119 results on '"Lung Diseases, Parasitic"'
Search Results
2. Cardiopulmonary nematode infections in wild canids: Does the key lie on host-prey-parasite evolution?
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María Rocío Ruiz de Ybáñez, Liron Lahat, Luis Eusebio Fidalgo, Carlos Martínez-Carrasco, Irene Sacristán, F.J. Martínez-Rondán, Álvaro Oleaga, Eduardo Berriatua, and Ana María López-Beceiro
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Heart Diseases ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Vulpes ,Foxes ,Zoology ,Animals, Wild ,Predation ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Angiostrongylus ,Nematode Infections ,030304 developmental biology ,Iberian wolf ,0303 health sciences ,Wolves ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Heart ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Metastrongyloidea ,Canis ,Nematode ,Spain ,Sympatric speciation - Abstract
Cardiopulmonary nematodes are among the most pathogenic parasites of domestic and wild canids. The aim of this study was to describe the species diversity, prevalence and infection intensity of these parasites in the Iberian wolf (Canis lupus signatus) and the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula. 257 foxes and 74 wolves were necropsied between 2008 and 2014. Four nematode species were identified: Angiostrongylus vasorum, Eucoleus aerophilus, Crenosoma vulpis and Filaroides hirthi. This last species was only found in wolves, being the first time that is cited worldwide in this wild canid. The overall parasite prevalence was significantly higher in foxes (70%) than in wolves (28%). Specifically, prevalences in foxes and wolves were, respectively, 43% and 22% for A. vasorum, 33% and 5% for E. aerophilus, and 30% and 9% for C. vulpis. The prevalence of F. hirthi was 16%. The A. vasorum intensity was significantly higher in foxes than in wolves. Differences between host species in the risk of infection would be associated to diverging feeding behavior, and possibly reflects a parasite-host adaptation related to host's hunting strategies and cardiorespiratory requirements. This study revealed an association between infection and environmental factors, and highlighted a wide variation in the spatial distribution of A. vasorum. Our results indicate that cardiopulmonary parasites are widespread in wild canids in northwest Spain, and further agrees with other studies indicating the expansion of A. vasorum in Europe and, therefore, the urgent need to investigate infection in dogs in sympatric areas.
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- 2019
3. The modulatory effect of Artemisia annua L. on toll-like receptor expression in Acanthamoeba infected mouse lungs
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Elżbieta Wandurska-Nowak, Paweł P. Jagodziński, Monika Derda, Edward Hadaś, Agnieszka Kolasa-Wołosiuk, Agnieszka Wojtkowiak-Giera, and Danuta Kosik-Bogacka
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0301 basic medicine ,DNA, Complementary ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,030231 tropical medicine ,Immunology ,Artemisia annua ,Acanthamoeba ,Inflammation ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Microbiology ,Alveolar cells ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Parenchyma ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Lung ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Toll-like receptor ,Plant Extracts ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Toll-Like Receptors ,Amebiasis ,Reverse Transcription ,General Medicine ,respiratory system ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunohistochemistry ,Toll-Like Receptor 2 ,Toll-Like Receptor 4 ,TLR2 ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,RNA, Protozoan - Abstract
The genus Acanthamoeba, which may cause different infections in humans, occurs widely in the environment. Lung inflammation caused by these parasites induces pulmonary pathological changes such as pulmonary necrosis, peribronchial plasma cell infiltration, moderate desquamation of alveolar cells and partial destruction of bronchial epithelial cells, and presence of numerous trophozoites and cysts among inflammatory cells. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of plant extracts from Artemisia annua L. on expression of the toll-like receptors TLR2 and TLR4 in lungs of mice with acanthamoebiasis. A. annua, which belongs to the family Asteraceae, is an annual plant that grows wild in Asia. In this study, statistically significant changes of expression of TLR2 and TLR4 were demonstrated. In the lungs of infected mice after application of extract from A. annua the expression of TLRs was observed mainly in bronchial epithelial cells, pneumocytes (to a lesser extent during the outbreak of infection), and in the course of high general TLR expression. TLR4 in particular was also visible in stromal cells of lung parenchyma. In conclusion, we confirmed that a plant extract of A. annua has a modulatory effect on components of the immune system such as TLR2 and TLR4.
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- 2019
4. Relationship between antioxidant defense in Acanthamoeba spp. infected lungs and host immunological status
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Karolina Kot, Natalia Łanocha-Arendarczyk, Danuta Kosik-Bogacka, Izabela Gutowska, Irena Baranowska-Bosiacka, and Emilia Metryka
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Antioxidant ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Acanthamoeba ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Lipid peroxidation ,Immunocompromised Host ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Glutathione Peroxidase ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Lung ,biology ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Glutathione peroxidase ,Proteins ,Amebiasis ,General Medicine ,Catalase ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Oxidative Stress ,Glutathione Reductase ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Parasitology ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Immunocompetence ,Pneumonia (non-human) ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenicity of acanthamoebiasis is an important aspect of the intricate and complex host–parasite relationship. The aim of this experimental study was to determine oxidative stress through the assessment of lipid peroxidation product (LPO) levels and antioxidant defense mechanism in Acanthamoeba spp. lung infections in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed hosts. In Acanthamoeba spp. infected immunocompetent mice we noted a significant increase in lung lipid peroxidation products (LPO) at 8 days and 16 days post infection (dpi). There was a significant upregulation in lung LPO in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed mice infected by Acanthamoeba spp. at 16 dpi. The superoxide dismutase activity decreased significantly in lungs in immunosuppressed mice at 8 dpi. The catalase activity was significantly upregulated in lungs in immunocompetent vs. immunosuppressed group and in immunocompetent vs. control mice at 16 dpi. The glutathione reductase activity was significantly lower in immunosuppressed group vs. immunosuppressed control at 24 dpi. We found significant glutathione peroxidase downregulation in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed groups vs. controls at 8 dpi, and in immunosuppressed vs. immunosuppressed control at 16 dpi. The consequence of the inflammatory response in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed hosts in the course of experimental Acanthamoeba spp. infection was the reduction of the antioxidant capacity of the lungs resulting from changes in the activity of antioxidant enzymes. Therefore, the imbalance between oxidant and antioxidant processes may play a major role in pathology associated with Acanthamoeba pneumonia.
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- 2018
5. Morphological and molecular characterization of Paragonimus caliensis Little, 1968 (Trematoda: Paragonimidae) from Medellin and Pichinde, Colombia
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Carlos Muskus, Iván D. Vélez, Alicia Galiano, Carolina Lenis, Antonio Marcilla, and Imelda Vélez
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0301 basic medicine ,Paragonimiasis ,Brachyura ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,030231 tropical medicine ,Paragonimus ,Zoology ,Colombia ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Common species ,Phylogenetics ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Metacercariae ,Phylogeny ,Phylogenetic tree ,Holotype ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,DNA, Helminth ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Parasitology ,Type locality ,Trematoda - Abstract
Paragonimiasis is a subacute to chronic inflammatory granulomatous lung disease caused by the genus Paragonimus. In Latin America Paragonimus mexicanus Miyazaki & Ishii, 1968 is the only confirmed species to cause human infections. Paragonimus caliensis Little, 1968 is an uncommon species often regarded as a synonym of P. mexicanus. Recently, the study of two types of Paragonimus metacercariae from Costa Rica has provided new molecular and morphological evidence that P. caliensis is a separate species from P. mexicanus. In the present study, molecular, morphological and phylogenetic tools have been used to characterize two populations of Paragonimus located at west of Medellin, Antioquia and at Pichinde, Valle del Cauca (type locality of P. caliensis), Colombia. Adults and metacercariae obtained from Medellin, and metacercariae from Pichinde were analyzed. For morphological observations we used light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Morphology of metacercariae and adults matched with the holotype of P. caliensis. The number and arrangement of sensory papillae in the acetabulum region differs from the morphotypes reported for P. caliensis in Costa Rica. Two morphotypes in branching patterns of ovary and two morphotypes in branching patterns of testes were identified. The main morphological differences between P. caliensis and P. mexicanus corresponded to the size of gonads and their relative positions in the body, and the occasional presence of a cyst wall in P. caliensis metacercariae. The molecular and phylogenetic analyses (using nuclear ribosomal ITS2 and partial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 CO1 sequences) confirmed that P. caliensis from the type locality is the same species from Medellin and Costa Rica. Furthermore, these analyses also suggest genetic as well as geographical separation of P. caliensis populations between Colombia and Costa Rica. Currently, P. mexicanus and P. caliensis are sympatric in the Colombian Pacific bioregion, and specific diagnosis based on their egg size is not possible. Therefore, it is necessary to determine the biogeographic distribution ranges of both species and to implement molecular techniques to establish the role of P. caliensis in human paragonimiasis in Colombia.
