Xenodiagnosis
Xenodiagnosis = Xenos (foreign) + diagnosis
- Indirect method to detect infectious agents
- Uses vectors (insects/animals) as foreign hosts
- Vector is allowed to feed on/injected with patient material
- Later, vector is examined for pathogen presence
For questions:
- Check if the substance injected/consumed in infected → If yes → Xenodiagnosis
Vectors Used
- Mosquitoes
- Ticks
- Mites
- Flies
- Fleas
- Lice
Examples of Xenodiagnosis
1. Chagas Disease
- Vector: Reduviid bug (lab-bred)
- Bug feeds on suspected patient
- After 4–5 weeks, feces checked for Trypanosoma cruzi
2. Dengue Virus
- Mosquito species:
- Aedes aegypti
- Aedes albopictus
- Toxorhynchites
- Mosquito is inoculated with virus
- Virus multiplies in mosquito organs
- Used to detect Dengue virus
3. Trichinella spiralis Infection
- Muscle biopsy from patient fed to lab rats
- T. spiralis larvae detected in rat muscles
Advantages
- Useful when microscopic detection is difficult
- Detects low pathogen load in blood
Other Diagnostic Options (Not Xenodiagnosis)
Option | Method | Use |
A | Ligated rabbit ileal loop | Detect ETEC enterotoxins (no vector infection) |
C | Inject hamster with splenic biopsy | Diagnose Leishmaniasis via animal inoculation |
D | Intradermal test on guinea pig | Test Corynebacterium diphtheriae toxin |
- Option A: Not xenodiagnosis (rabbit not infected)
- Options C & D: Animal inoculation/virulence tests, not xenodiagnosis
