Epidemiology + Risk Factors
Clinical Presentation
Immune Response
Diagnosis + Treatment
100

What is the patient's name?

Pete Weddle, 62, M

100

Explain the name "kala-azar" (Hindi for black fever)

The disease often causes hyperpigmentation in individuals of South Asian ancestry

100

Freebie

urwelcom

100

List prevention strategies against Leishmaniasis

Avoid sandfly bites: limit outdoor activities at dawn/dusk/night in endemic areas, wear protective clothing, apply insect repellant

200

How is Leishmaniasis spread?

Through sandfly bites

200

What are the different types of Leishmaniasis?

(diffuse) cutaneous, mucocutaneous, and visceral

200

What immune cell is needed to mount an effective immune response to Leishmania spp.?

Parasite-specific CD4+ Th1 cells

200

List laboratory methods for diagnosing Leishmaniasis

Biopsy microscopy, culture medium, serology

300

Name different species of Leishmania (at least 4)

Old World: L. major, L. tropica, L. donovani, L. infantum

New World: L. mexicana, L. braziliensis, L. chagasi

300

What is the usual timeline for symptom development in Leishmaniasis

Symptoms usually arise a few weeks to months after infection for cutaneous Leishmaniasis and a few months to years for visceral

300

How does Leishmania survive within macrophages? (an acidic environment)

Amastigotes express a proton-transporting ATPase which maintains the pH at ~6.5

300

Daily Double!

If anyone can explain to me treatment differences, if any, between L. donovani species complex and L. infantum, I'll give double points. Specifically treatment with miltefosine (IMPAVIDO)

400

Describe the life cycle of Leishmania spp.

(picture on separate tab)

400

What are typical symptoms of Leishmaniasis

Fever, cachexia, hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia, hypergammaglobulinemia

400

Leishmania requires iron for survival, how does the host combat this?

Uses proinflammatory cytokines to repress iron absorption (upregulating hepcidin, ferritin, and downregulation of transferrin in the macrophage)

400

What is the MoA for leishmanicidal liposomal amphotericin B?

It is thought that the drug binds to parasitic ergosterol precursors (lanosterol), disrupting the parasite membrane

500

What are the implications of anthroponotic transmission?

As humans are the sole reservoir, control of the disease in the individual can help control the spread of the disease in the population

500

Compare-contrast clinical manifestations of VL-HIV coinfections

Classical features not significantly different. Prognosis, cure rate, relapse rate, AIDS progression are much worse especially with untreated HIV coinfection

500

Leishmania promastigotes express 2 major virulence factors: Lipophosphoglycan and Gp63. Explain their MoA

Lipophosphoglycan: Forms dense glycocalyx that activates and inhibits complement while targeting the cell for phagocytosis by macrophages

Gp63: Binds to fibronectin to promote adhesion to macrophages. Cleaves complement and lysosomal enzymes.

500

Mr. Weddle expressed concern over the bone marrow aspiration. How would you ease the patient's fears and contrast bone marrow aspiration to the more diagnostically sensitive splenic aspiration?

(Answers vary)

Splenic aspiration carries a high risk of life-threatening hemorrhage.