1692 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
Pneumocystis. Among PLWH, the incidence of PCP is inversely related
to the CD4+ T-cell count: at least 80% of cases occur at counts of <200/μL,
and most of these cases develop at counts of <100/μL. HIV viral load
is another factor that predisposes patients to PCP. CD4+ T-cell counts
are less useful in predicting the risk of PCP in patients who are immunosuppressed for reasons other than HIV infection. Clinicians must
recognize that PCP can occur at CD4+ T-cell counts >200/μL in any
immunosuppressed population including persons with HIV infection.
Such occurrences are especially common in patients who are immunosuppressed due to causes other than HIV infection, especially among
patients who have undergone solid-organ transplantation, since CD4+
T-cell counts are not as sensitive and specific indicators of PCP as they
are in PLWH.
Lung Pathology Pneumocystis has a unique tropism for the lung.
Organisms are presumably inhaled into the alveolar space after being
exhaled by another human. Clinically apparent pneumonia occurs only
if an individual is immunocompromised. Pneumocystis proliferates in
the lung, provoking a mononuclear cell response. The alveoli become
filled with proteinaceous material, and alveolar damage results in
increased alveolar-capillary injury and surfactant abnormalities. Stained
lung sections typically show foamy, vacuolated alveolar exudates composed largely of viable and nonviable organisms (Fig. 220-1A). Interstitial edema and fibrosis may develop, and organisms can be seen in the
alveolar space with silver or other stains. Moreover, the organisms can
be seen when tissue is subjected to colorimetric or immunofluorescent
staining (Fig. 220-1B–1D).
■ CLINICAL FEATURES
Clinical Presentation PCP presents as acute or subacute pneumonia that may initially be characterized by a vague sense of dyspnea
alone but that subsequently manifests as fever and nonproductive
cough with progressive shortness of breath. Patients may ultimately
progress to respiratory failure and death. Extrapulmonary manifestations of PCP are rare but can include involvement of almost any organ,
most notably the lymph nodes, spleen, and liver.
Physical Examination, Oxygen Saturation, and Imaging The
physical examination findings in PCP are nonspecific. Patients have
decreased oxygen saturation—at rest or with exertion—that, without
treatment, progresses to severe hypoxemia. Patients may initially have
a normal chest examination and no adventitious sounds, but later
develop diffuse rales and signs of consolidation.
Laboratory Findings The results of routine laboratory tests are
nonspecific in PCP. Serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) are
often elevated as a result of pulmonary damage; however, a normal
LDH level does not rule out PCP, nor is an elevated LDH value specific
for PCP. The peripheral white blood cell count may be elevated in relation to the patient’s baseline values, but the increase is usually modest.
Hepatic and renal function are typically normal.
Radiographic Findings Although the initial chest radiograph
may be normal when patients have mild symptoms, the classic radiographic appearance of symptomatic PCP consists of diffuse bilateral
interstitial infiltrates that are perihilar and symmetric (Fig. 220-2A)—
yet another finding that is not specific for PCP. The interstitial infiltrates can progress to alveolar filling (Fig. 220-2B). High-resolution
chest CT shows diffuse ground-glass opacities in virtually all patients
with PCP, often before a routine chest radiograph becomes abnormal
(Fig. 220-2C). A normal chest CT essentially rules out the diagnosis
of PCP. Pneumatoceles and pneumothoraces are characteristic chest
radiographic findings, especially in patients with HIV infection
(Fig. 220-2D). A wide variety of atypical radiographic findings have
been described, including asymmetric patterns, upper-lobe infiltrates,
mediastinal adenopathy, nodules, cavities, and effusions.
■ DIAGNOSIS
The optimal sample for a specific microbiologic diagnostic examination depends on how ill the patient is and what resources are
recognized as the first presentations of what came to be known as the
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (Chap. 202).
