Toxoplasmosis

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Microbiology in Italy, July 2013 [1]
The only definitive hosts for Toxoplasmosis gondii are cats.
From: http://www.economist.com/node/16271339

Description/Etiology/Taxonomy

Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate, intracellular parasitic protozoan that infects most species of warm blooded animals, including humans, and is the causative agent of the disease Toxoplasmosis. While T. gondii may infect humans to asexually reproduce and cause disease, the only host in which the protozoa may complete its life cycle and sexually reproduce are family Felidae, more commonly referred to as domestic cats and their relatives. [1]

Taxonomy of Toxoplasma gondii
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Chromalveolata
Superphylum: Alveolata
Phylum: Apicomplexa
Class: Conoidasida
Subclass: Coccidiasina
Order: Eucoccidiorida
Family: Sarcocystidae
Subfamily: Toxoplasmatinae
Genus: Toxoplasma
Species: Toxoplasma gondii

Pathogenesis


Transmission
Lifecycle

The only hosts in which Toxoplasma gondii can mature and reproduce are members of the family Felidae. Infected domestic cats (and those related to them) will shed large numbers of unsporulated oocysts in their feces for approximately one to two weeks. Oocysts released into the environment take from one to five days to form spores and become capable of causing infection. Intermediate hosts, commonly birds and rodents as they are typical prey of felines, may then become infected by consuming materials contaminated with T. gondii spores. After ingestion, oocysts develop into tachyzoites which localize in neural and muscle tissues to develop into cyst bradyzoites. Members of the family Felidae become infected after consuming intermediate hosts that have these cysts in their tissues. Additionally, other animals may become infected with cysts after ingesting T. gondii spores from the environment. [1]


Infecting humans

Humans may become infected with Toxoplasma gondii by a variety of routes. The most common methods of infection include: consuming undercooked meat of animals that had tissue cysts, consuming food or water contaminated with infected cat feces, consuming food or water contaminated by infected environmental samples (e.g. soil, cat litter), receiving a blood transfusion or organ transplant from individuals harboring tissue cysts, and infection of a fetus transplacentally from the mother. Unlike its lifecycle in felines and intermediate hosts, T. gondii commonly forms cysts in the skeletal muscle, brain, eyes, and myocardium of the human host. Additionally, rather than being shed in feces like the feline host, the cysts in a human host may remain for the entire life of the human host. [1]

Colonization

Infectious dose
There is no known specific infectious dose of Toxoplasma gondii organisms required to cause disease, however it has been suggested that the number is very low. [2] However, there are three stages of the T. gondii lifecycle in which it is infectious. The first infectious phase of the T. gondii lifecycle is during the oocyst stage; T. gondii oocysts may be found in soil or water and can survive in the environment for several months. The second infectious phase is the tachysoite stage, a phase of rapid replication in the tissues of the host; this is the stage responsible for the onset of acute toxoplasmosis. Finally, the third infectious stage of the T.gondii lifecycle is the bradyzoite stage in which the parasite slowly replicates in the muscle and brain tissue of the infected host. [3]

Incubation period
The incubation period, or the time between exposure to the organism and the onset of symptoms, of Toxoplasma gondii in a human host is 10 to 23 days after consuming contaminated food or water, and 5 to 20 days after exposure to infected cat feces. [4]


Virulence factors

Clinical features


Epidemiology

It is estimated that 22.5% of the United States population over age 12 is infected with Toxoplasma gondii. In other countries, the infection rates are close to 95% of infected persons within a population. Toxoplamsa gondii infects a greater percentage of people in areas of the world that lower in altitude and have hot, moist environments. [1]


Symptoms


Healthy Individuals

Healthy individuals who become infected with Toxoplasma gondii are often asymptomatic. Occasionally, a non-immunosuppressed individual will develop flu like symptoms for a few weeks that eventually fade. [1]
Immunocompromised Individuals

Immunocompromised individuals, for example individuals who have HIV/AIDS, suffer a wide range of symptoms from Toxoplasma gondii infection including inflammation of the lung tissue, myocarditis, and acute inflammation of the brain. [2]
Pregnancy-associated infection

If a woman becomes infected with Toxoplasma gondii while pregnant, especially in the early stages of pregnancy, the parasite may be congenitally transmitted to the unborn child. Results of a congenital infection often result in a miscarriage or still birth. Some children may be born asymptomatically and develop symptoms such as vision loss, mental disability, and seizures later in life. [1]


Morbidity/mortality

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of Toxoplasmosis is generally achieved via serology, or the examination of plasma or other bodily fluids to determine whether the body has produced antibodies in response to a specific antigen. Additionally, Toxoplasmosis may be diagnosed via the identification of T.gondii cysts in a tissue sample taken from a suspected infected individual. Diagnosis of Toxoplasmosis infection before birth may be determined by confirming the presence of T. gondii DNA in amniotic fluid. [1]

Treatment

Prevention

Host Immune Response

References

1 Centers for Disease Control (CDC). General Information Toxoplasmosis. Page last updated: January 10, 2013
2 Public Health Agency of Canada. Toxoplasma gondii - Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS). Date Modified: 2011-02-18
3 Sarah Staggs and Eric Villegas. Waterborne Pathogens: Toxoplasma. Last Updated: 04 April 2012
4 Iowa State University. The Center for Food Security and Public Health. Toxoplasmosis: Toxoplasma Infection. Last Updated: May 2005


Created by Magdalene C. Shaughnessy, student of Tyrrell Conway at the University of Oklahoma