homeostasis (balance) Diseases can have many causes:  Ex.: genetic, congenital (embryonic development),
MLAB Microbiology Keri Brophy-Martinez Public Health & The Microbiology Lab.
Parasites are found in all groups of organisms
Disease ecology – SIR models ECOL 8310, 11/17/2015.
Populations Dynamics Chapter 36. I. Environmental Factors Living organisms are influenced by a wide range of environmental factors. These can be two.
Epidemiology. Epidemiological studies involve: –determining etiology of infectious disease –reservoirs of disease –disease transmission –identifying patterns.
Definitions Learning Objectives At the end of this lecture you (will) be able to: Understand definitions used in infectious disease epidemiology.
Parasite Ecology. Ecology The study of ecosystems –Interaction between organisms and the environment Biotic – living part of environment Abiotic – non-living.
A Modern Definition Study of the occurrence and distribution of health-related diseases or events in specified populations, including the study of the.
Terminology in public health Dr. Salwa A. Tayel & Dr. Ibrahim Gossady Department of Family & Community medicine August 2015/1436 August 26,
Epidemiology. Epidemiology involves: –determining etiology of infectious disease –reservoirs of disease –disease transmission –identifying patterns associated.
Epidemiology. Classically speaking Classically speaking EPI DEMO LOGOS Upon,on,befall People,population,man the Study of The study of anything that happens.
SPREAD OF DISEASE. Epidemiology  Epidemiology: is the study of the patterns, causes, and effects of health and disease conditions in defined populations.causeshealthdiseasepopulations.
Basic Concepts of Epidemiology & Social Determinants of Health Prof. Supannee Promthet 27 Septmber 2013:
23/10/2010Dr. Salwa Tayel1. 23/10/2010Dr. Salwa Tayel2 Associate Professor Family and Community Medicine Department King Saud University By Infectious.
SPREAD OF DISEASE. SOURCES OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES The source of a disease is known as a reservoir. A reservoir can be anything: inanimate object, person,
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PUBLIC HEALTH Dr. Mohammad Shakeeb,MD Specialist in clinical pathology/microbiology and immunology.
EPIDEMIOLOGY Koch’s Postulates (1876) Koch’s Postulates To prove that a given microorganism is the pathogen for a certain disease one must 1.Isolate.
Sex and behaviour: Macroparasites & Microparasites CfE Advanced Higher Biology Unit 2: Organisms and Evolution.
SIR Epidemics 박상훈.
Unit 1: Intro to Pathology Set #1. Pathology vs. Epidemiology Epidemiology is the study of the frequency and distribution of disease in order to identify.
Livestock Parasitology Animal Science. TERMINOLOGY Parasitology – branch of biological science that deals with the study of parasites. Epidemiology –
Ch Epidemiology Microbiology.
VIRUSES And PRIONS.
Fundamentals of Epidemiology
Scales of Ecological Organization
Epidemiology What is Epidemiology? Etiology.
Ashry Gad Mohamed Prof. of Epidemiology
Infectious disease – a disease that is capable of being transmitted from one person to another by direct or indirect contact Starter Now think of as many.
Introduction to Pathogens
Parasitism and Disease
Introduction to Pathogens
VIRUSES And PRIONS.
Chapter 20 Communicable and Infectious Disease
Parasitism and Disease
Introduction to Pathogens
General definition: Medical parasitology: the study and medical implications of parasites that infect humans   Parasites may be simple unicellular protozoa.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم Zoonoses Disease Lecture-1 Introduction
VIRUSES And PRIONS.
Presentation transcript:

Parasites transmitted by vectors Often very specific vector-parasite relationships Biomphalaria sp. - Schistosoma mansoni Anopheles sp. – Plasmodium falciparum Simulium sp. – Onchocerca volvulis Some more general Rhodnius sp / triatoma sp. - Trypanosoma cruzi

TRANSMISSION OF PARASITES BY VECTORS: Biological Transmission I.A. Cyclopropagative Transmission The parasite undergoes cyclical changes and multiplies within the vector, i.e., there are both developmental changes and multiplication of the parasite. B. Cyclodevelopmental Transmission The parasite undergoes cyclical changes within the vector but does not multiply, i.e., there are only developmental changes of the parasite without multiplication. C. Propagative Transmission The parasite multiplies within the vector without any cyclical changes, i.e., the parasite increases in number within the vector but does not undergo any developmental changes. II. Mechanical Transmission This is similar to a "flying syringe" where transmission from one host to another is accomplished because the parasite contaminates the mouthparts of an arthropod and is physically carried to another host.

