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PHYLUM
ARTHROPODA(ARTHROPOD
CHARACTERISTICS)
Done by : Lamya Alsadhan
Supervised by : Ebtesam Alolayan
What Is an Arthropod?
• Arthropod, any member of the phylum
Arthropoda.
• includes such familiar forms as lobsters, crabs,
spiders, mites, insects, centipedes, and
millipedes.
• Arthropods are represented in every habitat on
Earth and show a great variety of adaptations.
• Some are aquatic, others are terrestrial, some
are free living, and others are parasitic.
Objective:
• To identify the common characteristics of medical arthropods
and its classification.
• To discuss the mechanisms of transmission and causation of
diseases.
• To describe the diseases caused or transmitted by medical
arthropods.
• To implement appropriate prevention, control, and
treatment.
General features:
• All arthropods have a body supported by a
hardened external skeleton (exoskeleton).
• The appendages of arthropods - their legs,
antennae, and mouthparts - are jointed.
• Internally, the nerve cord runs along the lower
(ventral) part of the body and is not enclosed in a
protective spinal column.
• Blood is moved by the aid of a tube-like heart.
• The overall body arrangement is bilaterally
symmetrical.
Distribution and abundance:
• Arthropods are found in
almost all of the habitats
that cover the Earth’s
surface, even in your own
room!
Importance:
• The larger crustaceans- shrimps, lobsters, and
crabs- are used as food throughout the world.
• Although many species of insects and mites
attack food crops and timber, arthropods are
of enormous benefit to human agriculture.
• The stings and bites of arthropods may be
irritating or painful, but very few inject
dangerous toxins.
• Medically, arthropods are more significant as
carriers of diseases.
Arthropods relations to us :
• Medical Arthropod:
• Arthropods related with human health.
• Medical Arthropodology:
• Morphology, taxonomy, life cycle, ecology,
transmission of the diseases, control measures.
• Examples:
• Flea  Bubonic Plague.
• Soft tick  Q fever.
• Mosquito  Malaria.
Harm for human health:
•Harmful cause nuisance.
•Ectoparasites.
•Mechanical
transporters.
•Vectors.
Subphylum Crustacea:
• Most crustaceans have: two pairs of antennae,
three pairs of chewing appendages, various
numbers of pairs of legs.
• Crustaceans differ from the insects in that they
have legs on their abdomen as well as on their
thorax.
• Medical importance: Cyclopes are intermediate
hosts of the fish tapeworm (Diphyllobothrium
latum) and Dracunculus medinensis.
Subphylum Chelicerata
Class Arachnida:
• The Class Arachnida includes spiders, scorpions, ticks,
and mites.
• Most arachnids are adapted to kill prey with poison
glands, stingers, or fangs.
• Arachnids have a body that is divided into a
cephalothorax and an abdomen.
• Incomplete metamorphosis.
• Class Arachnida includes 3 orders of medical
importance:
• Order Scorpiones.
• Order Araneae (spiders).
• Order Acari (ticks and mites).
Tick:
• Ticks are divided into hard-bodied
ticks (family Ixodidae) and soft-
bodied ticks (family Argasidae)
• Ticks are blood-feeding
ectoparasites
• Ticks are widely distributed around
the world, especially in warm, humid
climates.
Life cycle:
Hard and Soft ticks:
• Hard ticks:
• Suck in day.
• Feed on the host for a few days.
• Resting sites: forest, woods, grassland, pasturage.
• Soft ticks:
• Suck at night.
• Feed on the host from minutes to one hour.
• Resting sites: locate at the host’s nests and hovel.
Harm to humans:
• Direct injures
• Irritation
• Tick paralysis
• Transmission of diseases
• Tick-borne encephalitis.
• Tick-borne relapsing fever, Lyme
disease.
• Q fever and tick-borne typhus.
Mite:
• Mites are small arthropods belonging to the class
Arachnida and the order Acari (also known as Acarina).
• Most mites are tiny, and have a simple, unsegmented
body plan.
• some species live in water, many live in soil as
decomposers, while others again are predators or
parasites.
• Most species are harmless to humans but a few are
associated with allergies or may transmit diseases.
Itch mite (Sarcoptes scabiei ):
• Sarcoptes scabiei parasitizes on humans, which can
cause scabies.
• Most have piercing/sucking mouthparts, some have
chewing mouthparts. All are different from insects
• Most are 8-legged except for the 1st instar which is 6-
legged.