The incidence of PCP increased dramatically as the AIDS epidemic
grew: without chemoprophylaxis or antiretroviral therapy (ART),
80–90% of patients with HIV/AIDS in North America and Western
Europe ultimately developed one or more episodes of PCP. While its
incidence declined with the introduction of anti-Pneumocystis prophylaxis and combination ART, PCP has continued to be a leading cause of
AIDS-associated morbidity in the United States and Western Europe,
particularly in individuals who do not know they are infected with HIV
until they are profoundly immunosuppressed and in people living with
HIV (PLWH) with CD4+ T lymphocyte counts of <200/μL who are not
receiving ART or PCP prophylaxis.
PCP also develops in HIV-uninfected patients who are immunocompromised secondary to hematologic or malignant neoplasms, stem
cell or solid-organ transplantation, and treatment with immunosuppressive medications. The incidence of PCP depends on the degree and
duration of immunosuppression. PCP is increasingly reported among
individuals receiving tumor necrosis factor α inhibitors and immunosuppressive monoclonal antibodies for autoimmune, rheumatologic,
or neoplastic diseases. While clinical disease due to Pneumocystis in
immunocompetent hosts has not been clearly documented, studies
have shown that Pneumocystis organisms can colonize the airways
of children and adults who are not immunocompromised. The relevance of these organisms to acute or chronic syndromes, such as
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), in immunocompetent
patients is being investigated.
In some developing countries, the incidence of PCP among PLWH
has been reported to be lower than that in industrialized countries.
This lower incidence may be due to competing mortality from infectious diseases such as tuberculosis and bacterial pneumonia, which
typically occur before patients become immunosuppressed enough
to develop PCP. Geographic variations in Pneumocystis exposure and
underdiagnosis attributable to lack of diagnostic resources also may
explain the apparent lower frequency of PCP in some countries.
■ PATHOGENESIS AND PATHOLOGY
Life Cycle and Transmission The life cycle of Pneumocystis
likely involves both sexual and asexual reproduction. The organism
exists as a trophic form, a cyst, and a precyst. Studies in rodents show
that immunocompetent animals can serve as reservoirs for respiratory
transmission of P. carinii (the infecting species in rodents) to immunocompetent and immunosuppressed animals. Human Pneumocystis
is thought to be transmitted by a respiratory route as well. P. jirovecii,
like all pneumocystis species, is host-specific. Thus, humans are not
infected, for example, by P. carinii (rodents) or P. oryctolagi (rabbits),
but are only infected by P. jirovecii.
Serologic and molecular studies have demonstrated that most
humans are exposed to P. jirovecii early in life. It was historically
thought that Pneumocystis pneumonia usually developed from reactivation of latent infection. However, molecular evidence makes it
clear that children and adults can develop PCP from primary infection
or reinfection. It is difficult to prove whether reactivation of latent
infection in fact occurs. The source of infection is thought to be either
healthy or immunosuppressed individuals who themselves experienced recent infection or reinfection, or immunosuppressed persons
with clinical PCP. Nosocomial outbreaks occur in inpatient and outpatient settings. The utility of droplet or airborne isolation for preventing
transmission from patients with PCP to other immunosuppressed
individuals has been debated; no clear evidence exists, although it
seems prudent to isolate patients with active PCP from other immunosuppressed patients using at least droplet precautions.
Role of Immunity Defects in cellular and/or humoral immunity
predispose to development of PCP. Such defects may be congenital,
or they may be acquired as a result of HIV infection or of treatment
with immunosuppressive drugs such as glucocorticoids, fludarabine, temozolomide, temsirolimus, cyclophosphamide, rituximab,
or alemtuzumab. CD4+ T cells are critical in host defense against
1693CHAPTER 220 Pneumocystis Infections
available. Before the 1990s, diagnoses of PCP were usually established
by open lung biopsy; later, transbronchial lung biopsy was employed.
Hematoxylin and eosin staining of pulmonary tissue demonstrates
a foamy alveolar infiltrate and a mononuclear interstitial infiltrate
(Fig. 220-1A). This appearance is pathognomonic for PCP even though
the organisms cannot be specifically identified with this stain. The
diagnosis is typically established in lung tissue or pulmonary secretions
by staining of the cyst—e.g., with methenamine silver (Fig. 220-1B),
toluidine blue O, or Giemsa (Fig. 220-1C)—or by staining with a specific immunofluorescent antibody (Fig. 220-1D).