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- 2018
6. Histopathology of parasitic infections of the lung
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Jennifer M. Boland and Bobbi S. Pritt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Paragonimiasis ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Biopsy ,030231 tropical medicine ,Lung pathology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Text mining ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Predictive value of tests ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Histopathology ,Differential diagnosis ,business - Published
- 2017
7. The effect of pasture molluscicide on small lungworm infections and the productivity of grazing lambs
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John W. Larsen, Jenny E. Hanks, and Angus J.D. Campbell
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0301 basic medicine ,Molluscacides ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,animal diseases ,030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,Sheep Diseases ,Biology ,Pasture ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animal science ,parasitic diseases ,Grazing ,Animals ,Weaning ,Nematode Infections ,education ,Muellerius capillaris ,education.field_of_study ,geography ,Sheep ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,General Veterinary ,Intermediate host ,General Medicine ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Mollusca ,Molluscicide ,Parasitology ,Lungworm - Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the effect of pasture molluscicide treatment on the prevalence and severity of small lungworm infections, and the productivity of lambs grazing improved pastures in southeastern Australia. A randomised control field trial of 260 Merino-cross lambs was conducted on a commercially managed farm in South Australia with a history of high small lungworm prevalence. Separate groups of lambs rotationally grazed irrigated lucerne paddocks treated with iron chelate molluscicide or untreated control paddocks. Lambs were monitored every 2-6 weeks from weaning until slaughter with liveweight, lungworm and gastrointestinal nematode infection status measured. At slaughter indicators of small lungworm infection via inspection and carcass characteristics were assessed. The density of the intermediate host snail and lucerne pasture availability were also measured. There was a higher population of adult Prietocella barbara molluscs in the Control paddocks compared to the Treatment paddocks after molluscicide had been applied and prior to grazing commencing (206 vs. 14 snails/m2, respectively; P = 0.03; 95 % CI 8, 528). However, the overall mollusc density was similar between Control and Treatment. The prevalence of small lungworm infections was quite low during the trial (0-13 %), in both Control and Treatment lambs, except at day 94 when 48 % of 28 Control lambs were positive compared to none of 27 Treatment lambs (P < 0.001; 95 % CI 30, 66). A similar proportion of Treatment and Control lambs had evidence of small lungworm infection lesions at slaughter (both 67.8 %). Control lambs grew slightly faster than Treatment lambs, with an average daily gain of 202 (± 3 SEM) g/head/day for Control and 190 (± 4 SEM) for Treatment (P < 0.001) during the 112-day trial. Despite historic evidence of very high prevalence of lungworm infection in this region of southeastern Australia, iron chelate molluscicide treatment prior to lambs grazing the pasture had no demonstrable effect on the prevalence and severity of small lungworm infections, nor the productivity of lambs grazing these pastures. This study indicates that for a commercial sheep farm, additional molluscicide treatments of pastures after they are established, for the prevention of small lungworm infection, may not be warranted. Furthermore, requirements for more precisely monitoring snails are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
8. Risk factors for lungworm-associated milk yield losses in grazing dairy cattle
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Marieke Vanhecke, Edwin Claerebout, Christina Strube, and Johannes Charlier
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Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Cattle Diseases ,Biology ,Animal science ,Risk Factors ,Grazing ,Dictyocaulus Infections ,medicine ,Animals ,Lactation ,Bulk tank ,Animal Husbandry ,Risk factor ,Dairy cattle ,Ostertagia ostertagi ,General Veterinary ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Milk ,Herd ,Cattle ,Female ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,Lungworm ,Weight gain - Abstract
Dictyocaulus viviparus, the causative agent of bovine parasitic bronchitis, is an important parasite of dairy cattle. Infections can lead to substantial economic losses, due to mortality, reduced weight gain and milk production and treatment costs. There have been relatively few studies investigating herd management risk factors for infections with D. viviparus and lungworm-associated production losses. The aims of this study were (1) to assess the impact of (sub)clinical lungworm infections on productivity in dairy cows and, (2) to identify or confirm risk factors, related to herd management, for infections in grazing dairy cattle. Using a recombinant Major Sperm Protein (MSP)-based ELISA, the presence of D. viviparus antibodies in bulk tank milk (BTM) samples was evaluated on 717 and 634 farms at two-week intervals during two grazing seasons (2018 and 2019). Associations between milk antibody levels and production data (mean milk yield in kg/cow/day, percentage of fat and protein) were assessed, as well as associations with putative risk factors in the herd management, gathered through a questionnaire survey. In both years, there was a substantial, but non-significant, difference in the annual mean milk yield on farms with at least one BTM sample above the cut-off of 0.41 ODR, compared with the mean milk yield on farms that stayed under this threshold on each sampling day (-0.17 and -0.70 kg milk/cow/day in 2018 and 2019, respectively). In 2019, this association was stronger, and significant, when the cut-off was exceeded in at least two consecutive BTM samples (-1.74 kg milk/cow/day). BTM results were also significantly negatively associated with the closest milk production data during the two-weekly BTM sampling intervals in 2019. A single or two consecutive positive tests were used in the risk factor analysis as a proxy for lungworm-associated milk yield losses. Purchase of new animals (Odds Ratio (OR) = 2.68) and the proportion of the first grazing season covered by preventive anthelmintic treatment (OR up to 3.88, depending on proportion) were positively associated with lungworm-associated milk yield losses, while mowing at least 50 % of the pastures (OR = 0.57) was negatively associated with lungworm-associated milk yield losses. Our results suggest that the ELISA holds promise to identify herds with significant production losses due to lungworm infections, under the condition that BTM sampling is done repeatedly during the grazing season. Based on the confirmed risk factors, adjustments of the farm management could perhaps mitigate these losses.
- Published
- 2021
9. Eosinophilic Lung Diseases
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Vincent Cottin, Infections Virales et Pathologie Comparée - UMR 754 (IVPC), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Universite Lyon I, and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL)
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Lung Diseases ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Allergic Bronchopulmonary/*diagnosis/immunology/therapy ,Immunology ,Eosinophilia/complications/*diagnosis/immunology ,Churg-Strauss Syndrome ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Eosinophilia ,Diagnosis ,Loffler Syndrome ,Eosinophilic ,medicine ,Eosinophilic pneumonia ,Humans ,Aspergillosis ,Immunology and Allergy ,Pulmonary Eosinophilia/complications/*diagnosis/immunology/therapy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pulmonary Eosinophilia ,Churg-Strauss Syndrome/*diagnosis ,business.industry ,Aspergillosis, Allergic Bronchopulmonary ,Smoking ,Interstitial lung disease ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Asthma/diagnosis/immunology/therapy ,Asthma ,respiratory tract diseases ,3. Good health ,Pneumonia ,030228 respiratory system ,Chronic Disease ,Differential ,Acute Disease ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Granulomatosis with polyangiitis ,Parasitic/*diagnosis/immunology/therapy - Abstract
Eosinophilic lung diseases especially comprise eosinophilic pneumonia or as the more transient Loffler syndrome, which is most often due to parasitic infections. The diagnosis of eosinophilic pneumonia is based on characteristic clinical-imaging features and the demonstration of alveolar eosinophilia, defined as at least 25% eosinophils at BAL. Peripheral blood eosinophilia is common but may be absent at presentation in idiopathic acute eosinophilic pneumonia, which may be misdiagnosed as severe infectious pneumonia. All possible causes of eosinophilia, including drug, toxin, fungus related etiologies, must be thoroughly investigated. Extrathoracic manifestations should raise the suspicion of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
- Published
- 2016
10. Red fox ( Vulpes vulpes ) as a potential reservoir host of cardiorespiratory parasites in Bosnia and Herzegovina
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Amer Alić, Ismar Klebić, Emanuele Brianti, Georg Gerhard Duscher, Mirsad Kadrić, and Adnan Hodžić
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Disease reservoir ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Linguatula serrata ,Vulpes ,Population ,Foxes ,Dirofilaria immitis ,Bosnia and Herzegovina ,Cardiorespiratory parasites ,Epidemiology ,Haplotypes ,Red fox ,Parasitology ,Veterinary (all) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dirofilariasis ,medicine ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,education ,Phylogeny ,Disease Reservoirs ,education.field_of_study ,General Veterinary ,biology ,General Medicine ,DNA, Helminth ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification - Abstract
Red fox (Vulpes vulpes) is considered as reservoir of different cardiorespiratory parasites of veterinary and medical importance. Since data on cardiorespiratory parasites in foxes in Bosnia and Herzegovina are still lacking, the aims of the present study were to (i) investigate the prevalence and geographical distribution of these parasites, (ii) determine genetic diversity of detected parasite species, and (iii) to estimate the role of foxes in the transmission cycle to companion animals and humans. Four species, morphologically and molecularly identified as Eucoleus boehmi (64.6%; 51/79), Eucoleus aerophilus (69.7%; 154/221), Crenosoma vulpis (45.7%; 101/221) and Linguatula serrata (1.3%; 1/79) were retrieved from nasal cavity and lungs in 184 (83.3%) animals. The occurrence of heartworms, Angiostrongylus vasorum and Dirofilaria immitis was not detected by necropsy or PCR. Furthermore, three distinct haplotypes of E. aerophilus (I, III, XV) and two of C. vulpis (I, II) previously reported in pet animals and wild carnivores were confirmed in this study. A new haplotype of C. vulpis (designated as haplotype V) was also identified based on 12S rRNA gene for the first time. The present study indicates a high prevalence and wide distribution of nasal and lung nematodes in fox population in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and supports the existence of transmission patterns between wildlife and pet animals.
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- 2016
11. Eosinophilia in Pulmonary Disorders
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Kerry Woolnough and Andrew J. Wardlaw
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Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Immunology ,Helminthiasis ,Context (language use) ,Disease ,Churg-Strauss Syndrome ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Cell Movement ,Helminths ,Hypereosinophilic Syndrome ,Eosinophilic pneumonia ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Eosinophilia ,Pulmonary Eosinophilia ,Lung ,Interleukin 5 ,Asthma ,business.industry ,Hypereosinophilic syndrome ,Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis ,Sputum ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Eosinophils ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Pulmonary disorders - Abstract
Lung disease associated with marked peripheral blood eosinophilia is unusual and nearly always clinically significant. Once recognized, it is generally easy to manage, albeit with long-term systemic corticosteroids. A failure to respond to oral steroids in the context of good compliance suggests a malignant cause for the eosinophilia. An important development is the introduction of antieosinophil therapies, particularly those directed against the interleukin 5 pathway, which is hoped to provide benefit in the full spectrum of eosinophilic lung disease as well as asthma, reducing the burden of side effects and resultant comorbidities.
- Published
- 2015
12. Chest CT findings of toxocariasis: Correlation with laboratory results
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In Jae Lee, Sung Hye Koh, Jun Hur, Jong Hyeok Kim, Kwanseop Lee, Dong Gyu Kim, and Hye Jeon Hwang
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Pleural effusion ,Chest ct ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Leukocyte Count ,Young Adult ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Eosinophilia ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Solitary pulmonary nodule ,Toxocariasis ,business.industry ,Solitary Pulmonary Nodule ,Nodule (medicine) ,General Medicine ,Immunoglobulin E ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Laboratory results ,Eosinophils ,Exact test ,Female ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Aim To assess the relationship between chest computed tomography (CT) findings of patients with toxocariasis and levels of serological markers. Materials and methods A total of 38 cases of patients diagnosed with toxocariasis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), CT, and serological markers were retrospectively reviewed. The presence of nodule with or without ground-glass opacity (GGO) halo, consolidation, focal GGO, pleural effusion, and lymphadenopathy at chest CT were evaluated. Statistical analysis was performed with the Fisher's exact test. Results The most common chest CT findings were nodule ( n = 12, 31.6%) and focal GGO ( n = 12, 31.6%). In patients with normal eosinophil levels, focal GGO ( n = 9, 37.5%) was the most common finding. In contrast, nodule with a GGO halo ( n = 7, 50%) was the most common finding in the eosinophilia group. Nodule with a GGO halo was more common in the eosinophilia group, with a statistically significant difference ( p = 0.017). Nodule was more common in the eosinophilia group, and focal GGO was more common in the normal eosinophil group. Conclusion The most common chest CT findings in toxocariasis were nodule with or without GGO halo, and focal GGO. In the eosinophilia group, nodule with a GGO halo was significantly more frequent. Other CT findings did not show a statistically significant relationship with serological markers.