• All are extremely tiny. A big one is the size of a period
in your textbook. Some adults live inside hair follicles.
Some live inside trachea of insects.
Life cycle:
 Egg  larva  protonymph 
tritonymph  adult
 Larva - 3 pairs of legs
 Nymphs - 4 pairs of legs.
 The female burrows into the skin
and lays eggs in a sinuous tunnel.
Pathogenesis:
• Selects places where the skin is thin and
wrinkled. Between fingers, wrists, elbows, feet,
etc.
• Children may be found burrowing on whole body.
• The mite can cause more severe skin reactions,
such as itching and allergic reactions.
• The hypersensitivity may result from the mite
excretions.
• Secondary bacterial infections may also occur,
probably as a result of scratching.
Immune response in scabies:
• S. scabiei infestation results in inflammatory and adaptive immune responses
relatively late in the infection (4–6 weeks after initial contact with mite).
• It is believed scabies mites have developed the capability of modulating
various aspects of the host immune responses resulting in the delayed onset
of symptoms.
• The rash and itch associated with scabies shows features of both type I
(immediate) and type IV (delayed) hypersensitivity reactions.
• The initial inflammatory response towards the mite and its products consists
of Langerhans cells (LCs) and eosinophils with smaller number of monocytes,
macrophages and mast cells.
Diagnosis, Prevention and control:
• Symptoms: sinuous tracks in the
skin, inflammation, itching.
• Find the mites in the skin.
• All clothing and bedding should
be laundered in hot water, and
sun dried.
• 5% Permethrin ointment.
Class Insecta:
• Insects are relatively small, ranging in size from
0.1mm.
• Most insects have compound eyes, and many have
ocelli as well.The mouth parts of insects are
elaborate.
• One pair of antennae and one or two pairs of wings,
three pairs of legs, all attached to the thorax.
• Body is divided into head, thorax, and abdomen
• Larvae in insects are worm-like, which differ greatly
in appearance from the adults.
Insects as vector of diseases:
• As vectors of the agents of bacterial, viral or
parasitic infection.
• As parasites in their own right, spending part or
all of their lifespan on humans
• As instigators of allergic responses that vary in
severity.
• They are 2 types of vectors:
• Biological vectors
• Mechanical vectors
Class Insecta is divided into 4 orders of
medical importance:
•Order Anoplura (lice).
•Order Siphonaptera (fleas).
•Order Hemiptera (bugs).
•Order Diptera (mosquitoes and
flies).
Order Anoplura (lice):
• Body is flattened dorso-ventrally.
• Lice are wingless insects with short legs.
• Displays incomplete metamorphosis.
• Head louse (Pediculus humanus):
• Adult louse is 2-5 mm in size, male is smaller than
female.
• Body is divided into head, thorax and abdomen.
• Currently, head and pubic lice are not considered
to be vectors for human pathogens
Order Siphonaptera (Fleas):
• About 2500 species, most parasites of
mammal’s only approx. 100 species of birds.
• Temporary obligate parasites, blood-feeding
exclusively as adults.
• Most fleas of medical and veterinary importance
are not host specific, that increases the
potential for acquisition and transmission of
pathogens.
• Xenopsylla cheopis (Oriental rat flea) is primary
urban plague vector.
Order Hemiptera (Bed Bugs):
• Bed bugs get their name from their proclivity.
• They feed on blood, climbing on you as you sleep and
feasting.Their bites can cause severe redness and
itching.
• Some of them are not a big deal. But they're fast
breeders and hard to kill.They can hide in your carpet,
your clothes or even inside your walls.
• Bed bug bite causes anemia and lack of energy and in
extreme cases, death.
Order Diptera (mosquitoes and flies):
• Mosquitoes :
• Mosquitoes are one of the main disease carriers among insects.
• When they bite, they regurgitate a small amount of their stomach contents into
the new host.
• If a mosquito previously bit an infected person or animal, he can transfer that
disease to the new host. Ex: Malaria, typhoid and cholera.
• Flies:
• Flies often eat food we consider undesirable, such as rotting vegetation and
feces.
• Their bodies are covered with diseased particles, including their mouth parts,
feet and legs.
• Deposition of those diseased particles on food we eat, leads to food poisoning.
• Flies also transmit diseases such as typhoid and cholera.
Protection against Mosquitoes,Ticks, & Other
Arthropods:
• GENERAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES:
• Avoid outbreaks.
• Be aware of peak exposure times and places.
• Wear appropriate clothing..
• Check for ticks
• Bed nets.
