Intestinal protozoa
From IDWiki
Microbiology
- Protozoans are eukaryotic unicellular organisms that have organelles
- Many have a trophozoite form (active, motile, feeding form), as well as a cyst form (vegetative, difficult-to-kill)
- Stains:
- Iron hematoxilin, which stains nuclei on a black background
- Acid-fast stain, which highlights red Cryptosporidium/Cyclospora/Cystoisospora
- Can combine both of the above
Classification
From largest to smallest family
- Amoebae
- Entamoeba histolytica/dispar (microscopically indistinguishable, but E. dispar is non-pathogenic)
- Entamoeba harmanni and Entamoeba coli (non-pathogenic)
- Endolimax nana
- Iodamoeba butchlii
- Flagellates
- Giardia lamblia
- Dientamoeba fragilis (no cystic form)
- Chilomastix mesnili
- Ciliates
- Coccidia: small, may be seen as acid-fast
- Cryptosporidium (~5 μm)
- Cyclospora cayetanensis (~10 μm)
- Cystoisospora belli (previously called Isospora) (~30 μm)
- Sarcocystis hominis
- Microsporidia
Identification
- Some have classic appearance:
- Giardia trophs look like an owl
- Balantidium coli is huge
- Trichomonas and Chilomastix trophs have flagellae and are tear-drop shaped
- Cystoisospora belli looks like an eye or halved egg
- Cyclospora is thick-walled and looks like a golf ball
- Cryptosporidium is the smallest (4-6 µm) and may have crescent-shaped sporozoites inside
- Sarcocystis is quite large (15 µm), non-acid-fast, and looks like 2 joined ovals
Amoebae
- In order to differentiate the larger Amoebae, need to consider the size, nucleus characteristics, and other features
- Does is stain acid-fast? If yes, it is one of the "sporas"
- What kind of nucleus is it?
- Entamoeba: dark ring of peripheral chromatin, with a defined central nucleus and relatively clear perikarysomal space
- Non-Entamoeba: more blob-like, less well defined
- Granulated: big dots, suggests Dientamoeba fragilis trophozoite
- How many nuclei?
- Trophozoites are mostly mono-nucleated, cysts may be polynucleated
- Dientamoeba has 2 nuclei in trophozoite form
- What is the average size?
- Need a measurement microscope
- Other stuff
- Large vacuole suggests Iodamoeba butschlii
- Uneven chromatin suggests Entamoeba coli
- Chromatoidal bars suggests Entamoeba polecki, Entamoeba histolytica, or Entamoeba hartmanni
Organism | Nucleus type | No. nuclei | Size | Other features |
---|---|---|---|---|
E. histolytica | Entamoeba type | 2-4 | > 10 µm | Chromatoidal bars |
E. coli | Entamoeba type | 5-8+ | > 10 µm | |
E. hartmanni | Entamoeba type | < 10 µm | Chromatoidal bars | |
E. polecki | Entamoeba type but 1/3 cell width | > 10 µm | Chromatoidal bars, but may have glycogen mass | |
Iodamoeba | Blob-like | 1 | Large vacuole | |
Endolimax | Blob-like | 2-4 |
Coccidia
- No serology available
- Culture difficult or impossible
- May be seen on histopathology of biopsy specimens
Organism | Size of oocyst | Stool O&P | Stool antigen | Acid-fast | Other stain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cryptosporidium | 4-6 μm | + | + | + | immunofluorescence |
Cyclospora cayetanensis | 8-10 μm | + | – | + | |
Cystoisospora belli | 23-33 x 10-19 μm | + | – | + | |
Microsporidia | 1-3.5 μm | ± | – | – | chromotrope, calcofluor |