- Published
- 2014
13. Gastrointestinal and pulmonary parasites of working horses from Colombia
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Jesús A. Cortés-Vecino, Gina Polo, Wilson O. Imbacuán-Pantoja, Laura Natalia Robayo-Sánchez, Oscar A. Cruz-Maldonado, and Alejandro Ramírez-Hernández
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anoplocephalidae ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,030231 tropical medicine ,Colombia ,Eimeria ,Feces ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age Distribution ,0302 clinical medicine ,Common species ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Helminths ,Horses ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Protozoan Infections, Animal ,General Veterinary ,biology ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,Flow pattern ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Coinfection ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Parasitology ,Helminthiasis, Animal - Abstract
Working equids are used in different countries for numerous purposes and regularly are crucial for multiple communities' income and profit. Historically, in Bogotá D.C. they were used as animal-powered vehicles but in 2013 it was initiated a substitution and adoption program as a result of society pressure and lawful processes. Infectious diseases and mainly parasitic diseases, poses a threat in the health and productivity of these animals. Our aim was to identify, by coproparasitological methods, the gastrointestinal and pulmonary parasite species infecting working horses submitted to the mentioned substitution and adoption program. Between May and December 2013 and February and July 2014, fresh faecal samples were obtained from 1004 and 648 horses from Bogotá D.C. and other Colombian municipalities, respectively. They were processed by flotation and Baermann tests in order to visualize faecal parasitic forms (eggs, oocysts, and larvae). Prevalences were calculated for each gastrointestinal parasite at origin and one year after, at destination, and analysed by age group and coinfection. At origin (Bogotá D.C.), prevalence for at least one parasite species was 87.5% and one year later, at destination (other municipalities), was 89.5%. The most prevalent species were strongyles (86.4-89.4%) followed by Parascaris spp. (0.7-6.2%), cestodes (Anoplocephalidae) (3.7-4.9%) and Oxyuris sp. (2.8-4.3%). Other species detected were Eimeria sp., Strongyloides sp. and Dictyocaulus sp. Coinfection by two or more species ranged between 14.4 and 38.3% being strongyle, Parascaris spp., Oxyuris sp. and cestodes (Anoplocephalidae) the most common species involved. Some parasitic infections commonly associated with younger animals (e.g. Parascaris spp.) were detected in all age groups. Flow patterns of parasites linking Bogotá D.C. and other municipalities are presented. Finally, these results support the widespread distribution of most of species and the plausible health and welfare impact of this infections in working equids submitted to particular epidemiological risks.
- Published
- 2019
14. Prevalence survey of gastrointestinal and respiratory parasites of shelter cats in northeastern Georgia, USA
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Kristen R. Hoggard, Dixie M. Jarriel, Guilherme G. Verocai, and Thomas J. Bevelock
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Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Ancylostoma ,Georgia ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Mesocestoides ,Cat Diseases ,Feces ,Toxocara cati ,Age Distribution ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Sex Distribution ,Spirometra ,Dipylidium caninum ,Phylogeny ,Toxocara ,Likelihood Functions ,Aelurostrongylus abstrusus ,CATS ,Isospora ,General Veterinary ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Cats ,Taeniidae ,Cestoda ,Female ,Parasitology - Abstract
The goal of this study was to assess the prevalence of gastrointestinal and respiratory parasites of shelter cats from northeast Georgia, thus promoting a more targeted approach in parasite diagnosis and treatment. Fecal samples of cats kept in a shelter located in Lavonia, northeastern Georgia, USA, were processed for the presence of parasites using double centrifugation sugar flotation (n = 103) and Baermann techniques (n = 98). Flotation revealed eggs of Toxocara cati (17.5%), Ancylostoma sp. (11.7%), Taeniidae (3.9%), Spirometra mansonoides (2.9%), Mesocestoides sp. (1%), Dipylidium caninum (1%), and Eucoleus aerophilus (1%), and oocysts of Cystoisospora felis (16.5%), and Cystoisospora rivolta (8.7%). Baermann diagnosed Aelurostrongylus abstrusus larvae in 5 cats (5.1%), while fecal flotation alone identified only 2 of these infections. Taeniidae eggs were identified to species-level by PCR and sequencing targeting the cytochrome oxidase c subunit 1 (cox1) of the mitochondrial DNA. All isolates belong to Hydatigera taeniaeformis sensu stricto, which is the first unequivocal report of the species in North America. Overall, 45.6% of the cats were infected with at least one parasite. This prevalence of infection is much higher than what is generally reported in client owned animals, highlighting the importance of using appropriate fecal diagnostic techniques to detect gastrointestinal and respiratory parasites on newly adopted cats. Correct diagnosis may direct appropriate treatment and control strategies, which would mitigate the risk of infection of other animals in household, and human exposure to zoonotic parasites.
- Published
- 2019
15. Acute pulmonary schistosomiasis in travelers: Case report and review of the literature
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Phyllis E. Kozarsky, Boris I. Pavlin, and Marty Cetron
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Schistosomiasis ,Disease ,Praziquantel ,Internal medicine ,parasitic diseases ,Madagascar ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Travel medicine ,Anthelmintics ,Schistosoma haematobium ,Travel ,biology ,business.industry ,Schistosoma japonicum ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Symptomatic relief ,Infectious Diseases ,Acute Disease ,Immunology ,Schistosoma ,Schistosoma mansoni ,business ,Travel Medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report the case of an American traveler who developed acute pulmonary schistosomiasis after swimming in a lake in Madagascar, and we review the literature on acute pulmonary schistosomiasis. Schistosomiasis is one of the world's most prevalent parasitic diseases, with three species (Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosoma haematobium and Schistosoma japonicum) causing the greatest burden of disease. Pulmonary manifestations may develop in infected travelers from non-endemic areas after their first exposure. The pathophysiology of acute pulmonary disease is not well-understood, but is related to immune response, particularly via inflammatory cytokines. Diagnosis of schistosomiasis may be either through identification of characteristic ova in urine or stool or through serology. Anti-inflammatory drugs can provide symptomatic relief; praziquantel, the mainstay of chronic schistosomiasis treatment, is likely not effective against acute disease; the only reliable prevention remains avoidance of contaminated freshwater in endemic areas, as there is no vaccine. Travelers who have been exposed to potentially contaminated freshwater in endemic areas should seek testing and, if infected, treatment, in order to avoid severe manifestations of acute schistosomiasis and prevent complications of chronic disease. Clinicians are reminded to elicit a detailed travel and exposure history from their patients.
- Published
- 2012
16. Migrating Schistosoma japonicum schistosomula induce an innate immune response and wound healing in the murine lung
- Author
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Melissa L. Burke, Geoffrey N. Gobert, Laken McGarvey, Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann, Henry J. McSorley, and Donald P. McManus
- Subjects
Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Immunology ,Inflammation ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Schistosoma japonicum ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Mice ,Immune system ,Immunity ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Wound Healing ,Innate immune system ,biology ,Microarray analysis techniques ,Gene Expression Profiling ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunity, Innate ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Gene expression profiling ,Schistosomiasis japonica ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Wound healing - Abstract
The migrating schistosomulum is an important stage of the schistosome lifecycle and represents a key target for elimination of infection by natural and vaccine-induced host immune responses. To gain a better understanding of how schistosomes initiate a primary host immune response we have characterised the host lung response to migrating Schistosoma japonicum schistosomula using a combination of histopathology, microarray analysis and real-time PCR. Our findings indicate that the early pulmonary response to these migrating larvae is characteristic of innate inflammation and wound healing. This response is associated with significant up-regulation of several genes with immunoregulatory function including Ch25h, Hmox1 and Retnla which may act to control the nature or magnitude of the inflammatory response to the migrating schistosomula, promoting both parasite and host survival. These findings contribute to our understanding of host-parasite interactions associated with schistosome and, especially, S. japonicum infection, and may aid the future design of novel vaccines that target the lung stage schistosomulum.
- Published
- 2011
17. IL-4Rα-responsive smooth muscle cells contribute to initiation of TH2 immunity and pulmonary pathology in Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infections
- Author
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Elmarie Myburgh, Matti Kimberg, Benjamin G Dewals, Frank Brombacher, Frank Kirstein, Berenice Arendse, Helen Mearns, Andreas L. Lopata, Antony J. Cutler, William G. C. Horsnell, P. E. Burger, N. White, Jennifer C. Hoving, and Alykhan Vira
- Subjects
Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Myocytes, Smooth Muscle ,Immunology ,Mice ,Th2 Cells ,Myosin ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Myocyte ,Nippostrongylus brasiliensis ,Interleukin 6 ,Protein Kinase C ,Interleukin 4 ,Strongylida Infections ,Mice, Knockout ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Interleukin-13 ,biology ,Interleukin-6 ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Cycle ,Interleukin-4 Receptor alpha Subunit ,Interleukin ,Flow Cytometry ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Mucus ,Interleukin 15 ,Interleukin 13 ,biology.protein ,Nippostrongylus ,Interleukin-5 ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infections generate pulmonary pathologies that can be associated with strong T(H)2 polarization of the host's immune response. We present data demonstrating N. brasiliensis-driven airway mucus production to be dependent on smooth muscle cell interleukin 4 receptor-α (IL-4Rα) responsiveness. At days 7 and 10 post infection (PI), significant airway mucus production was found in IL-4Rα(-/lox) control mice, whereas global knockout (IL-4Rα(-/-)) and smooth muscle-specific IL-4Rα-deficient mice (SM-MHC(Cre) IL-4Rα(-/lox)) showed reduced airway mucus responses. Furthermore, interleukin (IL)-13 and IL-5 cytokine production in SM-MHC(Cre) IL-4Rα(-/lox) mice was impaired along with a transient reduction in T-cell numbers in the lung. In vitro treatment of smooth muscle cells with secreted N. brasiliensis excretory-secretory antigen (NES) induced IL-6 production. Decreased protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent smooth muscle cell proliferation associated with cell cycle arrest was found in cells stimulated with NES. Together, these data demonstrate that both IL-4Rα and NES-driven responses by smooth muscle cells make important contributions in initiating T(H)2 responses against N. brasiliensis infections.