• Insecticides and spatial repellents.
• Protective measures against bed bugs
Phylum arthropoda(arthropod characteristics)

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Phylum arthropoda(arthropod characteristics)

  • 1. PHYLUM ARTHROPODA(ARTHROPOD CHARACTERISTICS) Done by : Lamya Alsadhan Supervised by : Ebtesam Alolayan
  • 2. What Is an Arthropod? • Arthropod, any member of the phylum Arthropoda. • includes such familiar forms as lobsters, crabs, spiders, mites, insects, centipedes, and millipedes. • Arthropods are represented in every habitat on Earth and show a great variety of adaptations. • Some are aquatic, others are terrestrial, some are free living, and others are parasitic.
  • 3. Objective: • To identify the common characteristics of medical arthropods and its classification. • To discuss the mechanisms of transmission and causation of diseases. • To describe the diseases caused or transmitted by medical arthropods. • To implement appropriate prevention, control, and treatment.
  • 4. General features: • All arthropods have a body supported by a hardened external skeleton (exoskeleton). • The appendages of arthropods - their legs, antennae, and mouthparts - are jointed. • Internally, the nerve cord runs along the lower (ventral) part of the body and is not enclosed in a protective spinal column. • Blood is moved by the aid of a tube-like heart. • The overall body arrangement is bilaterally symmetrical.
  • 5. Distribution and abundance: • Arthropods are found in almost all of the habitats that cover the Earth’s surface, even in your own room!
  • 6. Importance: • The larger crustaceans- shrimps, lobsters, and crabs- are used as food throughout the world. • Although many species of insects and mites attack food crops and timber, arthropods are of enormous benefit to human agriculture. • The stings and bites of arthropods may be irritating or painful, but very few inject dangerous toxins. • Medically, arthropods are more significant as carriers of diseases.
  • 7. Arthropods relations to us : • Medical Arthropod: • Arthropods related with human health. • Medical Arthropodology: • Morphology, taxonomy, life cycle, ecology, transmission of the diseases, control measures. • Examples: • Flea  Bubonic Plague. • Soft tick  Q fever. • Mosquito  Malaria.
  • 8. Harm for human health: •Harmful cause nuisance. •Ectoparasites. •Mechanical transporters. •Vectors.
  • 9.
  • 10. Subphylum Crustacea: • Most crustaceans have: two pairs of antennae, three pairs of chewing appendages, various numbers of pairs of legs. • Crustaceans differ from the insects in that they have legs on their abdomen as well as on their thorax. • Medical importance: Cyclopes are intermediate hosts of the fish tapeworm (Diphyllobothrium latum) and Dracunculus medinensis.
  • 11. Subphylum Chelicerata Class Arachnida: • The Class Arachnida includes spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites. • Most arachnids are adapted to kill prey with poison glands, stingers, or fangs. • Arachnids have a body that is divided into a cephalothorax and an abdomen. • Incomplete metamorphosis. • Class Arachnida includes 3 orders of medical importance: • Order Scorpiones. • Order Araneae (spiders). • Order Acari (ticks and mites).
  • 12. Tick: • Ticks are divided into hard-bodied ticks (family Ixodidae) and soft- bodied ticks (family Argasidae) • Ticks are blood-feeding ectoparasites • Ticks are widely distributed around the world, especially in warm, humid climates.
  • 14. Hard and Soft ticks: • Hard ticks: • Suck in day. • Feed on the host for a few days. • Resting sites: forest, woods, grassland, pasturage. • Soft ticks: • Suck at night. • Feed on the host from minutes to one hour. • Resting sites: locate at the host’s nests and hovel.
  • 15. Harm to humans: • Direct injures • Irritation • Tick paralysis • Transmission of diseases • Tick-borne encephalitis. • Tick-borne relapsing fever, Lyme disease. • Q fever and tick-borne typhus.
  • 16. Mite: • Mites are small arthropods belonging to the class Arachnida and the order Acari (also known as Acarina). • Most mites are tiny, and have a simple, unsegmented body plan. • some species live in water, many live in soil as decomposers, while others again are predators or parasites. • Most species are harmless to humans but a few are associated with allergies or may transmit diseases.
  • 17. Itch mite (Sarcoptes scabiei ): • Sarcoptes scabiei parasitizes on humans, which can cause scabies. • Most have piercing/sucking mouthparts, some have chewing mouthparts. All are different from insects • Most are 8-legged except for the 1st instar which is 6- legged. • All are extremely tiny. A big one is the size of a period in your textbook. Some adults live inside hair follicles. Some live inside trachea of insects.
