0000000000759853

AUTHOR

Kobra Mokhtarian

showing 2 related works from this author

Molecular characterization of fasciola spp. From some parts of Iran

2020

Background: Identification of liver flukes, Fasciola hepatica, and Fasciola gigantica by morphometric parameters is not always reliable due to the overlapping measurements. This study aimed to characterize the liver flukes of animals from different parts of Iran by the genetic markers, ITS1, and COXI. Methods: We collected flukes from infected livestock in six provinces of Iran from Sep to Nov 2016. The flukes were identified by amplification of a 680 bp sequence of ITS1 locus followed by a restriction fragment polymorphism (RFLP) assay. The genetic diversity among isolates was evaluated by amplification and sequencing of a 493 bp fragment of the COXI gene. Results: We obtained 38 specimens…

Genetic diversityVeterinary medicine030505 public healthFasciolabiologyMolecular epidemiologyFasciola giganticalcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthFasciola giganticalcsh:RA1-1270Liver flukeFasciola hepaticaIranbiology.organism_classification03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHepaticaparasitic diseasesFasciola hepaticaOriginal Article030212 general & internal medicineRestriction fragment length polymorphism0305 other medical science
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Dicrocoelium dendriticum found in a Bronze Age cemetery in western Iran in the pre-Persepolis period: The oldest Asian palaeofinding in the present h…

2015

Dicrocoeliasis of animals and humans is caused by trematode species of the genus Dicrocoelium, mainly Dicrocoelium dendriticum in ruminants of the Holarctic region. D. dendriticum may be considered an old parasite, probably related to the appearance and diversification of Eurasian ovicaprines, occurred 14.7-14.5 million years ago. The oldest palaeoparasitological findings of Dicrocoelium in domestic animals and humans date from more than 5000 years BC in Europe. Eggs of D. dendriticum have been found in a burial of a Bronze Age cemetery (2600-2200 BC) close to Yasuj city, southwestern Iran. This is the oldest finding of D. dendriticum in the Near East, where present human infection reports …

HerbivoreMiddle EastGeographybiologyDicrocoelium dendriticumZoologyDicrocoeliasisIranbiology.organism_classificationSoilInfectious DiseasesHolarcticGeographyArchaeologyBronze AgeGenusPeriod (geology)AnimalsHumansCemeteriesParasitologyDicrocoeliumDicrocoeliumOvumParasitology International
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