- Published
- 2011
18. Unusual growth rate during cystic echinococcosis
- Author
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Nellie Della-Schiava, Florent Valour, Safia Khenifer, Isabelle Durieu, Benoit Guibert, Martine Wallon, Stéphane Durupt, and Eddy Cotte
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Albendazole ,Echinococcosis ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Helminths ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Lung cysts ,Aged, 80 and over ,Lung ,biology ,Cystic echinococcosis ,business.industry ,Zoonosis ,Anticestodal Agents ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Size increase ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Algeria ,Female ,Parasitology ,business - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis is a world wild zoonosis caused by Echinococcus granulosus, leading to hepatic and lung cysts with a usually slight growth rate. We report the case of an 82year-old Algerian woman with hepatic and lung cystic echinococcosis with a 10-fold size increase in 6months.
- Published
- 2014
19. Emerging and Established Parasitic Lung Infestations
- Author
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Tarek Kilani and Vannan Kandi Vijayan
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Climate ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Disease ,Acute respiratory distress ,medicine.disease_cause ,Communicable Diseases, Emerging ,Asymptomatic ,Tropical eosinophilia ,Immunocompromised Host ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Hygiene ,Humans ,Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,media_common ,Travel ,Lung ,business.industry ,Organ Transplantation ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Many lung infestations from established and newly emerging parasites have been reported as a result of the emergence of HIV/AIDS, the increasing use of immunosuppressive drugs, increasing organ transplantations, the increase in global travel, and climate change. A renewed interest in parasitic lung infections has been observed recently because many protozoal and helminthic parasites cause clinically significant lung diseases. The diseases caused by these parasites may mimic common and complicated lung diseases ranging from asymptomatic disease to acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring critical care management. The availability of new molecular diagnostic methods and antiparasitic drugs enables early diagnosis and prompt treatment to avoid the morbidity and mortality associated with these infestations. Good hygiene practices, improvement in socioeconomic conditions, vector control measures, and consumption of hygienically prepared and properly cooked food are essential to reduce the occurrence of parasitic infestations.
- Published
- 2010
20. Transmission of lungworms of harbour porpoises and harbour seals: Molecular tools determine potential vertebrate intermediate hosts
- Author
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Peter Wohlsein, D. Schaudien, G. von Samson-Himmelstjerna, Kristina Lehnert, Christoph Bleidorn, and Ursula Siebert
- Subjects
Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Helminth genetics ,Phocoena ,Phoca ,Germany ,biology.animal ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,Animals ,Cluster Analysis ,Helminths ,In Situ Hybridization ,Phylogeny ,Strongylida Infections ,Life Cycle Stages ,biology ,Ecology ,Fishes ,Aquatic animal ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,DNA, Helminth ,biology.organism_classification ,Intestines ,Turbot ,Metastrongyloidea ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,North Sea ,Oligonucleotide Probes ,Lungworm ,Porpoise - Abstract
Harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) and harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) from German waters are infected by six species of lungworms (Metastrongyloidea). These nematodes parasitise the respiratory tract, are pathogenic and often cause secondary bacterial infections. In spite of their clinical and epidemiological significance, the life cycle and biology of lungworms in the marine environment is still largely unknown. Regions of ribosomal DNA (ITS-2) of all lungworms parasitising harbour porpoises and harbour seals in German waters were sequenced to characterise and compare the different species. The phylogenetic relationship among the lungworm species was analysed by means of their ITS-2 nucleotide sequences and the species-specific traits of the ITS-2 were used to screen wild fish as possible intermediate hosts for larval lungworms. Molecular markers were developed to identify larval nematodes via in-situ hybridisation of tissues of harbour porpoise and harbour seal prey fish. Potential wild intermediate fish hosts from the North Sea were dissected and found to harbour larval nematodes. Histological examination and in-situ hybridisation of tissue samples from these fish showed lungworm larvae within the intestinal wall. Based on larval ITS-2 nucleotide sequences, larval nematodes were identified as Pseudalius inflexus and Parafilaroides gymnurus. Turbot (Psetta maxima) bred and raised in captivity were experimentally infected with live L1s of Otostrongylus circumlitus and ensheathed larvae were recovered from the gastrointestinal tract of turbot and identified using molecular tools. Our results show that fish intermediate hosts play a role in the transmission of metastrongyloid nematodes of harbour porpoises and harbour seals.
- Published
- 2010
21. Evaluation of the persistent activity of moxidectin (10%) long-acting (LA) injectable formulation against Dictyocaulus viviparus, Haemonchus placei, Trichostrongylus axei and Oesophagostomum radiatum infections in cattle
- Author
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R. Search, D. M. Amodie, D. Rugg, E. Szewczyk, R. Pollet, and S Ranjan
- Subjects
Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Nematoda ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Cattle Diseases ,Biology ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Feces ,Random Allocation ,Subcutaneous injection ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Helminths ,Nematode Infections ,Haemonchus placei ,Parasite Egg Count ,New Jersey ,General Veterinary ,Antinematodal Agents ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Moxidectin ,chemistry ,Delayed-Action Preparations ,Trichostrongylus axei ,Cattle ,Female ,Parasitology ,Macrolides ,Viviparus ,Oesophagostomum radiatum - Abstract
Two controlled studies were conducted to evaluate the persistent efficacy of moxidectin (10%) long-acting (LA) injectable formulation against Dictyocaulus viviparus, Haemonchus placei, Trichostrongylus axei and Oesophagostomum radiatum in cattle. The moxidectin LA injectable formulation was administered as a single subcutaneous injection into the proximal third of the ear at a dose rate of 0.01 ml/kg BW to provide 1.0 mg moxidectin/kg BW. The product had persistent efficacy of >90% against D. viviparus, H. placei and Oe. radiatum for at least 150 days post-treatment and against T. axei for at least 90 days post-treatment.
- Published
- 2010
22. Canine pulmonary angiostrongylosis: The influence of climate on parasite distribution
- Author
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Peter Ward, Madeleine Krajewski, Eric R. Morgan, R. Jefferies, and Susan E. Shaw
- Subjects
biology ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Climate Change ,Distribution (economics) ,Diagnostic test ,Disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Capillaria aerophila ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Colonisation ,Dogs ,Infectious Diseases ,Environmental health ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Parasitology ,Dog Diseases ,Angiostrongylus ,Lungworm ,business ,Strongylida Infections - Abstract
The geographic range of Angiostrongylus vasorum is expanding, leading to increased disease. Although observed cases of canine pulmonary angiostrongylosis have been dutifully reported in the literature, the state of biological knowledge remains too poor to predict future patterns of spread with any confidence. Nevertheless, there is an urgent need to identify areas that are likely to be suitable for parasite establishment. Preliminary attempts to do this using a climatic envelope approach suggest that several new areas are open to colonisation, even without invoking climate change. The risk of parasite importation into these areas should be mitigated, e.g. by restricting movement of dogs unless tested or treated for A. vasorum, and monitored by focused surveillance of definitive and intermediate hosts. These efforts will benefit from newly developed diagnostic tests.
- Published
- 2009
23. Bronchopulmonary nematode infection of Capra pyrenaica in the Sierra Nevada massif, Spain
- Author
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Emmanuel Serrano, Ramón C. Soriguer, Jesús M. Pérez, Patrocinio Morrondo, Samer Alasaad, Luca Rossi, V. Dacal-Rivas, Xing-Quang Zhu, and José E. Granados
- Subjects
Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Nematoda ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,medicine.disease_cause ,Capra pyrenaica ,Abundance (ecology) ,ibex ,Infestation ,medicine ,Pulmonary nematodes ,Spain ,Animals ,Helminths ,Nematode Infections ,Muellerius capillaris ,Larva ,Goat Diseases ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Goats ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Parasitology ,Nematode infection ,Female - Abstract
The present investigation examined the prevalence and abundance of bronchopulmonary nematodes in 213 randomly hunted Iberian ibexes (Capra pyrenaica) (87 females and 126 males) in the Sierra Nevada mountain range in Spain between 2003 and 2006. Post mortem examination revealed an overall prevalence of 72% for adult nematodes (Cystocaulus ocreatus 44%, Muellerius capillaris 44%, Protostrongylus sp. 40%, and Dictyocaulus filaria 4%). The abundances were 13.45 ± 3.97, 5.18 ± 2.49, 6.36 ± 2.16, and 2.27 ± 0.46, respectively. Protostrongylid adults showed similar infection rates, which were statistically different from that of D. filaria. 20% of the examined Iberian ibexes were infected by three protostrongylid nematodes species, 24% of C. pyrenaica were affected by two protostrongylid species, while infestations with only one protostrongylid species were detected in 20% of the examined animals. The overall prevalence of larvae nematodes in the examined animals was 100%, and the overall abundance (number of the first stage larvae per gram) was 86.45 ± 20.63. There was a high correlation between the two sets of data (adults and larvae). Results of the present investigation provided foundation for the effective control of bronchopulmonary nematode infection in Iberian ibex. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2009
24. Canine pulmonary angiostrongylosis: An update
- Author
-
J.L. Willesen and Jørgen Koch
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Snails ,Population ,Disease ,Capillaria aerophila ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Dogs ,Epidemiology ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,medicine ,Animals ,Helminths ,Dog Diseases ,Angiostrongylus ,education ,Disease Reservoirs ,Strongylida Infections ,Anthelmintics ,education.field_of_study ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Pneumonia (non-human) - Abstract
Canine pulmonary angiostrongylosis is an emerging snail-borne disease causing verminous pneumonia and coagulopathy in dogs. The parasite is found in Europe, North and South America and Africa, covering tropical, subtropical and temperate regions. Its distribution has been characterised by isolated endemic foci, with only sporadic occurrences outside these areas. In the last two decades, the literature has been dominated by several case reports and small case series describing sporadic disease in old or new endemic areas. Case reports and experimental studies with high doses of infective third stage larvae may not reflect what happens under field conditions. There is insufficient understanding of the spread of infection and the dynamic consequences of this parasite in the canine population. This review discusses the biology, epidemiology, clinical aspects and management of canine pulmonary angiostrongylosis.
