The life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii - Part 01
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- Опубликовано: 14 окт 2020
- Learn about the life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii, an intracellular parasitic one-celled eukaryote that causes the infectious disease toxoplasmosis. Video produced by the research group coordinated by Wanderley de Souza, researcher and professor at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.
the soundrack is amazing and the animation too
That was fantastic. Thank you
Very good video!
Very nice video!
you can diagnose it with a simple blood test
Very good,simple illustrative video,thnx
people : learn
me : vibing with the music
good ilustration
it can also transfer trough water, soil and Many other
How is this not at the top?
Thank the video
Why the music :(
في ترجمة كل اللغات تقريبا 👏👏
هل ممكن ترجمه الفيلم عربي
nice! i love da creepy music.
Good video!
this is so scary
Great
If I believe that you said a large number of oocysts are produced within a short period of time(mainly around two to three weeks on average), I really do believe that.
A single infected prey(such as a rat or a mouse) can contain thousands of tissue cysts,
each tissue cysts produces an average of a few dozen(between 8(in muscle cells)to 200(in liver or even cancer cells), mainly 128 on an average maximum number)Bradyozoites, and each mature bradiozoite can produce 8 to 32 merozoites(mainly 16 or 20).
And the process repeats itself over and over again for around a week or two, depending on conditions.
Once the parasites start to produce gametes, females will often form first and then the males.
The males will release around 8 to 16 micro gametes, which each one will fertilize one female and then the fertilize female then becomes a oocyst.
And if you have calculated all the reproductive cycles of bradyozoites to merozoites and merozoites becoming more merozoites repeatedly,
A single infected prey can produce more than a billion oocysts during the entire life cycle of toxoplasmosis in an average definitive host(which are always cats).
And an average cat only poops out hundreds of millions of oocysts per day on average.
This can cause them to have diarrhea during the oocyst releasing process, but overtime the cats will eventually start to feel better again afterwards.
Unless that same cat eats another infected rodent,and the symptoms can become even more severe.
Remember when they got this wrong on houseMD?
How do you diagnose it?
Serologic test
Interesting, similar to the malerial plasmodium parasites. Creepy video and music tho ahah
wow
Ngeri
So can this parasite multiply in humans?
Asexually in the form of trophozoites, yes. But not sexually
@@gauriparmar3818 oh ok Ty
I love you
Why can’t we just nickname the oocysts after the genus name of the parasites that create them,
For plasmodium the oocysts will be called P.O. cysts or plasmodia cyst,
For toxoplasma gondii, it’s To(pronounced T O)cysts or toxocysts,
And for cryptosporidium it C.O cysts or crypto cysts,
And for babysia it Bocyst(the letters before cyst are pronounced as body Oder, but the letters actually refer to the parasite that makes them),
I’m(Ryan VD) suggesting that,
just because we will better classify which oocysts come from which sporozoan parasites(toxoplasmosis and cryptosporidium cysts can look similar to each other).
The difference is that toxo cysts have sporocysts, while crypto cysts do not have sporocysts.
How do you diagnose it?
Can be diagnosed through tissue biopsy like the brain where can see the presence of cysts
Surely there is a less invasive way. Taking mryhh and wormwood is a good start anyway.
@@ragefulhippie6273 blood tests, if you can find anyone trained to use labs and order proper investigative tests.