The demonstration of organisms in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL)
fluid is almost 100% sensitive and specific for PCP in patients with HIV
infection and is almost as sensitive in patients with immunosuppression due to other processes. The organisms are identified in pulmonary
secretions with the specific stains indicated above for lung biopsy.
While expectorated sputum or throat swabs have very low sensitivity,
an induced sputum sample obtained and interpreted by an experienced
provider can be highly sensitive and specific; however, the sensitivity is
dependent on both the characteristics of the patient and the experience
of the center conducting the test and is widely variable (55–90%).
Many laboratories now offer polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing of respiratory specimens for Pneumocystis in preference to direct
microscopy of appropriately stained respiratory secretions. However,
these PCR tests are so sensitive that it is difficult to distinguish patients
with colonization (i.e., those whose acute lung disease is due to some
other process but who have low levels of Pneumocystis DNA in the
lungs) from those with acute pneumonia due to Pneumocystis. Such
PCR tests on appropriate samples may be more useful for ruling out a
diagnosis of PCP if they are negative than for definitively attributing
the disease to Pneumocystis.
There has been considerable interest in serologic tests, such as assays
for (1→3)-β-d-glucan, a component of the fungal cell wall. These
levels are frequently elevated in patients with PCP. However, serum or
BAL (1→3)-β-d-glucan levels are not perfectly sensitive or highly specific for PCP. There are increasing numbers of reports of serum PCR
tests for Pneumocystis, but such tests are still in preliminary stages of
development.
■ COURSE AND PROGNOSIS
Untreated, PCP is invariably fatal. Patients with HIV infection often
have an indolent course that may present early as mild exercise intolerance or chest tightness without fever or cough and a normal or nearly
normal posterior–anterior chest radiograph but progresses over days,
weeks, or even a few months to fever, cough, diffuse alveolar infiltrates,
and profound hypoxemia. Some patients with HIV infection and most
patients with other types of immunosuppression have more acute
disease that progresses over a few days to respiratory failure. Rare
patients also develop distributive shock. A few unusual patients present
with extrapulmonary manifestations in the skin or soft tissue, retina,
brain, liver, kidney, or spleen. Extrapulmonary disease is nonspecific
in presentation and can be diagnosed only by histology. When there
is extrapulmonary clinical disease in a patient with PCP, the priority
is to determine what other concurrent infectious or neoplastic process
might be present, given the rarity of extrapulmonary pneumocystosis.
Factors that influence mortality risk of PCP include the patient’s age
and degree of immunosuppression as well as the presence of preexisting lung disease, a low serum albumin level, the need for mechanical
ventilation, and the development of a pneumothorax. With advances
in supportive critical care, the prognosis for patients with PCP who
require intubation and respiratory support has improved and now
A B
C D
FIGURE 220-1 Direct microscopy of Pneumocystis pneumonia. A. Transbronchial lung biopsy stained with hematoxylin and eosin shows eosinophilic alveolar filling.
B. Methenamine silver–stained bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid. C. Giemsa-stained BAL fluid. D. Immunofluorescent stain of BAL fluid.
1694 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
depends to a large extent on comorbidities and the prognosis of the
underlying disease. Since patients typically do not respond to therapy
for 4–8 days, supportive care for a minimum of 10 days is a reasonable
consideration if such support is compatible with the patient’s wishes
and the prognosis of comorbidities. Patients whose condition continues to deteriorate after 3 or 4 days or has not improved after 7–10 days
should be reevaluated to determine whether other infectious processes
are present (either having been missed on initial evaluation or having
developed during treatment), whether initial anti-Pneumocystis treatment has failed, or whether noninfectious processes (e.g., congestive
heart failure, pulmonary emboli, pulmonary hypertension, drug toxicity, or a neoplastic process) are causing pulmonary dysfunction.
