Search results for "Cryptosporidium"

showing 10 items of 41 documents

Ocurrence of enteroparasites with zoonotic potential in animals of the rural area of San Andres, Chimborazo, Ecuador.

2021

Abstract Objective The aim of this research was the identification of the enteroparasites harbored by the animals of the San Andres community, to evaluate their role as susceptible hosts and sources of infection for other animals, humans (zoonoses), as well as parasite forms spreaders to the environment in this rural area, located in the province of Chimborazo, Ecuadorian Andean region. Material and methods The study was carried out combining 3 coproparasitological techniques: direct examination, Ritchie and Ziehl-Neelsen in 300 animal stool samples Results Blastocystis sp., Entamoeba spp., Giardia spp., Balantidium spp., Cryptosporidium spp., Ascaris spp., Toxocara spp., Ancylostoma spp., …

Hymenolepis nanaVeterinary medicinefood.ingredientParàsitsGuinea PigsCattle DiseasesCryptosporidiosisCryptosporidiumSheep DiseasesBalantidiumBiologyfoodDogsparasitic diseasesPrevalenceHelminthsAnimalsParasitesDog DiseasesHelmintsBlastocystisSheepGeneral VeterinaryAscarisGiardiaParasitologia veterinàriabiology.organism_classificationAncylostomaParasitologyCattleEcuadorGIARDIA SPP.Veterinary parasitology, regional studies and reports
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Humoral immune response in IL-12 and IFN-gamma deficient mice after infection with Cryptosporidium parvum.

2008

Infection with Cryptosporidium spp. causes diarrhoeal disease and has become an important medical and veterinary problem especially in the immunocompromised host. The importance of the adaptive immune response, with CD4+ T-lymphocytes being the major players, has been clearly demonstrated. The requirement of IL-12 and IFN-gamma identifies this response as a Th1-dominated reaction. IFN-gamma is also important in the early phase of the host-parasite interaction. We analysed the outcome of infection in IL-12p40 (IL-12KO) and IFN-gamma (GKO) deficient C57BL/6 mice after primary and secondary challenge with the parasite and, for the first time, we demonstrate the resulting Ig response in sera an…

ImmunologyAntibodies ProtozoanCryptosporidiosisMicrobiologyFecesInterferon-gammaMiceImmune systemIleumParasite Egg CountParasite hostingAnimalsParasite Egg CountCryptosporidium parvumMice KnockoutbiologyCryptosporidiumAcquired immune systembiology.organism_classificationInterleukin-12Immunoglobulin AMice Inbred C57BLCryptosporidium parvumImmunoglobulin GImmunologyVaginaInterleukin 12biology.proteinVaginal DouchingParasitologyFemaleAntibodyParasite immunology
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Structural analysis of Cryptosporidium parvum.

2004

Cryptosporidium parvum(Apicomplexa, formerly Sporozoa) is the causative agent of cryptosporidiosis, an enteric disease of substantial medical and veterinary importance.C. parvumshows a number of unique features that differ from the rest of the class of coccidea in which it is currently grouped taxonomically. Differences occur in the overall structure of the transmission form and the invasive stages of the parasite, its intracellular location, the presence of recently described additional extracellular stages, the host range and target cell tropism, the ability to autoinfection, the nonresponsiveness to anticoccidial drugs, the immune response of the host, and immunochemical and genetic char…

InfectivityCryptosporidium parvumbiologyCryptosporidiumbiology.organism_classificationVirologyImmunohistochemistryApicomplexaCryptosporidium parvumImmune systemMicroscopy Electron TransmissionCell Line Tumorparasitic diseasesIntestine Smallbiology.proteinParasite hostingAnimalsHumansAntibodyInstrumentationTropismSubcellular FractionsMicroscopy and microanalysis : the official journal of Microscopy Society of America, Microbeam Analysis Society, Microscopical Society of Canada
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Morphology and in vitro infectivity of sporozoites of Cryptosporidium parvum.