- Published
- 2009
25. Lungworm infections (Angiostrongylus vasorum, Crenosoma vulpis, Aelurostrongylus abstrusus) in dogs and cats in Germany and Denmark in 2003–2007
- Author
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Majda Globokar Vrhovec, Carlos Hermosilla, Christian Bauer, Anja Taubert, and Nikola Pantchev
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Time Factors ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Denmark ,Cat Diseases ,Feces ,Dogs ,Crenosoma vulpis ,Germany ,Animals ,Helminths ,Dog Diseases ,Strongylida Infections ,Aelurostrongylus abstrusus ,CATS ,General Veterinary ,biology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Nematode larvae ,Cats ,Strongylida ,Parasitology ,Seasons ,Lungworm - Abstract
Faecal samples of 4151 dogs from Denmark, 958 dogs from Germany and 231 cats from Germany with clinical signs were examined for lungworm larvae using the Baermann funnel technique between 2003 and 2007. In total, 3.6% of Danish and German dogs shed lungworm larvae. In Denmark, patent infections of dogs with Angiostrongylus vasorum were more prevalent (2.2%) than those with Crenosoma vulpis (1.4%). In Denmark, the majority of A. vasorum- (98%) and C. vulpis-infected (80%) dogs originated from Northern Zealand. The frequency of A. vasorum and C. vulpis infections in Danish dogs obviously decreased from 2003 to 2006. In Germany, canine faecal samples were found more frequently positive for C. vulpis than for A. vasorum larvae (2.4% and 1.2%, respectively). Lungworm-infected dogs originated mainly from southern and western Germany. Larvae of Aelurostrongylus abstrusus were detected in 5.6% of cats from Germany. Overall, a distinct seasonal pattern in the detection of infected dogs was apparent for A. vasorum in Denmark and C. vulpis in Germany. The relatively high number of lungworm-infected dogs and cats indicate that these parasitic diseases should be considered in differential diagnosis of cases of treatment-resistant respiratory/cardiopulmonary distress.
- Published
- 2009
26. Immunolocalization and pathological alterations following Strongyloides venezuelensis infection in the lungs and the intestine of MHC class I or II deficient mice
- Author
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João Santana da Silva, Julia Maria Costa-Cruz, Marcelo Emílio Beletti, F. Gonçalves, Marlene Tiduko Ueta, Neide M. Silva, Cristina Ribeiro de Barros Cardoso, Ana Lúcia Ribeiro Gonçalves, and Rosângela Maria Rodrigues
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Genes, MHC Class II ,Genes, MHC Class I ,Biology ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Mice ,Immune system ,Strongyloides ,MHC class I ,medicine ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Lung ,Mice, Knockout ,General Veterinary ,Immunoperoxidase ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,Small intestine ,Intestines ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Strongyloidiasis ,Duodenum ,biology.protein ,Immunohistochemistry ,Parasitology - Abstract
The present study, investigated the mechanisms involved in the immune responses of Major Histocompatibility Complex class I or class II knockout mice, following Strongyloides venezuelensis infection. Wild-type C57BL/6 (WT), MHC II −/− and MHC I −/− mice were individually inoculated with 3000 larvae (L3) of S. venezuelensis and sacrificed on days 1, 3, 5, 8, 13 and 21 post-infection (p.i.). Samples of blood, lungs and small intestines were collected. The tissue samples were stained with hematoxylin–eosin for the pathological analysis. The presence of the parasite was demonstrated by immunoperoxidase analysis. MHC II −/− mice presented a significantly higher number of adult worms recovered from the small intestine on day 5 p.i. and presented elevated numbers of eggs in the feces. The infection by S. venezuelensis was completely eliminated 13 days after infection in WT as well as in MHC I −/− mice. In MHC II −/− mice, eggs and adult worms were still found on day 21 p.i., however, there was a significant reduction in their numbers. In the lung, the parasite was observed in MHC I −/− on day 1 p.i. and in MHC II −/− mice on days 1 and 5 p.i. In the small intestine of WT mice, a larger number of parasites were observed on day 8 p.i. and their absence was observed after day 13 p.i. Through immunohistochemistry analysis, the parasite was detected in the duodenum of WT on days 5 and 8 p.i., and in knockout mice on days 5, 8 and 13 p.i.; as well as in posterior portions of the small intestine in MHC I −/− and MHC II −/− on day 13 p.i., a finding which was not observed in WT mice. We concluded that immunohistochemistry analysis contributed to a more adequate understanding of the parasite localization in immunodeficient hosts and that the findings aid in the interpretation of immunopathogenesis in Strongyloides infection.
- Published
- 2008
27. Parasitic lung infection and the paediatric lung
- Author
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Álvaro Jorge Madeiro Leite, Murilo Carlos Amorim de Britto, Gilberto Bueno Fischer, and Edgar E. Sarria
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Protozoan Infections ,Lung ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,business.industry ,Lung infection ,Helminthiasis ,Schistosomiasis ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,LOEFFLER SYNDROME ,Risk Factors ,Visceral larva migrans ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,medicine ,Humans ,Amoebiasis ,Child ,business ,Malaria ,Paragonimiasis - Abstract
Summary Human parasitosis is still prevalent worldwide and causes significant morbidity and mortality in developing countries. The involvement of the lung is variable depending on the characteristics of the parasites and hosts. In malnourished and immunodeficient children, the consequences of lung parasitosis may result in significant morbidity and mortality.
- Published
- 2008
28. Shared features in the pathobiology of babesiosis and malaria
- Author
-
Peter J. Krause, Johanna P. Daily, Edouard Vannier, Paul M. Lantos, Sam R. Telford, and Andrew Spielman
- Subjects
Erythrocytes ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Cytokine Activation ,Fulminant ,Plasmodium falciparum infection ,Disease ,Biology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Central Nervous System Diseases ,Babesiosis ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Malaria, Falciparum ,Extramural ,Clinical course ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Kidney Diseases ,Parasitology ,Malaria - Abstract
The pathobiology of malaria has been extensively studied in humans but many questions remain, especially regarding fulminant disease associated with Plasmodium falciparum infection. Babesiosis, recognized since biblical times as an important disease of livestock and more recently as an emerging health problem in humans, is caused by related intraerythrocytic protozoa with a similar pathogenesis and clinical course. Recent studies of cytokine activation and erythrocyte cytoadherence in babesiosis and malaria have exploited these similarities to provide new insights into malaria pathobiology. Continued investigation of similarities and differences in the pathogenesis of babesiosis and malaria should lead to additional fundamental insights for both conditions.
- Published
- 2007
29. Lungworms of Ruminants
- Author
-
Carla Panuska
- Subjects
Dictyocaulus viviparus ,Veterinary medicine ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Antinematodal Agents ,Ruminants ,General Medicine ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,United States ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Dictyocaulus ,Dictyocaulus filaria ,Food Animals ,Dictyocaulus Infections ,Animals ,Muellerius capillaris - Abstract
Several species of nematodes parasitize the respiratory tract of ruminants. Disease due to infection with these parasites occurs less frequently in North America than in other parts of the world but can be locally and regionally important. The life cycles, epidemiology, pathology, diagnosis and treatment of Dictyocaulus viviparus, Dictyocaulus filaria, and Muellerius capillaris are summarized in this article.
- Published
- 2006
30. Expression of IL-4 receptor on non-bone marrow-derived cells is necessary for the timely elimination of Strongyloides venezuelensis in mice, but not for intestinal IL-4 production
- Author
-
Mauro M. Teixeira, Karina Scheuermann, Adriano L.S. Souza, Adriana Fernandes, Ana Terezinha M. Pereira, Danielle G. Souza, Vanessa Pinho, and Deborah Negrão-Corrêa
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Biology ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Interferon-gamma ,Mice ,Th2 Cells ,Immune system ,Eosinophilia ,Strongyloides ,medicine ,Animals ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Parasite Egg Count ,Interleukin 4 ,Mice, Knockout ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,biology.organism_classification ,Interleukin-12 ,Small intestine ,Interleukin-10 ,Receptors, Interleukin-4 ,Intestines ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Interleukin 10 ,Infectious Diseases ,Cytokine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Strongyloidiasis ,Interleukin 12 ,Parasitology ,Interleukin-4 ,Bone marrow ,STAT6 Transcription Factor ,Biomarkers ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In rodents and in humans, Strongyloides infection induces an immune response which is predominantly Th2 in nature. In an attempt to understand the role of the IL-4R/STAT6 signaling pathway, the pathway activated by the Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13, in the induction of protection during Strongyloides venezuelensis infection, we have carried out experiments in mice lacking the IL-4Ralpha chain. Experiments were also carried out in STAT6 (STAT6(-/-)) and IL-12-deficient (IL-12(-/-)) mice for comparison. There was enhancement of IL-13 and abolition of IFN-gamma production in the small intestine of 7 day-infected IL-12(-/-) animals but worm elimination proceeded with very similar kinetics to those of wild-type mice. In IL-4Ralpha- or STAT6-deficient mice, there was a delay in parasite elimination and a large number of S. venezuelensis adult worms was still present in the small intestine 14 days after infection. Moreover, IgE production was completely abolished in IL-4Ralpha- or STAT6-deficient mice but tissue eosinophilia was normally induced by the parasite infection in deficient mice. Bone marrow transfer experiments showed that worm elimination occurred when a functional IL-4 receptor was present only in non-bone marrow-derived cells but not when IL-4R was only expressed in bone marrow cells. The induction of IL-4, but not IL-13, occurred independently of IL-4R. We believe these results are the first direct evidence that the mechanism responsible for the timely elimination of S. venezuelensis is dependent on the activation of IL-4R and STAT6. Moreover, a functional protective response is dependent on the expression of IL-4Ralpha on non-bone marrow-derived cells.
