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Trypanosoma cruzi

Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

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Page 1: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Trypanosoma cruzi

Page 2: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

• Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there

• It is associated with poverty and poor housing because the insects that carry the disease can live in cracks and holes of poorly constructed houses made out of thatch, and mud

• T. cruzi, causes Chagas disease or American Trypanosomiasis.

Page 3: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Transmission

• This parasite is transmitted by a different type of blood-sucking arthropod, genus Triatoma, Rhodnius also known as “kissing bugs” by Scratching

• Ingestion of food contaminated with parasites

• Blood transfusion • Fetal transmission

Page 4: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing
Page 5: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing
Page 6: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

trypomastigote

amastigote

Page 7: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Chagas Disease

• Acute stage: Immediate reaction to infection– Only occurs in about 1% of people infected – Swelling of the eye, tiredness, fever, rash, loss of appetite– Can be fatal for infants, young children and immunocompromised

recipients– Lesion (chagoma) at site of inoculation

• Resolve over a period of a few weeks or months

• Indeterminate : 60-70% 8 to 10 weeks after infection– No symptoms

• Chronic: 30-40 % 10 to 20 years after infection– Enlarged heart and digestive tract– Can result in heart failure (Potentially fatal if untreated)

• Little effective therapy (toxic drugs/low cure rates)

Page 8: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Chagas' disease

Most recognized Symptoms

Of Acute phase

•Chagoma: inflammatory response at site of infection.

•Romaña sign: bilateral edema (unilateral)

is due to entry of the infectious agent is through the eye: unilateral conjunctivitis.

Page 9: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing
Page 10: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Most recognized symptoms of chronic phase

Page 11: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Diagnosis

• Microscopic examination: fresh anticoagulated blood thin and thick blood smears stained with Giemsa

• Serology: IFAT CFT  IHAT ELISA  

• Isolation of the agent: inoculation in culture with specialized media inoculation into mice xenodiagnosis

Page 12: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing

Prevention• Most effective approach

• Insecticides

• Education

• Improving housing conditions

• Sanitation

• Testing of blood donors

Page 13: Trypanosoma cruzi. Endemic to Mexico, South America and Central America, infecting 8-11 million people there It is associated with poverty and poor housing