Search results for "FASCIOLIASIS"
showing 9 items of 89 documents
Phenotypic analysis of adults of Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica and intermediate forms from the endemic region of Gilan, Iran.
2006
Fascioliasis is an important human and animal disease caused by Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica. In Iran, the distribution of these two species overlaps in most areas, including the northern human endemic province of Gilan where both fasciolids are simultaneously found in individual cattle and buffaloes. A phenotypic study of fasciolid adult flukes from naturally infected bovines from Gilan was carried out by means of an exhaustive morphometric analysis using traditional microscopic measurements and an allometric model. The Iranian fasciolids were compared to F. hepatica and F. gigantica standard populations, i.e. from geographical areas where both species do not co-exist (Bolivia …
MM3-ELISA evaluation of coproantigen release and serum antibody production in sheep experimentally infected with Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica.
2008
During an experimental infection of sheep with Fasciola hepatica or F. gigantica, MM3-SERO and MM3-COPRO ELISA tests were applied to compare the kinetics of antibody production and coproantigen release between the 2nd and 32nd week post-infection (wpi). The Kato-Katz technique was used to measure the kinetics of egg shedding by both Fasciola species (eggs per gram of feces, epg). The kinetics of IgG antibodies for all sheep infected with F. hepatica and F. gigantica followed a similar pattern. Optical density (OD) increased rapidly between the 4th until the 12th wpi, when the highest values were reached and then decreased slowly until the 32nd wpi. Coproantigen levels increased above the cu…
Fasciola gigantica transmission in the zoonotic fascioliasis endemic lowlands of Guilan, Iran: experimental assessment.
2014
The lowland flatlands around the city of Bandar-Anzali, at the Caspian Sea shore, Guilan province, are an endemic area where Fasciola gigantica appears to be the fasciolid species involved and past outbreaks affecting around 15,000 people and the highest human infection rates in Iran have been reported. Fascioliasis transmission in that area has been experimentally analysed for the first time, by means of assays of monomiracidial (Group A: 120 snails) and pentamiracidial (Group B: 96 snails) infections of local Radix lymnaeid snails with a local cattle F. gigantica isolate. Ribosomal DNA ITS-2 sequencing proved that Lymnaea (Radix) gedrosiana should henceforth be considered a synonym of Rad…
Analysis of climatic data and forecast indices for human fascioliasis at very high altitude
1999
Human infection with Fasciola hepatica has recently been recognized as an important health problem worldwide, and particularly at very high altitudes in South America. The highest prevalences and intensities of human fascioliasis known are those of the northern Bolivian Altiplano, where infected Lymnaea truncatula occur at altitudes of 3800-4100 m. In the present study, the climatic data for this area of the Altiplano, which differ markedly from those of endemic areas in the lowlands, were analysed. There is no marked seasonality in temperature but there are large variations in temperature within a daily, 24-h period. Rainfall is seasonal, with a long dry season, coinciding with the lowest …
Fasciolasis humana y animal en África, con enfásis en Egipto
2013
Fasciolid flukes cause fascioliasis, an helminthic disease of humans and livestock and which is transmitted by specific freshwater snails of the family Lymnaeidae, within a frame of transmission and epidemiology pronouncedly influenced by climate factors and environmental conditions. In Africa, fascioliasis is caused by the two species Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica, giving rise to important economic losses in husbandry throughout. Research on human infection has focused on northern Maghreb countries and Egypt, whereas studies on the wide region southward from the Sahara have only been sporadic. The present Thesis includes the genetic characterisation of the lymnaeid species found in se…
Human and animal fascioliasis in andean regions of argentina: lymnaeid vectors and livestock reservoirs
2018
La fascioliasis es una enfermedad parasitaria zoonótica causada en América por Fasciola hepatica. Produce serias pérdidas económicas a la ganadería y es un importante problema en salud pública a nivel mundial. Las más altas prevalencias en humanos se hallan en regiones andinas. La especie de lymnaeido vector involucrada condiciona el escenario epidemiológico. En Argentina existía gran controversia acerca de las especies de lymnaeidos vectores presentes. Además de los bovinos, escasos estudios han considerado el rol que cumplirían otras especies domésticas y silvestres como reservorios. La fascioliasis humana ha sido considerada una enfermedad de escasa relevancia. El objetivo del presente t…
Caracterización biológica de lymnaeidae y planorbidae (mollusca: gastropoda), vectores potenciales de fascioliasis y schistosomiasis urinaria en Espa…
2017
Fascioliasis y schistosomiasis son dos de las enfermedades parasitarias englobadas dentro del grupo de las “enfermedades tropicales desatendidas”, la importancia de las cuales recae en el hecho de ser muy poco prioritarias en los programas nacionales de salud. Se asocian principalmente a la pobreza causando discapacidades graves y deficiencias de por vida que suponen una enorme carga económica para los países endémicos. Por un lado, la fascioliasis es la enfermedad parasitaria de origen vectorial que presenta la más amplia distribución latitudinal, longitudinal y altitudinal conocida a nivel mundial, constituyendo un importante problema de salud pública. Se estima que existen 2,4 millones y…
Is the El Niño-Southern Oscillation likely to increase the risk of Fasciola transmission?
2007
(2007). Is the El Nino–Southern Oscillation likely to increase the risk of Fasciola transmission? Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 101, No. 6, pp. 555-557.
Caracterización Fenética y Genética de Individuos del Género Fasciola Linnaeus, 1758 (Trematoda: Fasciolidae) de México
2017
La fascioliasis es una importante enfermedad causada por dos especies de trematodos, Fasciola hepatica y Fasciola gigantica, que incluye un amplio espectro de especies hospedadoras definitivas tanto domésticas como silvestres. En el presente trabajo, como primer paso, se realizó una revisión bibliográfica exhaustiva de todos los casos humanos de fascioliasis en México, reportados tanto en la literatura mexicana, como casos de pacientes mexicanos diagnosticados en Canadá y USA. El estudio fenético y genético se realizó con adultos del parásito, obtenidos de bovinos del matadero de la Ciudad de Toluca, Estado de México, México, zona de endemia humana. Para el estudio fenético comparativo se u…