- Published
- 2006
31. Disseminated Acanthamoebiasis after Lung Transplantation
- Author
-
Scott D. Lick, Alexander G. Duarte, Bruno Palma Granwehr, Judith F. Aronson, Zhiqin Wang, and Farooq Sattar
- Subjects
Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Acanthamoeba ,Opportunistic Infections ,Organ transplantation ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Fatal Outcome ,Postoperative Complications ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Protozoan infection ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Lung transplantation ,Acanthamoebiasis ,Transplantation ,Lung ,business.industry ,Acanthamoeba infection ,Amebiasis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Respiratory failure ,Surgery ,Disease Susceptibility ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Lung Transplantation - Abstract
Protozoan infections in organ transplant recipients are rare. We report a fatal case of disseminated acanthamoebiasis in a bilateral lung transplant recipient that presented with cutaneous lesions, respiratory failure, and seizures. Acanthamoeba infection may be identified in transplant recipients with exposure to water who develop non-healing cutaneous ulcers with granulomatous inflammation. Cutaneous lesions are the initial manifestation of infection and a harbinger of dissemination. Early institution of combination anti-microbial therapy is therefore necessary for effective treatment and prevention of lethal spread to the central nervous system.
- Published
- 2006
32. Pulmonary Parasitosis: Applied Clinical and Therapeutic Issues
- Author
-
Hala A El-Nahas, Sameh Ibrahim Sersar, Sherif Abdou Moussa, Abdel Basset Mohammed Saleh, and Wael A. Abdel Ghafar
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Echinococcosis, Pulmonary ,Adolescent ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Schistosomiasis ,Chest pain ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Cyst ,Retrospective Studies ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Retrospective cohort study ,Decortication ,medicine.disease ,Echinococcosis ,Surgery ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Chi-squared distribution - Abstract
Background The aim of this study is to review the problems encountered in treating pulmonary hydatid and bilharsiasis and to highlight the risks associated with chemotherapy and the delay of their surgical treatment. Methods The medical records of 60 patients with pulmonary hydatid and bilharsiasis were retrospectively investigated. The patients were divided into two groups based on whether the parasite was hydatid (group 1, n =56) or schistosomiasis (group 2, n =4). The group 1 was divided into group 1a (complicated cyst n =32) and group 1b ( n =24 noncomplicated hydatids). Results In all cases of pulmonary bilharsiasis and intact pulmonary hydatid cysts, the lesions were either incidental findings or the patient had presented with haemoptysis, cough, dyspnea and chest pain. The differences between the groups with respect to the rates of preoperative complications and postoperative morbidity, frequency of decortication and hospital stay were statistically insignificant ( p >0.05). Conclusions Complicated cases have higher rates of preoperative and postoperative complications but the differences are insignificant. Complicated cases are easier to diagnose. This underlines the need for paying more attention to the possibility of pulmonary parasitosis especially in lower lobe lesions in endemic areas.
- Published
- 2006
33. Characterization of the protective response against a homologous challenge infection with Strongyloides venezuelensis in rats
- Author
-
Byeong-Soo Kim, Byeong-Kirl Baek, Chang-Hyun Kim, C. W. Lim, A.O. Oluoch, Ibulaimu Kakoma, M.K Islam, and Jin Hur
- Subjects
Male ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Population ,Microbiology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Feces ,Immunity ,Strongyloides ,medicine ,Parasite Egg Count ,Animals ,Eosinophilia ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,education ,education.field_of_study ,General Veterinary ,biology ,General Medicine ,Eosinophil ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Immunity, Innate ,Small intestine ,Rats ,Eosinophils ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Strongyloidiasis ,Immunology ,Female ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
The protective response in rats against a homologous challenge infection with Strongyloides venezuelensis was characterized. In an initial infection with 1000 filariform larvae and migrating larvae (L(3)) of S. venezuelensis, the population of L(3) in the lungs on day 3 postinfection (PI), and that of adult worms in the small intestine on day 7 PI, were 180.8+/-14.5 and 336.8+/-70.7, respectively. The latter were gradually expelled towards day 42 PI. After the initial infection, the rats developed strong immunity against a homologous challenge infection as manifested by a marked reduction in worm populations, stunted body length and width, damage to reproductive organs, impaired egg production and rapid expulsion of the worms by day 14 after challenge. Expulsion of the worms was preceded by a significantly elevated (P
- Published
- 2003
34. Paragonimiasis: a view from Columbia
- Author
-
Jorge E Ortega, Iván D. Vélez, and Luz Elena Velásquez
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Paragonimiasis ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Paragonimus ,Helminthiasis ,Physiology ,Colombia ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Feces ,biology ,business.industry ,Zoonosis ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Praziquantel ,Pneumothorax ,Immunology ,Sputum ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Paragonimiasis is a zoonosis caused by adult trematodes of the Paragonimus genus. The infection in humans is a result of a complex transmission cycle that includes two obligate intermediate hosts, a snail and a crustacean or a crayfish, and a definitive mammalian host. It has been shown that 9 of the more than 40 species of Paragonimus described affect humans in over 39 countries in Asia, Africa and America. It is estimated that 20.7 million people have paragonimiasis and it is calculated that 195 million people are at risk of being infected. The illness usually is caused once the parasite has settled in the lung at the site of the main clinical symptoms: cough, thoracic pain and hemoptysis. The diagnosis of paragonimiasis is based on the patient's history, the parasitological findings (ova in sputum and in feces), and the result of radiological and immunological tests. In severe cases, the patient may suffer from life-threatening hemoptysis or pneumothorax. Currently, praziquantel is the drug of choice.
- Published
- 2002
35. Pulmonary Paragonimiasis
- Author
-
Teresa Presa-Abos, María Jesús Rodríguez-Nieto, Marcel Rodriguez-Guzman, Julio Gómez-Seco, Pablo Fernández Gómez-Escolar, and José Fortes-Alen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Hemoptysis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Delayed Diagnosis ,Tuberculosis ,Paragonimiasis ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Antitubercular Agents ,Praziquantel ,Food Parasitology ,Paragonimus ,Pulmonary tuberculosis ,parasitic diseases ,Isoniazid ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ,Anthelmintics ,Granuloma ,Lung ,biology ,business.industry ,Zoonosis ,Caulobacteraceae ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Pyrazinamide ,Dermatology ,Radiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spain ,Ecuador ,Rifampin ,Differential diagnosis ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,Ethambutol ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Paragonimiasis is a food-borne zoonosis caused by a trematode of the genus Paragonimus(1,2). Infestation is rare in Spain, but the influx of people from endemic areas should make us keep this condition in the differential diagnosis of our patients(2,5). We report the case a patient from Ecuador and resident in Spain for 7 years with active pulmonary tuberculosis on arrival in Spain and later diagnosed with of pulmonary paragonimiasis due to persistent haemoptysis. The diagnosis was established by surgical lung specimen showing granulomas containing parasite eggs and the macroscopic view of the fluke within a lung cavity. Initial tuberculosis treatment and current treatment with praziquantel controlled both conditions.
- Published
- 2011
36. NF-κB is essential for induction of pro-inflammatory cytokine genes by filarial parasitic sheath proteins
- Author
-
Shigeki Miyamoto, Arun Balakrishnan, and Kishore Narayanan
- Subjects
Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Setaria Nematode ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Inflammation ,Respiratory Mucosa ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha ,Eosinophilia ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Secretion ,Molecular Biology ,Transcription factor ,NF-kappa B ,NF-κB ,Helminth Proteins ,NFKB1 ,Filariasis ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,IκBα ,Cytokine ,Liver ,chemistry ,Cytokines ,I-kappa B Proteins ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
The transcription factor NF-kappaB plays critical roles in immune and inflammatory responses. Here we show that filarial parasitic sheath proteins cause activation of NF-kappaB in the airway epithelial HEp-2 cell line. This activation was transient and saturable, and involved degradation of the cytoplasmic inhibitor protein IkappaBalpha. Stable expression of IkappaBalpha mutated at Ser32 and Ser36 to Ala caused inhibition of NF-kappaB activation, indicating that this activation involves the IkappaB kinase-mediated pathway. Moreover, while it did not influence the HEp-2 cell survival, selective blockade of NF-kappaB activation resulted in inhibition of the expression and the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-6 and interleukin-8. Thus, initial transient activation of NF-kappaB resulted in profound and long-term effects on epithelial cell responses to filarial parasitic proteins. These findings implicate an important role for NF-kappaB in orchestrating inflammatory reactions associated with tropical pulmonary eosinophilia.
- Published
- 2000
37. Treatment and Control of Gastrointestinal Parasites
- Author
-
J. A. Dipietro, Douglas E. Hutchens, and Allan Paul
- Subjects
Anthelmintics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Equine ,business.industry ,Drug Resistance ,Parasite Control ,Strongyle Infections, Equine ,Pneumonia ,Cestode Infections ,Gastrointestinal parasites ,Animals ,Medicine ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Anthelmintic ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Routine anthelmintic treatments are one of the most important components of an equine wellness program used by horse owners and veterinarians today. Thirteen different compounds are available in the United States in the treatment of gastrointestinal parasites, most of which are available over the counter. As a result, there is a decreased reliance on the veterinarian to perform routine tube dewormings. Therefore, the future of the veterinarian's role in the management of gastrointestinal parasites is likely to be in the consultation and design of parasite control programs. With this in mind, this article covers all of the equine anthelmintics and their clinical applications.
- Published
- 1999
38. The efficacy of Michel's dose and move system on gastrointestinal nematode infections in dairy calves
- Author
-
P.Y Dop, J.H. Boersema, Frans N. J. Kooyman, W.M van der Aar, and M. Eysker
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Cattle Diseases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Biology ,Pasture ,Feces ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Risk Factors ,Grazing ,Dictyocaulus Infections ,medicine ,Animals ,Helminths ,Animal Husbandry ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Parasite Egg Count ,Weather ,Netherlands ,Infectivity ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pepsinogens ,Trichostrongyloidea ,General Veterinary ,Antinematodal Agents ,Ostertagia ,Fenbendazole ,General Medicine ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Gastroenteritis ,Moxidectin ,Dairying ,chemistry ,Cattle ,Female ,Parasitology ,Macrolides ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The efficacy of a move to aftermath in July combined with moxidectin or fenbendazole treatment for the control of parasitic gastroenteritis (PGE) in calves was evaluated in three field experiments in the Netherlands. In all five treated groups high gastrointestinal nematode infections and PGE were prevented by a dose and move in July. Cooperia infections increased to moderate levels in two groups treated with moxidectin and one group treated with fenbendazole. In both other groups and also for Ostertagia in these three groups, low to extremely low infections were acquired. In the first experiment high primary infections, resulting in high faecal egg counts and a moderate increase of blood pepsinogen values occurred before the dose and move. Nevertheless, these primary infections were not high enough to result in PGE. In both other experiments primary infection levels were low and faecal egg counts increased to 100–650 eggs/g faeces at the end of the grazing season. The blood pepsinogen values of non-treated control groups demonstrated that it took more than a month after their move to aftermath before substantial reinfection occurred on the new pasture. In the first and the last experiment only, high Ostertagia and Cooperia infections developed in the control group at the end of the grazing season, though it did not result in clinical PGE. The experiments demonstrate all theoretical risks of the dose and move system: (1) PGE early in the grazing season as a result of high overwintered pasture infectivity. (2) PGE just before the move as a result of an early midsummer increase in pasture infectivity. (3) PGE around housing as a result of insufficient suppression of pasture infectivity late in the grazing season. (4) Underexposure to nematode infections due to a high suppression of nematode infections. Nevertheless, it can be concluded that under normal conditions the dose and move system remains to be a valuable and easily applicable system for the control of PGE.