TREATMENT
P. jirovecii Pneumonia
The treatment of choice for PCP is trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX), given either IV or PO for 14 days to non-HIVinfected patients with mild disease and for 21 days to all other
patients (Table 220-1). TMP-SMX, which interferes with the organism’s folate metabolism, is at least as effective as alternative agents
and is better tolerated. TMP-SMX can cause leukopenia, hepatitis,
rash, and fever as well as anaphylactic and anaphylactoid reactions.
Patients with HIV infection have an unusually high incidence of
hypersensitivity to TMP-SMX. Monitoring of serum drug levels is
useful if renal function or toxicities are issues in order to enhance
the likelihood that therapy will be effective and toxicity will be
avoided. Maintenance of a 2-h post-dose serum sulfamethoxazole
level of 100–150 μg/mL has been associated with a successful outcome. Resistance to TMP-SMX cannot be measured by organism
growth inhibition in the laboratory because Pneumocystis cannot
be cultured. However, mutations in the target gene for sulfamethoxazole that confer in vitro sulfa resistance when found in other
organisms have been recognized in Pneumocystis. The clinical relevance of these mutations for the response to therapy is unknown.
Sulfadiazine plus pyrimethamine, an oral regimen more often used
for treatment of toxoplasmosis, also is highly effective.
Intravenous pentamidine or the combination of clindamycin plus
primaquine is an option for patients who cannot tolerate TMP-SMX
and for patients in whose treatment TMP-SMX appears to be failing.
Pentamidine must be given IV over at least 60 min to avoid potentially lethal hypotension. Adverse effects can be severe and irreversible and include renal dysfunction, dysglycemia (life-threatening
hypoglycemia that can occur days or weeks after initial infusion
and be followed by hyperglycemia), neutropenia, and torsades des
pointes. Clindamycin plus primaquine is effective, but primaquine
can be given only by the oral route—a disadvantage for patients
who cannot ingest or absorb oral drugs. Oral atovaquone is also
a reasonable option for patients with mild disease who have no
A B
C D
FIGURE 220-2 Radiographs in Pneumocystis pneumonia. A. Posterior–anterior chest radiograph showing symmetric interstitial infiltrates. B. Posterior–anterior
chest radiograph showing symmetric alveolar infiltrates (courtesy of Alison Morris). C. CT image demonstrating symmetric interstitial infiltrates and ground-glass opacities.
D. CT image showing symmetric interstitial infiltrates, ground-glass opacities, and pneumatoceles.
1695CHAPTER 220 Pneumocystis Infections
TABLE 220-1 Treatment of Pneumocystis pneumoniaa
DRUG(S) DOSE, ROUTE ADVERSE EFFECTS
First-Choice Agent
TMP-SMX TMP (5 mg/kg) plus SMX
(25 mg/kg) q6–8h PO or
IV (i.e., 2 double-strength
tablets tid or qid)
Fever, rash, cytopenias,
hepatitis, hyperkalemia
Alternative Agents
Atovaquone 750 mg bid PO Rash, fever, hepatitis
Clindamycin
plus
Primaquine
300–450 mg q6h PO or
600 mg q6–8h IV
15–30 mg qd PO
Hemolysis (G6PD deficiency),
methemoglobinemia,
neutropenia, rash
Pentamidine 3–4 mg/kg qd IV Hypotension, azotemia,
cardiac arrhythmias (torsades
des pointes), pancreatitis,
dysglycemias, hypocalcemia,
neutropenia, hepatitis
Adjunctive Agent
Prednisone or
methylprednisolone
40 mg bid × 5 d, 40 mg qd ×
5 d, 20 mg qd × 11 d; PO
or IV
Peptic ulcer disease,
hyperglycemia, mood
alteration, hypertension
a
Treatment can be administered for 14 days to non-HIV-infected patients with mild
disease and for 21 days to all other patients.
Abbreviations: G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; TMP-SMX,
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
impediments to absorbing an oral drug that requires a high-fat
meal for optimal absorption. There is some evidence for activity of
echinocandins against the cyst form (but not the trophozoite form)
of pneumocystis, but the role for echinocandins as part of combination therapy is currently uncertain.
