Thursday, September 13, 2012


Introduction to parasitism

While there are so many organisms that we can see with our naked eyes, there are many other organisms that we can only detect with the aid of an ordinary microscope or an electron microscope. Among these ‘invisible’ organisms are parasites of man and his livestock.
Significance of parasites
Parasites are dreaded organisms, for they are responsible for some of the worst disease epidemics in memory. The bacterium,Yersiania pestis, transmitted by fleas and rats, was responsible for waves of epidemics of what was then known as ‘Black Death’ that killed thousands of people in the Middle East and Europe between the 6th and 18th centuries. Although human plague flare-ups do occur today in some parts of the world, including the African continent, its transmission is mainly sylvatic.
At the dawn of the 20th century, East and Central Africa were attacked by hitherto unknown epidemic of sleeping sickness during which more than a half a million people lost their lives. Human trypanosomiasis and nagana, its cattle variant, have much to do with Africa’s current economic underdevelopment.
And then there is malaria, one of the worst scourges of man that continues to kill 1-2 million people every year, the majority being African children.
Parasites affect us in many other ways. They not only sap our energies making us weak and unable to work, they are the cause of poverty and hunger. They are responsible for school absenteeism and poor academic performance. They eat our food or make us incapable of utilizing the food we eat, causing physical and mental retardation.
Some human parasites, such as plasmodia and hookworms feed on blood and cause anaemia. Parasites may also cause mechanical damage to host tissues through which they pass during their migratory stages, or lead to the formation of calcified tissue and even cancerous tissue. The thread-like filarial worms that invade the lymphatic system are responsible for elephantiasis and hydrocoele, some of the worst deformations of the human figure. Espundia, a leishmanial parasite found in the jungles of Central and South America, can erode the whole nasopharyngeal region of its victims, turning them into social rejects.
Since parasites impact on our lives daily, it is important that we understand what they are and how they operate if we are to find solutions to their harmful effects. In designing control measures one must take into account those parasite factors that are crucial to its survival, more particularly its transmission pattern, biotic potential and the nature of its interaction with the host.
Control
Control should aim at reducing morbidity and mortality in the population. As their immune systems are underdeveloped, children should always be given special consideration. Ultimately, control should aim at interrupting transmission and eliminating parasites from the population.
The vehicles of transmission are generally arthropods and mammalian animal reservoirs, some fishes and man. Control of arthropods involves the larval stages as well as the adults. In mosquito control, for example, the aim should be to deny the mosquitoes suitable breeding sites so that they have nowhere to lay their eggs. To do this potholes are filled up with soil, man-made receptacles of any kind that can collect water, such as broken bottles, tins, and used car tyres must be destroyed. There should be a proper drainage system so that flowing water in the sewers and streams passing through human living quarters is not obstructed.
Mosquito larvae are destroyed by chemical larvicides. A cheaper alternative is use of used motor oils that block larval gills causing them to suffocate for lack of oxygen.
Adult mosquitoes can be killed by spraying the walls of occupied houses with an insecticide that has long residual effect. This is necessary because most of the mosquitoes that transmit malaria rest on the walls after feeding. Using insecticide impregnated nets is an effective way of avoiding mosquito bites at night.
Man participates in the transmission of a number of parasites and a change in human behaviour and attitudes would go a long way in ridding the community of such parasites. For example, AscarisTrichuris and Enterobius enter our bodies through ingestion of food or fluids contaminated with human faeces that contain parasite eggs. To avoid contracting these parasites, there should be proper disposal of human faeces. Other parasites like TrichinellaT. saginata and T. solium, are acquired by eating undercooked animal products and by cooking these properly before they are consumed the infections can be avoided. The elimination of these parasites is not as simple as it sounds because human behaviours and attitudes are usually so ingrained that it may require years of persuasion to change them. Nevertheless, patience, sustained health education campaigns, at times backed by bye-laws, should yield results.
 Role of zoonosis
Control measures may be handicapped by the involvement of domestic and wild animals in the transmission of a parasite. A disease that naturally exists in other animals but that can also infect humans is known as a zoonosis. Some of the most important parasitic zoonoses include trypanosomiases, leishmaniases, echinococcosis and trichinosis. The animals that harbour the infective agent in each of these diseases are known as reservoirs or carriers of infection and are constant sources of infection to humans. Transmission of infection from the reservoir to man may involve a vector, such as a tsetse fly, or consumption of meat from an infected reservoir host as in trichinosis and hydatidosis.
The significance of zoonosis is that the reservoir animal does not usually suffer any clinical disease from the parasite it harbours. The reservoir animal can retain the infection for a long time, while transmitting it to other susceptible animals and humans. Furthermore, wild animals can move widely over a short period of time, either to escape predators or in search of water and food. During social upheavals, animals may be hunted and forced to flee their normal habitats. These movements may create new foci of infection away from its traditional focus.
Attempts to control zoonotic diseases have often met with financial and logistical difficulties. The wanton destruction of reservoir animals associated with disease would not only require enormous infusion of funds and time but would likely be abandoned because of strong opposition from ecologists and environmentalists. However, in some countries, notably Iceland,New Zealand and Tasmania, the elimination of stray dogs and the strict control on the slaughter of sheep and cattle have been very successful in controlling hydatidosis. In fact, Iceland is now virtually free from hydatidosis primarily because the restrictions on keeping dogs have been extremely stringent.
Role of local population in control activities
There is currently a tendency to rely too much on chemotherapy in the control of parasitic diseases, with very little effort or, none at all, being given to basic sanitation and hygiene. Treatment of infected persons, destruction of vectors and environmental sanitation should constitute a control package. While it is important to provide treatment to infected persons, it should not be forgotten that most of the parasitic infections  can be avoided by observing  basic sanitary and environmental rules. 
The involvement of the local people in disease control activities enables them to have a clear view of the dynamics involved and what role, if any, their own actions may be contributing to the persistence and intensification of infection in their respective areas. The people who are affected by disease are usually passive observers rather than active participants in control programs. This has resulted in meaningless control programs that do not last once the sources of funds dry up.
The impregnation of the nets with insecticides for malaria control, or the making of tsetsefly traps for control of trypanosomiasis are activities that should be undertaken by those who live in the endemic areas with minimum cost. The materials needed and the expertise involved are not beyond their reach.