2009

An important obstacle in studying Cryptosporidium parvum is the lack of a permanent in vitro cultivation system of the parasite. While short-term cultures using various host cell lines have been widely employed, long-term cultures that would facilitate the immortalization of C. parvum isolates have not yet been developed. The description of the complete development of C. parvum in cell-free culture in 2004 has been received with great interest and also with some astonishment. Unfortunately, attempts to reproduce these results with different isolates of C. parvum and also C. hominis have failed. In this report, we provide an alternative interpretation of the nature of a parasite stage that o…

InfectivityCryptosporidium parvumbiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reactionanimal diseasesFluorescent Antibody Techniquebiology.organism_classificationVirologyIn vitroMicrobiologyCryptosporidium parvumCell cultureCell Line Tumorparasitic diseasesParasite hostingHumansParasitologyMicroscopy InterferenceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsRNA ProtozoanThe Journal of parasitology
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Identification of Cpgp40/15 Type Ib as the Predominant Allele in Isolates of Cryptosporidium spp. from a Waterborne Outbreak of Gastroenteritis in So…

2006

ABSTRACT Cryptosporidium sp. isolates from a waterborne outbreak of diarrhea in France were analyzed by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and sequencing of the Cpgp40/15 locus. Ninety-one percent of the isolates were Cryptosporidium hominis type Ib. The results of this study and those of studies of other outbreaks suggest that the type Ib allele is the predominant allele associated with waterborne cryptosporidiosis.

MESH : France/epidemiologyEpidemiologyMESH : polymerase chain reactionMESH : molecular sequence dataProtozoan ProteinsCryptosporidiosisPolymerase Chain Reactionlaw.inventionDisease OutbreaksMESH : Cryptosporidium/geneticsMESH : water/parasitologylaw[ SDV.MP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyMESH : gastroenteritis/parasitologyMESH : Polymorphism restriction fragment lengthwaterborne outbreakPolymerase chain reactionbiologyMESH : DNA Protozoan/analysisCryptosporidiumGastroenteritisDiarrheaMESH : Cryptosporidiosis/epidemiologyFrancemedicine.symptomMESH : Cryptosporidium/classificationCryptosporidium hominisMESH : Protozoan proteins/metabolismPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthMicrobiology (medical)MESH : Cryptosporidium/isolation&purificationMolecular Sequence DataCryptosporidiumLocus (genetics)MESH : Disease outbreaksMicrobiologyMESH : Cryptosporidiosis/parasitologymedicineAnimalsAlleleGenotyping[SDV.MP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyAllelesMESH : animalsMESH : sequence analysis DNAOutbreakWaterSequence Analysis DNADNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classificationMESH : protozoan proteins/geneticsVirologygenotypingMESH : Gastroenteritis/epidemiologyMESH : Alleles
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One Health Approach to Zoonotic Parasites: Molecular Detection of Intestinal Protozoans in an Urban Population of Norway Rats, Rattus norvegicus, in …

2021

Rattus norvegicus, the brown or Norway rat, is the most abundant mammal after humans in urban areas, where they live in close proximity to people. Among rodent-borne diseases, the reservoir role of Norway rats of zoonotic parasites in cities has practically been ignored. Considering the parasitic diseases in the One Health approach, we intended to identify and quantify the zoonotic intestinal protozoans (ZIP) in an urban population of R. norvegicus in the city of Barcelona, Spain. We studied the presence of ZIP in 100 rats trapped in parks (n = 15) as well as in the city’s sewage system (n = 85) in the winter of 2016/17. The protozoans were molecularly identified by means of a multiplex PCR…

Microbiology (medical)BarcelonaParàsits<i>Giardia duodenalis</i>PopulationDientamoeba fragilislcsh:MedicineSewageZoologyBiology<i>Cryptosporidium</i> spp.Cryptosporidium spp.Article<i>Blastocystis</i>Cryptosporidium sppOne Health approachZoonosesUrbanizationMicroorganismes patògensPandemicparasitic diseasesImmunology and AllergyeducationMolecular BiologyDientamoeba fragilis<i>Dientamoeba fragilis</i><i>Rattus norvegicus</i>education.field_of_studyBlastocystisGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:RCryptosporidiumbiology.organism_classificationRattus norvegicuszoonosesInfectious DiseasesOne HealthBlastocystisbusinessGiardia duodenalis
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Effect of antiretroviral protease inhibitors alone, and in combination with paromomycin, on the excystation, invasion and in vitro development of Cry…