A major advance in therapy for PCP was the recognition that glucocorticoids could improve survival rates among PLWH with moderate to severe disease (room air PO2
<70 mmHg or alveolar–arterial
oxygen gradient ≥35 mmHg). Glucocorticoids appear to reduce
the pulmonary inflammation that occurs after specific therapy is
started and organisms begin to die, eliciting inflammation. Therapy
with glucocorticoids should be the standard of care for patients with
HIV infection and probably is also effective for patients with other
immunodeficiencies. This treatment should be started for moderate or severe disease when therapy for PCP is initiated, even if the
diagnosis is suspected but has not yet been confirmed. If PLWH or
HIV-uninfected patients are receiving high-dose glucocorticoids
when they develop PCP, there are theoretical advantages to either
increasing the steroid dose (to reduce the inflammatory response
to the dying organisms) or decreasing the steroid dose (to improve
immune function), but there is no convincing evidence on which to
base any specific strategy.
No definitive trials have defined the best therapeutic algorithm
for patients in whom TMP-SMX treatment for PCP is failing. If no
other treatable infectious or noninfectious processes are detected
and pulmonary dysfunction appears to be due to PCP alone, many
authorities would switch from TMP-SMX to either IV pentamidine
or IV clindamycin plus oral primaquine. Some authorities would
add the second drug or drug combination to TMP-SMX rather
than switching regimens. If patients are not already receiving them,
glucocorticoids should be added to the regimen; the dosage and
regimen, which are usually chosen empirically, depend on what
glucocorticoid regimen (if any) the patient was receiving when PCP
therapy was begun.
For patients with HIV infection who present with PCP before the
initiation of ART, ART should be started within the first 2 weeks of
therapy for PCP in most situations. Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) can occur, and the decision to initiate ART
thus requires considerable expertise in optimal timing relative to
PCP recovery as well as for the other factors that are relevant when
ART is initiated in any patient.
■ PREVENTION
The most effective method for preventing PCP is to eliminate the cause
of immunosuppression by withdrawing immunosuppressive therapy
or treating the underlying cause (e.g., HIV infection). Patients who are
susceptible to PCP benefit from chemoprophylaxis during the period
of susceptibility. For patients with HIV infection, CD4+ T-cell counts
are a reliable marker of susceptibility, and counts below 200/μL are an
indication to start prophylaxis (Table 220-2).
For patients who are immunosuppressed as a result of factors other
than HIV infection, there is no laboratory parameter, including the
CD4+ T-cell count, that predicts susceptibility to PCP with adequate
positive and negative accuracy. The period of susceptibility is usually
estimated on the basis of experience with the underlying disease and
immunosuppressive regimen. Premature cessation of prophylaxis has
been associated with clusters of cases in certain patient populations,
such as solid-organ transplant recipients. Patients receiving a prolonged course of high-dose glucocorticoids appear to be particularly
susceptible to PCP. The glucocorticoid exposure threshold that warrants chemoprophylaxis is controversial, but such preventive therapy
should be strongly considered for any patient who is receiving more
than the equivalent of 20 mg of prednisone daily for 30 days or who is
receiving glucocorticoids in conjunction with other immunosuppressive agents. Clinical experience also suggests that chemoprophylaxis is
useful for patients receiving certain immunosuppressive agents (e.g.,
tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, antithymocyte globulin, rituximab,
and alemtuzumab). The duration of such chemoprophylaxis is empirically estimated based on prior clinical experience and immunologic
factors that would plausibly relate to immunity such as CD4+ T-cell
counts, recognizing that such estimates are not precise.
TMP-SMX is the most effective prophylactic drug; few patients
experience a PCP breakthrough when they are reliably taking a recommended TMP-SMX chemoprophylactic regimen. Several TMP-SMX
regimens have been used successfully. Regimens of one single-strength
or double-strength tablet daily are the regimens with which there
is the most experience, but one double-strength tablet two or three
times weekly also has been recommended for various PLWH and nonHIV-infected populations of patients.