- Published
- 1998
39. Schistosomiasis
- Author
-
P E, Palmer
- Subjects
Urologic Diseases ,Life Cycle Stages ,Liver Diseases, Parasitic ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Animals ,Humans ,Schistosoma ,Schistosomiasis ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic - Published
- 1998
40. Effect of IL-12 on granuloma formation induced by injected Schistosoma japonicum eggs
- Author
-
Masaru Minai, Cheng-Kuo Chuang, Jun-Qi Yang, Hideshi Yoshikawa, Yasuo Nakajima, and Kachio Tasaka
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Ratón ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Schistosoma japonicum ,BALB/c ,Interferon-gamma ,Mice ,Th2 Cells ,medicine ,Animals ,Ovum ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Granuloma ,Lung ,biology ,Interleukins ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Interleukin-12 ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,Interleukin-10 ,Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction ,Infectious Diseases ,Cytokine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Schistosomiasis japonica ,Interleukin 12 ,Female ,Parasitology - Abstract
The regulatory functions of IL-12 on granuloma formation by the eggs of S. japonicum in the lungs of BALB/c mice were studied. Mice were injected i.v. with the eggs to induce the pulmonary granuloma. On days 0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 after injection, mice were injected i.p. with murine rIL-12 at a dose of 1 microgram day-1 (Group I) or 3 micrograms day-1 (Group II) or with PBS as a control (Group III). On day 10, all mice were sacrificed. The areas of pulmonary granulomas in histological sections were quantitatively measured by image analyser and the levels of mRNA for IL-10, IFN-gamma, IL-12 and IL-5 were assayed by reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR). The results showed that the mean area per granuloma was significantly decreased in Groups I and II as compared with Group III. As for cytokine induction, IL-10- and IFN-gamma-specific bands appeared in Groups I and II, but not in Group III. Bands for IL-5 appeared in all groups, while bands for IL-12 were not detected in any group. It is suggested that IL-12 could inhibit the Th2 dominant granuloma formation induced by the eggs of S. japonicum.
- Published
- 1997
41. Pulmonary microsporidiosis due to Encephalitozoon hellem in a patient with AIDS
- Author
-
S. Corona, Norman J. Pieniazek, Govinda S. Visvesvara, Massimo Scaglia, Susan B. Slemenda, G. P. Croppo, A. Orani, A J da Silva, Luciano Sacchi, Simonetta Gatti, A. M. Bernuzzi, and S Wallace
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Immunoblotting ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Microsporidiosis ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Line ,Albendazole ,Fatal Outcome ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Lung ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,fungi ,Respiratory disease ,Encephalitozoon ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Encephalitozoonosis ,Radiography ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bronchoalveolar lavage ,RNA, Ribosomal ,Microsporidia ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid ,RNA, Protozoan ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The microsporidian Encephalitozoon hellem is being reported with increasing frequency in HIV-positive subjects, as an agent of disseminated microsporidiosis without involving the gastrointestinal tract. We describe a case of pulmonary microsporidiosis in a 27-year-old Italian man with AIDS who developed fever, cough, and dyspnea. A chest X-ray showed multiple bilateral pulmonary opacities and mediastinal lymph-node enlargement. Stained smears of bronchoalveolar lavage sediment showed oval structures consistent with microsporidian spores. Viral, bacterial and fungal cultures were repeatedly negative, whereas microsporidia were successfully cultured in human and bovine fibroblast cell lines. Analysis of electron micrographs indicated that the isolate belonged to the genus Encephalitozoon. Based on further immunological, biochemical and molecular studies it was characterized as E. hellem. Even though a temporary improvement with albendazole therapy was noticed, the patient deteriorated clinically and died of severe respiratory distress.
- Published
- 1997
42. 'Cystic' pulmonary schistosomiasis
- Author
-
F. Vawda, J. Maharajh, and K.T. Naidoo
- Subjects
Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cysts ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,business.industry ,Pulmonary Fibrosis ,Helminthiasis ,Schistosomiasis ,Computed tomography ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Diagnosis, Differential ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Pulmonary schistosomiasis ,Differential diagnosis ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Although pulmonary schistosomiasis has been well described in the literature – 6,8,10,11 there is paucity of radiological literature describing the high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) appearance of pulmonary schistosomiasis. This report reviews the imaging characteristics of pulmonary schistosomiasis and describes the unusual HRCT appearance of a case of pulmonary schistosomiasis. The differential diagnosis is elaborated on.
- Published
- 2005
43. VIRUSES AND OTHER MISCELLANEOUS ORGANISMS
- Author
-
Jeanne M. Wallace
- Subjects
Lung Diseases ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Whooping Cough ,business.industry ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Congenital cytomegalovirus infection ,HIV Infections ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Toxoplasmosis ,Herpesviridae ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Immunology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Viral disease ,business ,Pneumonitis - Abstract
Pulmonary infections caused by several types of viruses and other miscellaneous organisms may cause disease in HIV infection. Evidence suggests that pulmonary conditions may result from infections of the lung by HIV itself. Other viruses, most commonly cytomegalovirus, may be primary perpetrators of pneumonitis or may contribute to diseases caused by coexisting infections. Although diagnosis and assessment of the clinical significance of these infections may be difficult, their recognition is of practical importance because potentially effective therapeutic agents are available for several of them. Miscellaneous infections such as pulmonary toxoplasmosis and pertussis are other uncommon but potentially treatable complications of HIV disease.
- Published
- 1996
44. Impaired pulmonary gas exchange in ewes naturally infected by small lungworms
- Author
-
B. Berrag, Jacques Cabaret, Station de Pathologie aviaire et parasitologie [Nouzilly] (PAP), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), and ProdInra, Migration
- Subjects
Pulmonary Circulation ,Respiratory rate ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Partial Pressure ,Sheep Diseases ,Biology ,pCO2 ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal science ,Reference Values ,Respiration ,medicine ,Animals ,Anthelmintic ,Neostrongylus ,Nematode Infections ,[SDV.MP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,0303 health sciences ,Sheep ,Lung ,Antinematodal Agents ,Fenbendazole ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Carbon Dioxide ,3. Good health ,Bicarbonates ,[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Female ,Parasitology ,Cystocaulus ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Respiratory rate and blood gases were studied in 2 groups of ewes: the ewes in group 1 (9 ewes) acted as uninfected controls and those in group 2 (6 ewes) were infected with small lungworms (Muellerius, Cystocaulus, Protostrongylus and < 1% Neostrongylus). The respiratory rate was higher in infected (49 +/- 19 breath min-1) than in uninfected ewes. (20 +/- 3 breath min-1); it was strongly reduced after treatment (49 vs 22) in infected ewes. The partial carbon dioxide arterial tension (PCO2), total CO2 and HCO3- were higher (respectively 77 vs 39 mmHg, 38 vs 23 mmol-1 and 35 vs 23 mmol-1) in infected compared with uninfected ewes, whereas arterial pH (7.2 vs 7.4) and partial oxygen tension PO2 were lower (41 vs 81 mmHg) in infected ewes. Group 2 was treated with fenbendazole (at 15 mg kg-1 bodyweight) to eliminate small lungworms, and the respiratory rate and blood gases were measured 3 weeks after treatment. The values after treatment were similar to those in uninfected ewes. It is concluded that heavy infections by small lungworms in ewes impairs gas exchange, but that gas exchange improves rapidly after treatment.
- Published
- 1996
45. Alveolar mastocytosis and eosinophilia in lambs with naturally acquired nematode infections of Protostrongylus rufescens and Haemonchus contortus
- Author
-
H.R. Gamble and Linda S. Mansfield
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Immunology ,Sheep Diseases ,Pasture ,Abomasum ,Feces ,Leukocyte Count ,Eosinophilia ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Mast Cells ,Parasite Egg Count ,Strongylida Infections ,geography ,Sheep ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,General Veterinary ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Breed ,Eosinophils ,Pulmonary Alveoli ,Nematode ,Strongylida ,Haemonchus ,medicine.symptom ,Haemonchiasis ,Lungworm ,Mastocytosis ,Haemonchus contortus - Abstract
Specific-pathogen-free Dorset and St. Croix lambs were placed on pasture contaminated with Haemonchus contortus third stage larvae and slugs carrying third stage larvae of Protostrongylus rufescens for an entire grazing season to evaluate breed differences in acquired resistance to these nematodes. Lambs were evaluated for clinical signs, clinical pathology and histopathologic lesions associated with these infections. Both breeds acquired natural infections with H. contortus and lungworm when allowed to graze contaminated pastures for 5 months during the summer and fall in central Maryland. Dorset sheep maintained heavy abomasal worm burdens of H. contortus throughout the grazing period when compared to St. Croix breed sheep. Seven of 12 Dorset sheep and three of 12 St. Croix sheep on pasture acquired heavy lungworm infections after at least 15 weeks of exposure, as evidenced by shedding of first stage larvae in feces and numerous subpleural lung lesions containing adult P. rufescens found at necropsy. All lungworm infected animals had mild respiratory and gastrointestinal signs, and two of five Dorset sheep with both infections had chronic anemia. All lungworm and H. contortus infected Dorset sheep had decreased numbers of circulating white blood cells. There was mastocytosis in the lungs of lungworm infected Dorset and St. Croix sheep when compared to age- and breed-matched control sheep prevented from acquiring both lungworm and trichostrongyle infections. No difference was noted in the number of mast cells in the abomasum, duodenum and skin of infected and non-infected Dorset sheep. A morphologic range of mast cell forms was observed in the lungs of infected sheep including transitional cells and globular leukocytes. The number of eosinophils was significantly greater in the lungs but not in the abomasum of infected sheep. Despite the pronounced cellular infiltrates surrounding the adult lungworms, they were viable on recovery and appeared undamaged when examined histologically.
