Search results for "HELMINTH"

showing 10 items of 363 documents

Hyperendemic fascioliasis associated with schistosomiasis in villages in the Nile Delta of Egypt.

2003

Coprologic surveys were carried out in villages of the Behera Governorate in the Nile Delta region of Egypt to characterize the epidemiologic features of human fascioliasis caused by Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica in this lowland endemic area by comparison with fascioliasis caused by only F. hepatica in areas hyperendemic for human disease in the Andean highlands of South America. The fascioliasis prevalences detected (range = 5.2-19.0%, mean = 12.8%) are the highest obtained in Egypt. The comparison with previous results suggests that in the Nile Delta, fascioliasis is spreading from an original situation of sporadic human cases in well-known endemic foci for animal disease to an endem…

AdultMaleVeterinary medicineFascioliasisAdolescentEndemic DiseasesPopulationHelminthiasisSchistosomiasisFecesSex FactorsRiversHepaticaRisk FactorsVirologyparasitic diseasesmedicinePrevalenceHelminthsFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumanseducationChildAgedAged 80 and overeducation.field_of_studybiologyTransmission (medicine)InfantLiver flukeFasciola hepaticaMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseSchistosomiasis mansoniInfectious DiseasesChild PreschoolParasitologyEgyptFemaleThe American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
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Ultrasonographical aspects of urinary schistosomiasis: Assessment of morphological lesions in the upper and lower urinary tract

1986

Ultrasonographic evaluation of 213 patients with urinary schistosomiasis in different age groups was performed in an endemic area of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The results were compared with 94 age matched controls without urinary schistosomiasis. In patients the bladder showed thickening of the wall, polypoid lesions of the mucosa and bladder wall, calcifications and urinary retention. Urinary tract obstruction, predominantly unilateral, was demonstrated. The lesions increased in severity with the intensity of infection, parallel to an increase in ova excretion. Children aged between 8 and 19 years were most severely affected. Pathological lesions of the upper urinary tract were rar…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyAdolescentUrinary systemUrinary BladderHelminthiasisSchistosomiasisKidneyGastroenterologySchistosomiasis haematobiaInternal medicinemedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingChildPathologicalAgedUltrasonographyUpper urinary tractUrinary bladderUrinary retentionbusiness.industryInfantMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleUretermedicine.symptomUrinary tract obstructionbusinessPediatric Radiology
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Phenotypic analysis of peripheral lymphocyte subpopulations in hydatid patients.

1999

Peripheral T-lymphocytes were analyzed in three groups of people: (1) individuals with current liver hydatid disease (hydatid patients, n = 20), (2) persons who had undergone surgical cyst removal at least 2 years previously (recovered patients, n = 9), and (3) a control group of healthy volunteers (uninfected controls, n = 13). Group 1 was subdivided according to cyst status, relapse of disease, and the presence or absence of symptoms. Percentages of lymphocytes expressing CD3, CD4, CD8, CD56, CD25, CD45RA, CD45RO, and HLA-DR were determined. Symptomatic patients had proportionally fewer CD3+ CD8 + lymphocytes than the control group (P=0.038). Hydatid patients with active cysts had proport…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyEchinococcosis HepaticHelminthiasischemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyGastroenterologyNatural killer cellImmunophenotypingImmune systemAntigens CDT-Lymphocyte SubsetsInternal medicineparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansCystIL-2 receptorEchinococcus granulosusAgedGeneral VeterinaryGeneral MedicineT lymphocyteMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureInsect ScienceLeukocytes MononuclearParasitologyFemaleCD8Parasitology research
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High endemicity of human fascioliasis between Lake Titicaca and La Paz valley, Bolivia.

1999

Over a 6-year period, an epidemiological study of human infection by Fasciola hepatica in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano was carried out. Prevalences and intensities were analysed from coprological results obtained in 31 surveys performed in 24 localities and proved to be the highest known so far. The global prevalence was 15.4%, with local prevalences ranging from 0% to 68.2%. Significant differences between prevalence rates were detected and the highest prevalences were in subjects aged20 years. However, prevalences showed no gender difference. The global intensity (eggs per gram of faeces, epg) ranged from 24 to 5064 epg and showed arithmetic and geometric means respectively of 446 and …

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyVeterinary medicineBoliviaFascioliasisAdolescentPrevalenceHelminthiasisFecesAge groupsparasitic diseasesEpidemiologymedicinePrevalenceFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumansChildParasite Egg CountFecesAgedAged 80 and overbiologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAge FactorsInfant NewbornInfantGeneral MedicineFasciola hepaticaMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationInfectious DiseasesHuman fascioliasisChild PreschoolParasitologyFemaleTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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Analysis of cytokine and specific antibody profiles in hydatid patients with primary infection and relapse of disease

1998

We studied in vitro cytokine production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with primary and recurrent hydatid disease when cells were incubated with mitogen (PHA) and antigen from hydatid cyst fluid (HCFAg); levels of specific IgE, IgG4 and eosinophil counts were also measured in sera. When specifically stimulated, PBMC from patients produced higher levels of IL-2 (P < 0.02), IFN-γ (P < 0.0028) and IL-5 (P < 0.01) than those from uninfected donors, whereas IL-10 levels were comparable. Notably, IL-5 was also produced in higher levels (P < 0.01) by PBMC from patients when incubated with PHA. The IL-5:IFN-γ ratio was significantly greater (P < 0.02) when measured in re…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyAntibodies HelminthBlood DonorsCell CountStimulationDiseaseImmunoglobulin EPeripheral blood mononuclear cellAntigenEchinococcosisRecurrencemedicineAnimalsHumansPhytohemagglutininsCells CulturedAgedbiologybusiness.industryMiddle AgedEosinophilIn vitroEosinophilsmedicine.anatomical_structureCytokineAntigens HelminthImmunologyLeukocytes Mononuclearbiology.proteinCytokinesCattleFemaleParasitologyMitogensbusinessCell DivisionParasite Immunology
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Arterial hypertension due to primary adrenal hydatid cyst.