TABLE 220-2 Prophylaxis of Pneumocystis pneumonia
DRUG(S) DOSE, ROUTE COMMENTS
First-Choice Agent
TMP-SMX 1 tablet (double- or
single-strength) qd PO
Incidence of hypersensitivity is
high. Rechallenge for nonlife-threatening hypersensitivity;
consider dose-escalation
protocol.
Alternative Agents
Dapsone 50 mg bid or 100 mg
qd PO
Hemolysis is associated with
G6PD deficiency.
Dapsone
plus
Pyrimethamine
plus
Leucovorin
50 mg qd PO
50 mg weekly PO
25 mg weekly PO
Leucovorin ameliorates
cytopenias due to pyrimethamine.
Dapsone
plus
Pyrimethamine
plus
Leucovorin
200 mg weekly PO
75 mg weekly PO
25 mg weekly PO
Leucovorin ameliorates
cytopenias due to pyrimethamine.
Pentamidine 300 mg monthly via
Respirgard II nebulizer
Aerosol may cause
bronchospasm. Pentamidine is
probably less effective than
TMP-SMX or dapsone regimens.
Atovaquone 1500 mg qd PO Requires fatty meal for optimal
absorption
Abbreviations: G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; TMP-SMX,
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
1696 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
For patients who cannot tolerate TMP-SMX (usually because
of hypersensitivity or bone marrow suppression), alternative drugs
include daily dapsone, weekly dapsone-pyrimethamine, atovaquone,
and monthly aerosol pentamidine. Patients who develop hypersensitivity to TMP-SMX can sometimes tolerate the drug if a gradual doseescalation protocol is used. Dapsone cross-reacts with sulfonamides
in a substantial fraction of patients and is rarely useful in patients
with a history of life-threatening reactions to TMP-SMX. Aerosolized
pentamidine is highly effective, but it is not as effective as TMP-SMX
and may not provide protection in areas of the lung that are not well
ventilated. Atovaquone is also effective and well tolerated; however,
this drug is available only as an oral preparation, and gastrointestinal
absorption is unpredictable in patients with abnormal gastrointestinal
motility or function.
■ FURTHER READING
Akgun KM, Miller RF: Critical care in human immunodeficiency
virus–infected patients. Semin Respir Crit Care Med 37:303, 2016.
Buchacz K et al: Incidence of AIDS-defining opportunistic infections
in a multicohort analysis of HIV-infected persons in the United States
and Canada, 2000–2010. J Infect Dis 214:862, 2016.
Chen P et al: Anidulafungin as an alternative treatment for Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia in patients who cannot tolerate trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole. Int J Antimicrob Agents 55:105820, 2020.
Le Gal S et al: Pneumocystis infection outbreaks in organ transplantation units in France: A nation-wide survey. Clin Infect Dis 70:2216,
2020.
Ma L et al: Genome analysis of three Pneumocystis species reveals
adaptation mechanisms to life exclusively in mammalian hosts.
Nat Commun 7:10740, 2016.
Panel on Opportunistic Infections in HIV-Infected Adults
and Adolescents: Guidelines for the prevention and treatment
of opportunistic infections in HIV-infected adults and adolescents:
Recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and the HIV Medicine Association of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Available at
http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/adult_oi.pdf. Accessed
June 22, 2021.
Zolopa A et al: Early antiretroviral therapy reduces AIDS progression/
death in individuals with acute opportunistic infections: A multicenter randomized strategy trial. PLoS One 4:e5575, 2009.
Section 17 Protozoal and Helminthic
Infections: General Considerations
221
The word parasite comes originally from the Greek parasitos (para,
alongside of; and sitos, food), meaning someone who eats at another’s
table or lives at another’s expense. Although the same is true of many
bacteria and viruses, the designation parasite is reserved, by convention, for helminths and protozoa. These organisms are larger and more
complex than bacteria, with a eukaryotic cell structure similar to that
of human host cells. Historically, this similarity has made it difficult
to find effective antiparasitic agents that do not cause unacceptable
toxicity to human cells. Fortunately, intensive research and modern
techniques have now provided suitable agents for safe and effective
treatment of most parasitic infections. See Chap. S12 for details on
diagnostic procedures and Chap. 222 for details on treatment.
