Search results for "LIVER FLUKE"

showing 10 items of 30 documents

Fasciola hepatica infection in children actively detected in a survey in rural areas of Mardan district, Khyber Pakhtunkhawa province, northern Pakis…

2018

Abstract Human fascioliasis is a freshwater snail borne, zoonotic disease caused by Fasciola liver flukes which are widely spread throughout Pakistan and has recently proved to be endemic in humans of the Punjab province. To verify whether fasciolids are also affecting humans outside this province, studies were conducted in four communities comprising rural and urban areas of Mardan district, Khyber Pakhtunkha province, northern Pakistan. Activities comprised two surveys, a coprological one to look for Fasciola infection and another to get information on potential human infection sources and risk factors by means of a questionnaire. Out of 540 subjects of all ages surveyed, only 4 children …

MaleRural PopulationFascioliasisVeterinary medicineLivestockAdolescentSnailsDisease VectorsFecesLiver Function TestsRisk FactorsHepaticaSurveys and Questionnairesparasitic diseasesAnimalsHumansHelminthsFasciola hepaticaPakistanChildParasite Egg CountEggs per gramFreshwater molluscDisease ReservoirsFasciolabiologyCoinfectionFasciola hepaticaLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationInfectious DiseasesFemaleParasitologyLiver functionParasitology International
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Comparative infectivity of Fasciola hepatica metacercariae from isolates of the main and secondary reservoir animal host species in the Bolivian Alti…

2000

Fascioliasis due to Fasciola hepatica (Linnaeus, 1758) is an endemic disease on the Northern Bolivian Altiplano, where human prevalences and intensities are the highest known, sheep and cattle are the main reservoir hosts, and pigs and donkeys the secondary ones. Investigations were carried out to study the viability of metacercariae experimentally obtained from eggs shed by naturally infected Altiplanic sheep, cattle, pigs and donkeys. A total of 157 Wistar rats were infected with doses of 5, 10, 20 and 150 metacercariae. Metacercariae aged for different number of weeks were used to analyse the influence of age on their viability. The number of worms successfully developed in each rat was …

MaleVeterinary medicineBoliviaFascioliasisSwineCattle DiseasesSheep DiseasesHost-Parasite InteractionsSpecies SpecificityHepaticaparasitic diseasesFasciola hepaticaHelminthsAnimalsHumansRats WistarInfectivitySwine DiseasesSheepbiologyEcologyHost (biology)Age FactorsEquidaeLiver flukeFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationLaboratory ratRatsSpecific Pathogen-Free OrganismsParasitologyCattleDonkeyFolia parasitologica
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Risk of gallstone disease in advanced chronic phase of fascioliasis: an experimental study in a rat model.

2003

In Wistar rats experimentally infected with Fasciola hepatica, the association between time of infection, number of flukes, rat weight, and serum lipid levels and the risk of developing pigment stones in the main bile duct was examined using data obtained at 100, 200, 300, 400, and 500 days postinfection. Gallstone presence increased with infection time. The relative risk of gallstone disease increased when the number of flukes per rat and rat weight increased. The presence of gallstones was associated with serum high-density lipoproteins and triglyceride levels. In a multivariate analysis, the association between gallstones and rat weight disappeared after adjustment for serum lipids. The …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyFascioliasisBlood lipidsPhysiologyGastroenterologyCholelithiasisRisk FactorsInternal medicineparasitic diseasesmedicinePrevalenceImmunology and AllergyFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumansRats WistarCommon bile ductbiologyBile ductGallstonesLiver flukeFasciola hepaticamedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationRatsDisease Models AnimalInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureBiliary tractChronic DiseaseLipoproteinThe Journal of infectious diseases
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Leucine aminopeptidase is an immunodominant antigen of Fasciola hepatica excretory and secretory products in human infections.

2007

ABSTRACT The liver fluke Fasciola hepatica parasitizes humans and ruminant livestock worldwide, and it is now being considered a reemerging zoonotic disease, especially in areas in which it is endemic, such as South America. This study investigates the immune response to excretory and secretory products produced by F. hepatica in a group of patients from the Peruvian Altiplano, where the disease is highly endemic. Using a proteomic approach and immunoblotting techniques, we have identified the enzymes leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase as immunodominant antigens recognized by sera from fasciolosis patients. An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using …

Microbiology (medical)FascioliasisAdolescentClinical BiochemistryImmunologyBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataSheep DiseasesEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayAminopeptidasePolymerase Chain ReactionLeucyl AminopeptidaseImmune systemAntigenHepaticaparasitic diseasesmedicineImmunology and AllergyFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumansElectrophoresis Gel Two-DimensionalFasciolosisChildDNA PrimersSheepbiologyBase SequenceImmunodominant EpitopesClinical and Diagnostic Laboratory ImmunologyLiver flukeFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyExcretory systemAntigens HelminthChild PreschoolClinical and vaccine immunology : CVI
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First phenotypic description of Fasciola hepatica/Fasciola gigantica intermediate forms from the human endemic area of the Nile Delta, Egypt.

