Trypanosoma cruzi

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Trypanosoma cruzi
Kinetoplasty (whips)
Trypanosomatidae
Trypanosomes cruzi trapped in the digestive tract
Occurrence Central and South America
Disease Chagas disease

(American trypanosomiasis)

Infectious

stage and

method of

infection

metacyclic trypomastigote -

contaminating

(from faeces of sucking bedbugs)

Diagnostics microscopy, serology, xenodiagnosis

(sucking of bugs)

Therapy does not exist
MeSH ID D014349

Trypanosoma cruzi is an element that causes Chagas' disease (also American trypanosomiasis). It belongs to the whipworms. It has a size of 15-20 µm, a wavy body shape and one flagellum, which forms an undulating membrane along the body. They do not form cysts or other resistant stages. It undergoes development in the digestive tract of the bug and transmits faeces, which the bug discharges to the skin during sucking (a contaminating mode of transmission). A person can also become infected by transfusion of infected blood (15%), from mother to fetus (1-2%) or by organ transplantation.

Occurrence[edit | edit source]

  • It is actually an American variant of African trypanosomes. It occurs in Central and South America and Mexico.
  • It is an extremely rare imported disease in the Czech Republic.

Life cycle[edit | edit source]

Life cycle of T. cruzi


Trypanosomes multiply in the intestine of bugs (subfamily Triatominae ) in the form of epimastigotes , which turn into infectious trypomastigotes in the rectum of bugs . The infected bedbug attaches to humans (especially at night) and begins to suck. During sucking, the bugs harden on the skin , the trypanosomes present in the feces reach the skin, and so the so-called contaminating mode of transmission occurs .

Subsequently, trypanosomes actively penetrate the skin, where they multiply in a whipless form as an amastigote inside non-phagocytic nuclear cells ( endothelial cells , muscle cells of all types, neuroglia ). After several divisions, shortly before the cell ruptures, amastigotes turn into trypomastigotes , which are released into the bloodstream and initiate infection of other cells. The cycle ends when another bug sucks the blood of the infected person.


Clinical picture[edit | edit source]

Trypanosoma cruzi causes Chagas' disease . Occurs only in America. It typically takes place in 3 phases.

Roman syndrome in Chagas disease

Acute phase[edit | edit source]

It appears 1 to 4 months after the bite. A small inflammatory infiltrate develops at the site of the bite , but otherwise the course may be asymptomatic. In the case of conjunctival infestation , a characteristic one-sided conjunctivitis and swelling of the eyelids is created - the so-called Romaň's syndrome . Children have irregular fevers, hepatosplenomegaly , myocarditis , edema , bleeding disorders and neurological disorders.

Latent phase[edit | edit source]

It appears 8 to 10 weeks after infection , but can last for several years. It is characterized by the multiplication of parasites in tissues, which is often asymptomatic.

Chronic phase[edit | edit source]

It lasts 10 to 30 years or even a lifetime. Trypanosoma causes chronic changes in the heart such as cardiomegaly , left ventricular dilatation or apical aneurysm (50%) - aneurysm at the apex of the heart.

Megaesophagus

Prognosis and complications[edit | edit source]

Cave!!!.png The prognosis is bad. Mortality is up to 50% during the 1st week. In addition, serious complications are myocarditis and meningoencephalitis , which can be fatal. If the patient survives, he suffers permanent neurological damage.

Diagnosis[edit | edit source]

We choose a suitable method according to the stage of the disease or according to the type of transmission.

  • In the acute phase, trypanosomes in tears (Roman's symptom), peripheral blood , and white blood cell concentrate ( buffy coat ) can be directly detected. We will use microscopy (native or stained specimen), culture, xenodiagnostics (direct detection of trypanosomes in the blood using laboratory-reared bugs in the chamber).
  • In the latent and chronic phases, we look for specific serum antibodies (IgG) in the blood or use xenodiagnostics.

If we suspect that trypanosomes have been transferred from mother to child (transplacental transmission), then we can:

  • directly detect trypanosomes in the newborn's blood (concentration by microhematocritic centrifugation , culture, PCR is required ),
  • examine specific serum antibodies in both mother and child,
  • histologically examine the placenta and / or umbilical cord and directly show amastigotes.

Therapy[edit | edit source]

  • There is no therapy, nifurtimox and benzonidazole are partially effective.

Links[edit | edit source]

Related articles[edit | edit source]

Reference[edit | edit source]

  1. BERMUDEZ, José, Carolina DAVIES a Analía SIMONAZZI. Current drug therapy and pharmaceutical challenges for Chagas disease. Acta Tropica. 2016, vol. 156, s. 1-16, ISSN 0001-706X. DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2015.12.017.

External links[edit | edit source]

Použitá literatura[edit | edit source]

  • BEDNÁŘ, Marek, A SOUČEK a V FRAŇKOVÁ, et al. LÉKAŘSKÁ MIKROBIOLOGIE : Bakteriologie, virologie, parazitologie. 1. vydání. Triton, 1996. 560 s. ISBN 859-4-315-0528-0.
  • NOHÝNKOVÁ, Eva. Africké a americké trypanosomy - původci spavé a Chagasovy nemoci [přednáška k předmětu Parazitologie, obor Všeobecné lékařství, 1. LF Univerzita Karlova]. Praha. 23. 11. 2015. 

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