EPIDEMIOLOGY TERMS A. Epidemiology This literally means "as it falls upon the people." A good working definition is the ecology of disease, i.e., all aspects of the pathogen, host(s), environment, social conditions, etc. that contribute to or influence the maintenance of a disease. B. Endemic A disease pathogen is present in an area and is expected to be there. C. Epidemic The presence of a disease is at levels higher than what normally is expected. D. Pandemic An epidemic that is worldwide in scope.

ADDITIONAL TERMS IN PARASITE ECOLOGY/EPIDEMIOLOGY A. Prevalence: Number of hosts infected divided by the number of hosts examined at a point in time. B. Incidence: Number of new cases of infection (disease) in a given time period divided by the number of uninfected and susceptible hosts at the beginning of the time period. C. Intensity: Number of parasites in a given host (Mean Intensity = the total number of parasites recovered divided by the number of infected hosts). D. Density: Number of parasites per unit area, weight, or volume of tissue (e.g., number of parasite eggs per gram of feces). E. Overdispersion: A general rule in parasite infections where relatively few hosts harbor the majority of all parasites in a population. In contrast, an underdispersed parasite population would mean that all hosts have the same number of parasites.

Anthropohhilic: associated with humans Anthroponoses: humans are only known host Etiologic agent: organism that causes disease Etiology: Study of the course of the disease Disease: symptoms in host caused by infectious organism Zoonotic disease: disease that moves from animals to humans Many human diseases are considered zoonotic….. WHY? Swine flu. Avian flu, SARS, HIV-AIDS, plague, ebola, bovine TB, lyme disease, west nile, rabies, hantavirus anthrax, Lassa fever Many reside in other animals (reservoir hosts) and therefore are difficult to control/eradicate

Infection takes place Parasite enters potential host Parasite searches for suitable location- responds to host signals Migrates/transported to specific tissue and establishes Parasite begins its life cycle in host Host may begin to show symptoms Symptoms are general or may be indicative of a specific disease (general fever vs blindness caused by Onchocerca) The distribution, periodicity, severity of disease is a field unto itself. What are possible outcomes of the infection???

Frequency Distributions

Number of Parasites per hostFrequency Distribution %

Most hosts have few or no parasites- some hosts have very many parasites. Overdispersion

Birth Immigration Death Emigration Parasite Numbers

Deaths Births Population

Constant Death Rate (60% of larvae die/month L t =L t-1 (1-0.6) Larvae (L) Slope dL / dt

Make things more complicated: Include age-dependent death rate Development, Migration and Infection Mathematical models can become quite complicated. The Objective is to be able to understand what is happening in a population. Increasing---stable---decreasing

Basic Reproduction Ratio: R 0 The average number of offspring produced throughout the reproductive life-span of a mature parasite that themselves survive to maturity in the absence of density-dependent constraints to population growth. Ro of any infection is defined for a given environment and a given host community. If a child has measles and that child is responsible for the infection of 20 other children then the Ro in this community is 20. If Ro=1 then we expect that the child to infect only one other person before (s)he recovers and loses infectiousness.

R 0 defines the threshold between persistence and extinction of an infection. If R 0 < 1…… If R 0 = 1…… If R 0 > 1……

This threshold assumes great importance when planning control programs. If Parasite eradication is the objective then the basic reproduction ratio must be reduced and maintained below 1. Many factors affect Ro in communities: Nutritional status affects duration of infectious period Environmental conditions affect mortality of infectious stages Same parasite with different vectors will be different

Transmission Virulence Standard assumption of the evolution of virulence theory

Host Parasite models between local and mean- field Pair-wise Approximation: differential equations for pair densities P SI (t) =prob randomly chosen pair is in state SI conditional prob that I is a neighbour of an S site in an SI pair event = transmission rate # neighbours (fixed) eg,