  • 18. Life cycle:  Egg  larva  protonymph  tritonymph  adult  Larva - 3 pairs of legs  Nymphs - 4 pairs of legs.  The female burrows into the skin and lays eggs in a sinuous tunnel.
  • 19. Pathogenesis: • Selects places where the skin is thin and wrinkled. Between fingers, wrists, elbows, feet, etc. • Children may be found burrowing on whole body. • The mite can cause more severe skin reactions, such as itching and allergic reactions. • The hypersensitivity may result from the mite excretions. • Secondary bacterial infections may also occur, probably as a result of scratching.
  • 20. Immune response in scabies: • S. scabiei infestation results in inflammatory and adaptive immune responses relatively late in the infection (4–6 weeks after initial contact with mite). • It is believed scabies mites have developed the capability of modulating various aspects of the host immune responses resulting in the delayed onset of symptoms. • The rash and itch associated with scabies shows features of both type I (immediate) and type IV (delayed) hypersensitivity reactions. • The initial inflammatory response towards the mite and its products consists of Langerhans cells (LCs) and eosinophils with smaller number of monocytes, macrophages and mast cells.
  • 21. Diagnosis, Prevention and control: • Symptoms: sinuous tracks in the skin, inflammation, itching. • Find the mites in the skin. • All clothing and bedding should be laundered in hot water, and sun dried. • 5% Permethrin ointment.
  • 22. Class Insecta: • Insects are relatively small, ranging in size from 0.1mm. • Most insects have compound eyes, and many have ocelli as well.The mouth parts of insects are elaborate. • One pair of antennae and one or two pairs of wings, three pairs of legs, all attached to the thorax. • Body is divided into head, thorax, and abdomen • Larvae in insects are worm-like, which differ greatly in appearance from the adults.
  • 23. Insects as vector of diseases: • As vectors of the agents of bacterial, viral or parasitic infection. • As parasites in their own right, spending part or all of their lifespan on humans • As instigators of allergic responses that vary in severity. • They are 2 types of vectors: • Biological vectors • Mechanical vectors
  • 24. Class Insecta is divided into 4 orders of medical importance: •Order Anoplura (lice). •Order Siphonaptera (fleas). •Order Hemiptera (bugs). •Order Diptera (mosquitoes and flies).
  • 25. Order Anoplura (lice): • Body is flattened dorso-ventrally. • Lice are wingless insects with short legs. • Displays incomplete metamorphosis. • Head louse (Pediculus humanus): • Adult louse is 2-5 mm in size, male is smaller than female. • Body is divided into head, thorax and abdomen. • Currently, head and pubic lice are not considered to be vectors for human pathogens
  • 26. Order Siphonaptera (Fleas): • About 2500 species, most parasites of mammal’s only approx. 100 species of birds. • Temporary obligate parasites, blood-feeding exclusively as adults. • Most fleas of medical and veterinary importance are not host specific, that increases the potential for acquisition and transmission of pathogens. • Xenopsylla cheopis (Oriental rat flea) is primary urban plague vector.
  • 27. Order Hemiptera (Bed Bugs): • Bed bugs get their name from their proclivity. • They feed on blood, climbing on you as you sleep and feasting.Their bites can cause severe redness and itching. • Some of them are not a big deal. But they're fast breeders and hard to kill.They can hide in your carpet, your clothes or even inside your walls. • Bed bug bite causes anemia and lack of energy and in extreme cases, death.
  • 28. Order Diptera (mosquitoes and flies): • Mosquitoes : • Mosquitoes are one of the main disease carriers among insects. • When they bite, they regurgitate a small amount of their stomach contents into the new host. • If a mosquito previously bit an infected person or animal, he can transfer that disease to the new host. Ex: Malaria, typhoid and cholera. • Flies: • Flies often eat food we consider undesirable, such as rotting vegetation and feces. • Their bodies are covered with diseased particles, including their mouth parts, feet and legs. • Deposition of those diseased particles on food we eat, leads to food poisoning. • Flies also transmit diseases such as typhoid and cholera.
  • 29. Protection against Mosquitoes,Ticks, & Other Arthropods: • GENERAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES: • Avoid outbreaks. • Be aware of peak exposure times and places. • Wear appropriate clothing.. • Check for ticks • Bed nets. • Insecticides and spatial repellents. • Protective measures against bed bugs