2003

With the spread of the human immunodeficiency virus in the early 1980s, cryptosporidiosis was regarded as an AIDS-defining disease. As an opportunistic pathogen, the intestinal parasite Cryptosporidium parvum became an important cause of chronic diarrhoea, leading to high morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised patients. To date, no effective chemotherapy is available. With the introduction of protease inhibitors (PIs) in highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the incidence of cryptosporidiosis in AIDS patients has declined substantially in western countries. We have therefore tested the effect of five PIs used in HAART on the excystation, invasion and development of the parasit…

Microbiology (medical)Cell SurvivalParomomycinvirusesCryptosporidiosisParomomycinHost-Parasite InteractionsMicrobiologyImmunoenzyme Techniquesimmune system diseasesIndinavirAntiretroviral Therapy Highly ActiveCell Line TumormedicineAnimalsHumansPharmacology (medical)Protease inhibitor (pharmacology)AmebicidesAntibacterial agentCryptosporidium parvumPharmacologybiologyvirus diseasesDrug SynergismHIV Protease Inhibitorsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationVirologyInfectious DiseasesCryptosporidium parvumNelfinavirRitonavirSaquinavirmedicine.drugJournal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
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Cyclospora cayetanensis: first imported infections in Germany.

1997

Over the last decade increasing numbers of enteritis cases have been attributed to infection with a new coccidian species that was named Cyclospora cayetanensis in 1993. Diarrhea caused by this agent is clinically indistinguishable from cryptosporidiosis, isosporiasis and microsporidiosis, but Cyclospora infections are often very prolonged (up to 15 weeks) and may cause severe weight loss. Diagnosis of infection is important because, in contrast to diarrhea caused by Cryptosporidium and microsporidia, treatment with co-trimoxazole is effective. Here we report the cases of two female patients, aged 70 and 58 years old, respectively, who suffered from severe, prolonged diarrhea after a vacati…

Microbiology (medical)DiarrheaIsosporiasisMicrosporidiosisCyclospora cayetanensisEnteritisMicrobiologyDiagnosis DifferentialFecesEucoccidiidaparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsHumansIntestinal Diseases ParasiticAgedTravelbiologyCoccidiosisCryptosporidiumGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyCyclosporaDiarrheaCoccidiosisInfectious DiseasesFemalemedicine.symptomInfection
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Epidemiological study ofCryptosporidium parvum in sera of persons from Germany

1998

In a seroprevalence study including 495 sera from persons of all age-groups, the presence of anti-Cryptosporidium parvum antibodies was evaluated in an enzyme immunoassay. Despite the fact that C. parvum is only found in approximately 2% of patients with diarrhea in Germany, specific antibodies could be detected in 15.4% of all samples. This figure indicates that a substantial proportion of the German population has been confronted with this parasite and it raises the question of whether C. parvum is a potential health risk to the general population.

Microbiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyeducation.field_of_studybiologymedicine.diagnostic_testanimal diseasesPopulationGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationVirologySerologyDiarrheaInfectious DiseasesCryptosporidium parvumImmunoassayparasitic diseasesImmunologyEpidemiologymedicinebiology.proteinSeroprevalenceAntibodymedicine.symptomeducationInfection
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Caspase-dependent apoptosis during infection with Cryptosporidium parvum

1999

The protozoan parasite Cryptosporidium parvum causes persistent diarrhea and malnutrition in children and the diarrhea-wasting syndrome in AIDS. No therapy exists for eliminating the parasite in the absence of a healthy immune response. Although it had been reported that infection of intestinal cell lines with C. parvum leads to host cell death, the mechanisms of cytolysis have not been characterized. We show here that infection with C. parvum leads to typical apoptotic nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation in host cells. Both nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation are inhibited by a caspase inhibitor, showing that caspases are involved in this type of apoptosis. Finally, blocking …

Programmed cell deathImmunologyCryptosporidiosisApoptosisDNA FragmentationCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsMicrobiologyCaspase-Dependent ApoptosisAmino Acid Chloromethyl KetonesCell LineImmune systemparasitic diseasesAnimalsHumansComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSCaspaseCryptosporidium parvumbiologybiology.organism_classificationCaspase InhibitorsVirologyCytolysisPOUVOIR PATHOGENE[SDV.MP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and ParasitologyInfectious DiseasesCryptosporidium parvumMicroscopy FluorescenceApoptosisCaspasesbiology.proteinDNA fragmentationHeLa CellsMicrobes and Infection
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