- Published
- 1995
46. Strongyloides stercoralis: Histopathology of uncomplicated and hyperinfective strongyloidiasis in the Mogolian gerbil, a rodent model for human strongyloidiasis
- Author
-
R.L. Kerlin, Thomas J. Nolan, and Gerhard A. Schad
- Subjects
Vasculitis ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Hemorrhage ,Methylprednisolone ,Strongyloides stercoralis ,Intestinal mucosa ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Mesenteric lymph nodes ,Mesentery ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Pulmonary Eosinophilia ,Lung ,biology ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Methylprednisolone Acetate ,Pulmonary Alveoli ,Disease Models, Animal ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Strongyloidiasis ,Lymphatic system ,nervous system ,Larva ,Strongyloides ,Parasitology ,Lymph Nodes ,Gerbillinae - Abstract
Tissues from corticosteroid-treated gerbils hyperinfected with Strongyloides stercoralis were compared grossly and microscopically to similar tissues from animals with uncomplicated strongyloidiasis. Gerbils with hyperinfection developed severe pulmonary alveolar haemorrhage with a variable degree of subacute eosinophilic interstitial pneumonia associated with numerous alveolar, vascular and interstitial larvae. Hyperinfection induced by corticosteroids, given either before inoculation of S. stercoralis larvae or after a chronic Strongyloides infection was established, produced similar lesions. In contrast, lungs from gerbils with uncomplicated Strongyloides infection had severe eosinophilic perivasculitis and vasculitis with very little haemorrhage, no pneumonia and no larvae. Sections of adult worms were present in the proximal part of the intestinal tract, lodged in spaces between mucosal epithelial cells. Adult worms were not associated with inflammation and were more common in the corticosteroid-treated gerbils. In corticosteroid-treated gerbils only, there were numerous larvae in the distal intestinal tract, throughout the intestinal wall and adjacent mesentery, within interstitial tissues and in lymphatic vessels. Significant inflammation with associated larvae was only present in the caecum and mesenteric lymph nodes, suggesting that the caecum was the main site for initiation of parenteral migration with subsequent invasion of the lymphatic system and lungs. The lesions in these gerbils were similar to those found in humans. Infection of gerbils with S. stercoralis is the best rodent model of human strongyloidiasis.
- Published
- 1995
47. Immunoregulatory potential of exogenous Schistosoma mansoni soluble egg antigen in a model of experimental schistosomiasis — I. Regulation of granuloma formation in vivo
- Author
-
Soad I. Hassan, Sanaa S. Botros, David A. Dean, Saber S. Sakr, Z.A. Shaker, Gehan L. Hafez, H.I. Hassanein, Nemat M. El Ghorab, and Maha Akl
- Subjects
Cyclophosphamide ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Ratón ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Schistosomiasis ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,Andrology ,Mice ,Antigen ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Pharmacology ,Granuloma ,biology ,Helminth Proteins ,Schistosoma mansoni ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Schistosomiasis mansoni ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Immunosuppressive drug ,Desensitization, Immunologic ,Antigens, Helminth ,Injections, Intravenous ,Injections, Intraperitoneal ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study was undertaken to assess the optimum conditions required to reduce the vigorous host granulomatous reaction around Schistosoma mansoni eggs. Soluble schistosomal egg antigen (SEA) at a concentration of 10 or 100 micrograms protein was administered i.p. or i.v. into unprimed C57BL/6 mice. SEA was injected either alone or in combination with cyclophosphamide (CY) 100 or 50 mg/kg via i.p. route. Seven or 14 days later viable eggs of S. mansoni were injected via the tail vein into treated groups and untreated normal controls. Mice were sacrificed 8, 16 and 24 days after the injection of eggs. The lungs were removed for histopathological study, measurement of granuloma diameter and phenotypic analysis of granuloma intralesional T-cell subsets. Compared to untreated controls, the lower concentration of SEA (10 micrograms) administered by the i.v. route 7 days before egg injection, induced a significant reduction in granuloma diameter 16 days after egg injection than that by the i.p. route or at a higher SEA concentration (100 micrograms). Compared to untreated controls, the higher dose of CY (100 mg/kg), given i.p. alone or in combination with 10 micrograms SEA by the i.v. or i.p. route, induced a significant reduction in granuloma diameter, while 50 mg/kg CY did not cause any reduction. The reduction in granuloma diameter by i.v. administration of low SEA concentration alone or in combination with CY IP, was associated with a decrease in the granuloma intralesional L3T4+/Lyt2+ ratio. The decrease in the ratio was due to an increase in Lyt2+ cells. The results suggest that the use of low dose SEA by the i.v. route alone or combined with an immunosuppressive drug ameliorates pathological changes concurrent with S. mansoni infection.
- Published
- 1995
48. Brugia pahangi: Differential Granulomatous Reactivity of Infected Jirds (Meriones unguiculatus) to Fractions of Adult Worm Extract
- Author
-
Ronald C. Montelaro, Rita G. Farrar, Thomas R. Klei, Melanie West, F. M. Enright, Cathy S. McVay, and Sharon U. Coleman
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brugia pahangi ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Spleen ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Chromatography, Affinity ,Immune system ,Antigen ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Granuloma ,biology ,Helminth Proteins ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Microspheres ,Filariasis ,Eosinophils ,Molecular Weight ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,Antigens, Helminth ,biology.protein ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Parasitology ,Lymph Nodes ,Antibody ,Gerbillinae - Abstract
Soluble extracts of adult Brugia pahangi (SSE) were fractionated by lectin affinity chromatography, followed by reversed phase HPLC. The immunologic and in vivo inflammatory reactivity of the resulting fractions were compared in jirds with acute and chronic infections of B. pahangi. When separated by SDS-PAGE, all fractions possessed bands which were recognized in Western blots by antibodies from jirds with both acute and chronic infections. Fractions were coupled to sized Sepharose beads that were subsequently embolized into the lungs of infected and uninfected control jirds. Granulomas were induced by SSE, the lectin column eluate, and HPLC fractions E, F, and G in acutely infected jirds. These reactions were significantly reduced in chronically infected jirds. HPLC fractions B, C, and D did not elicit an in vivo inflammatory response. A perivascular infiltrate of eosinophils and mononuclear cells was also observed in lungs of acutely infected jirds which received granuloma-inducing coated beads but not in lungs of similar jirds which received beads that did not induce this inflammatory response. Proliferative responses of splenocytes stimulated with SSE or the lectin eluate and lymph node cells and splenocytes stimulated with HPLC fractions B, C, or D corresponded to the in vivo granulomatous response to homologously coated beads. Correlations between in vivo inflammatory responses and in vitro proliferative responses were not seen using other fractions in these assays. These data indicate that varying degrees of granulomatous inflammation are induced by different filarial proteins mixtures and that the in vivo granuloma induction by antigen-coated beads will be useful in the identification of specific proteins involved in the induction, maintenance, and regulation of filariae-elicited inflammatory reactions. Although the size of these granulomas corresponds to severity of granulomatous inflammatory responses visualized within the jird lymphatics during the course of infection, the reaction does not correlate in all instances to lymphoproliferative responses of cells from peripheral lymph nodes or the spleen. Distinct differences between antibody and granulomatous reactivity to some fractions were noted.
- Published
- 1995
49. The immunogenicity of the acetylcholinesterases of the cattle lungworm Dictyocaulus viviparus
- Author
-
D.P. Knox, Malcolm W. Kennedy, J.B. McKeand, and J.L. Duncan
- Subjects
Male ,Antigenicity ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Cattle Diseases ,Biology ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dictyocaulus Infections ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Immunogenicity ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Dictyocaulus ,Infectious Diseases ,Nematode ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Excretory system ,Immunoglobulin G ,Cattle ,Parasitology ,Lungworm ,Viviparus - Abstract
Somatic extracts and excretory/secretory (ES) products of the adult stage of the cattle nematode, Dictyocaulus viviparus, were examined for acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity. Both were found to contain activity which had an optimum pH of 9.5, however, the adult ES products contained over 200 times more AChE activity per unit protein. Gel electrophoresis and specific enzyme staining revealed 5 migratory isoforms of AChE which were common to adult ES products and adult homogenates. Comparison of L3 with L4 and adult extracts indicated that the AChE were only produced by later developmental stages of this parasite. The antigenicity of D. viviparus AChE was demonstrated by binding to serum IgG from naturally and experimentally infected calves but the enzymes were not recognized by calves vaccinated twice with 400 Gy-irradiated larvae. This is the first report of helminth AChE release by a parasitic nematode in a pulmonary location. The presence of these enzymes in such high amounts in the ES products, along with their immunogenicity, suggests that they might have an important role to play in the immunobiology of D. viviparus in the lungs.
- Published
- 1994
50. The distribution of nematode egg counts and larval counts in grazing sheep and their implications for parasite control
- Author
-
V. Molnár, T. Kassai, and Tamás Sréter
- Subjects
Nematoda ,Lung Diseases, Parasitic ,animal diseases ,Population ,Sheep Diseases ,Zoology ,Biology ,Selective breeding ,Feces ,medicine ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Anthelmintic ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,Nematode Infections ,education ,Parasite Egg Count ,Larva ,education.field_of_study ,Sheep ,Ecology ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Nematode ,Female ,Parasitology ,Flock ,Lungworm ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The frequency distribution of gastrointestinal nematode egg and lungworm larval counts was examined in 101 and 87 naturally infected ewes on two farms. The egg and larval outputs of the two flocks followed the negative binomial pattern of distribution (with k values below unity) at each time of sampling, which suggests highly overdispersed worm burdens. The results of the statistical analysis indicated that a relatively small part of the two flocks was responsible for the excretion of the majority of both gastrointestinal nematode eggs and Dictyocaulus filaria larvae. It is concluded that by eliminating "wormy" individuals of flocks either by selective breeding or by their selective anthelmintic treatment, effective control of parasite transmission can be achieved. Because of the phenomenon of nematode "clumping" it seems necessary to expand new methods for estimation of flock productivity caused by nematodes in livestock and to incorporate negative binomial parameter (k) in mathematical models of nematode population dynamics.
- Published
- 1994
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