2002

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryHelminthiasisAdrenal Gland DiseasesAnticestodal AgentsHydatid cystAdrenalectomymedicine.diseaseAlbendazoleSurgeryEchinococcosisHypertensionmedicineHumansSurgeryFemaleComplicationbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedSurgery
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Molecular mechanisms of hookworm disease: stealth, virulence, and vaccines.

2012

Hookworms produce a vast repertoire of structurally and functionally diverse molecules that mediate their long-term survival and pathogenesis within a human host. Many of these molecules are secreted by the parasite, after which they interact with critical components of host biology, including processes that are key to host survival. The most important of these interactions is the hookworm's interruption of nutrient acquisition by the host through its ingestion and digestion of host blood. This results in iron deficiency and eventually the microcytic hypochromic anemia or iron deficiency anemia that is the clinical hallmark of hookworm infection. Other molecular mechanisms of hookworm infec…

AncylostomatoideaVaccinesbiologyAnemia Iron-DeficiencyVirulenceImmunologyVirulenceHelminth geneticsHelminth Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationNecator americanusMicrobiologyHookworm InfectionsImmune systemAntigenAncylostomaHookworm InfectionsAntigens Helminthparasitic diseasesImmunologyImmunology and AllergyAnimalsHumansHookworm infectionThe Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
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The transcriptome of Echinostoma caproni adults: further characterization of the secretome and identification of new potential drug targets.

2013

Abstract Echinostomes are cosmopolitan parasites that infect a large number of different warm-blooded hosts, both in nature and in the laboratory. They also constitute an important group of food-borne trematodes of public health importance mainly in Southeast Asia and the Far East. In addition, echinostomes are an ideal model to study several aspects of intestinal helminth biology, since they present a number of advantages. For example, echinostomes are large worms whose life cycle is relatively easy to maintain in the laboratory. Recently, several studies documented their great value in the study of intestinal helminth–vertebrate host relationship. Detailed knowledge of their genome, trans…

AnthelminticsEchinostomiasisProteomeved/biologyved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesBiophysicsComputational biologyHelminth ProteinsBiologyBiochemistryMolecular biologyGenomeHomology (biology)TranscriptomeSecretory proteinMetabolomicsDrug Delivery SystemsEchinostomaProteomeHelminthsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceModel organismJournal of proteomics
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Protective immunity against Echinostoma caproni in rats is induced by Syphacia muris infection.

2012

Syphacia muris (Nematoda: Oxyuridae) is a ubiquitous nematode that commonly infects rats in the laboratory and can interfere with the development of unrelated biological assays. In this context, we analysed the effect of a patent S. muris infection in Wistar rats on a superimposed infection with the intestinal trematode, Echinostoma caproni (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae). The results indicate that in the rats, infection with S. muris induces an immunity against a subsequent infection with E. caproni, although each parasite occupies different niches in the host. Echinostoma caproni worm recovery was significantly decreased in the rats primarily infected with S. muris and, at 3 and 4 weeks pos…

Antibodies HelminthIleumContext (language use)Trematode InfectionsImmunityIleumOxyuroideamedicineParasite hostingHelminthsAnimalsIntestinal MucosaRats WistarImmunity MucosalDisease ResistanceOxyuriasisEchinostomatidaebiologyMucinbiology.organism_classificationRatsDisease Models AnimalInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureNematodeImmunologyParasitologyFemaleTrematodaInternational journal for parasitology
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Anisakid larvae in the musculature of the Argentinean hake, Merluccius hubbsi

2000

We report the infection levels of third-stage anisakid larva in the muscle of the Argentinean hake, Merluccius hubbsi, in relation to fish size and location in the musculature. The musculature of 42 hake was separated into hypaxial (ventral) and epiaxial (dorsal) parts and surveyed for nematode larvae. Two anisakid species were detected: Anisakis sp. (prevalence, 52.4%; mean +/- SD abundance, 1.2 +/- 1.7) and Pseudoterranova sp. (prevalence, 9.5%; mean +/- SD abundance, 0.2 +/- 0.7). Since the fish were gutted after capture, the occurrence of anisakids in the flesh indicates that the worms had migrated into the muscle before capture. The number of Anisakis sp. in muscle was not correlated w…

ArgentinaZoologyAnisakiasisMicrobiologyMerlucciusFish DiseasesHakePrevalenceHelminthsParasite hostingAnimalsLarvabiologyFleshMusclesFishesAquatic animalAnatomybiology.organism_classificationAnisakisAnisakidaeSeafoodSpainLarvaFood MicrobiologyFood Science
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