Introduction to
Parasitic Infections
Sharon L. Reed
Internal parasites of human beings are divided into two types: helminths (worms) and protozoa. Helminths are multicellular organisms
that can often be seen with the naked eye (Chap. 230). There are two
phyla: Platyhelminthes (flat worms) and Nemathelminthes (roundworms). Both phyla include some genera that mature in the gastrointestinal tract and others that migrate through the tissue after ingestion
or skin penetration. Tables S12-1 and S12-2 present the helminthic
genera, their definitive and intermediate hosts, geographic distributions, and the parasitic stages in the human body.
The key to understanding which helminths use humans as definitive hosts is to remember that helminth ova develop into larvae, and
larval stages develop into adults. Humans serve as the definitive host
when they ingest helminth larvae, which develop into adults in the
intestine and usually cause mild disease, often without any symptoms.
(The exception is ingestion of the late-stage larvae of the somatic or
tissue flukes, as shown in Table S12-2.) In contrast, if humans ingest
helminth ova and serve as the intermediate host, the ova develop into
larvae, which penetrate the intestine, migrate through the tissue, and
invade organs where they mature into adults. Intermediate hosts with
parasitic invasion of organs may experience severe disease.
Protozoa are microscopic single-celled organisms. Among the many
differences between helminths and protozoans, the most important
is the ability of protozoa (like bacteria) to multiply within the human
body and cause overwhelming infections. A major mechanism promoting unrestrained growth is evasion of the host immune response
either by antigenic variation (Trypanosoma brucei) or by survival inside
host cells (e.g., Plasmodium, Babesia, Cryptosporidium, Leishmania,
and Toxoplasma). In contrast, almost all helminths require stages
in other hosts to complete their life cycles and multiply. As a result,
except for Strongyloides and Capillaria, which can complete their life
cycle in humans, increases in the burden of infection with helminths
require repeated exogenous reinfections. Thus, permanent residents of
endemic countries, who are exposed repeatedly, may have heavy severe
infections, while most travelers with one or two exposures are unlikely
to experience the full spectrum of chronic helminthic infections.
In contrast to helminthic infections, naïve patients with their first
protozoal infection usually are the most severely affected because
partial immunity often limits the number of parasites during recurrent infections. Protozoan replication to large numbers in the host
also promotes the development of drug-resistant forms, especially
in malaria (Chap. 222). Because protozoa belong to many different
phyla, it is easier to understand the pathogenesis and management of
protozoal infections when they are classified by the site of infection
(intestinal protozoans, free-living amebae, and blood and tissue protozoans) (Table S12-3). Immunocompromised hosts are at risk of disseminated infection with a number of protozoa, including Leishmania,
Toxoplasma, Cryptosporidium, and Trypanosoma cruzi, which are
AIDS-defining illnesses. In contrast, Strongyloides is the only helminth
to disseminate.
HELMINTHIC INFECTIONS
The Platyhelminthes (flatworms) are categorized as tapeworms
(cestodes) and flukes (trematodes). Tapeworms are composed of a head
or scolex bearing the holdfast organs and segments, which become
gravid as they mature. Some tapeworms can reach lengths of many
yards; the longest tapeworms develop in the intestine, where they rarely
cause serious disease. In contrast, flukes are small leaf-shaped organisms whose size is not a measure of disease severity.
■ FLATWORMS
Cestodes Tapeworms cause either intestinal or somatic infection,
depending on the species. Intestinal infections occur when the human
host ingests larvae in the tissue of the intermediate host, whereas
somatic infections occur when humans accidentally ingest ova excreted
from the wild or domesticated definitive animal host.
INTESTINAL TAPEWORMS As shown in Table S12-1, humans acquire
most intestinal tapeworms by eating the insufficiently cooked flesh of
the intermediate host. Thus, Taenia saginata is commonly called the
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