2007

Fasciola gigantica is the main fasciolid species in Africa; however, F. hepatica and F. gigantica overlap in some countries. Egypt deserves mentioning because of the emerging situation of human fascioliasis in the Nile Delta area. The morphometric characteristics of fasciolid adults infecting the main livestock species present in the Nile Delta human endemic area are analyzed through a computer image analysis system (CIAS) on the basis of standardized measurements known to be useful for the differentiation of both fasciolid species. This is the first time that such a study is performed in an African country and, therefore, the results are compared to (i) F. hepatica (European Mediterranean …

Microbiology (medical)IdentificationFascioliasisBuffaloesEndemic DiseasesFasciola giganticaPhénotypeFasciola giganticaZoologyCattle DiseasesMicrobiologyIntraspecific competitionHepaticaparasitic diseasesGeneticsFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumansPathologie humaineMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPathologiebiologyFasciolabusiness.industryEcologyhttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2503000 - Autres thèmesEndemic areaFasciola hepaticaLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationFasciolahttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3791http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_5631Infectious DiseasesPhenotypehttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_5776http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_11634LivestockCattleEgyptbusinessL72 - Organismes nuisibles des animauxhttp://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_31986http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_31985Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Fasciola hepatica phenotypic characterization in Andean human endemic areas: Valley versus altiplanic patterns analysed in liver flukes from sheep fr…

2011

Fascioliasis is a zoonotic parasitic disease caused by Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica. Of both species, F. hepatica is the only one described in the Americas, mainly transmitted by lymnaeid snail vectors of the Galba/. Fossaria group. Human fascioliasis endemic areas are mainly located in high altitude areas of Andean countries. Given the necessity to characterize F. hepatica populations involved, the phenotypic features of fasciolid adults infecting sheep present in human fascioliasis endemic areas were analysed in the Cajamarca Valley and Mantaro Valley (valley transmission patterns) and the northern Bolivian Altiplano (altiplanic transmission pattern). A computer image analysis…

Ovis ariesorganisms by sizeRange (biology)GastropodaFasciola giganticageographic originFossariaLymnaeidaelaw.inventionlawPerucomparative studynon|phenotypeeducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyparasite transmissionarticleLiver flukeEuropeFasciolidaemultivariate analysisPhenotypeInfectious DiseasesTransmission (mechanics)Parasitic diseasecomputer analysisaltitudeMicrobiology (medical)protozoal geneticsBoliviaFascioliasisFasciola giganticaPopulationPhenotypic characterizationSheep DiseasesZoology//purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.08 [https]Microbiologyanimal tissueanimal parasitosisHuman endemic areasimage analysisHepaticaparasitic diseasesGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansFasciola hepaticacontrolled studyeducationMolecular Biologyendemic diseaseEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSheeputerus|FascioliasisFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasebreedingInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Neurological and Ocular Fascioliasis in Humans

2014

Fascioliasis is a food-borne parasitic disease caused by the trematode species Fasciola hepatica, distributed worldwide, and Fasciola gigantica, restricted to given regions of Africa and Asia. This disease in humans shows an increasing importance, which relies on its recent widespread emergence related to climate and global changes and also on its pathogenicity in the invasive, biliary, and advanced chronic phases in the human endemic areas, mainly of developing countries. In spite of the large neurological affection capacity of Fasciola, this important pathogenic aspect of the disease has been pronouncedly overlooked in the past decades and has not even appear within the numerous reviews o…

Pediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologybiologybusiness.industryFasciola giganticaDiseaseLiver flukemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationParasitic diseasemedicineEtiologyFasciola hepaticaEosinophiliaDifferential diagnosismedicine.symptombusiness
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Donkey Fascioliasis Within a One Health Control Action: Transmission Capacity, Field Epidemiology, and Reservoir Role in a Human Hyperendemic Area.

2020

A One Health initiative has been implemented for fascioliasis control in a human hyperendemic area for the first time. The area selected for this multidisciplinary approach is the Northern Bolivian Altiplano, where the highest prevalences and intensities in humans have been reported. Within the strategic intervention axis of control activities concerning animal reservoirs, complete experimental studies, and field surveys have been performed to assess the fascioliasis transmission capacity and epidemiological role of the donkey for the first time. Laboratory studies with altiplanic donkey-infecting Fasciola hepatica and altiplanic Galba truncatula snail vector isolates demonstrate that the d…

Veterinary medicineBolivia040301 veterinary sciencesSnaildonkeylaw.inventionhuman fascioliasis hyperendemic0403 veterinary science03 medical and health sciencesHepaticalawbiology.animalFasciola hepaticaOne Health030304 developmental biologyGalba truncatulaOriginal Research0303 health scienceslcsh:Veterinary medicineGeneral Veterinarybiology04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesLiver flukeFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationreservoir roleTransmission (mechanics)Vector (epidemiology)lcsh:SF600-1100field epidemiologyVeterinary ScienceDonkeyGalba truncatula experimental transmissionFrontiers in veterinary science
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Plant-Borne Trematode Zoonoses: Fascioliasis and Fasciolopsiasis

2007

There are six plant-borne trematode species known affecting humans: Fasciola hepatica, F. gigantica, and Fasciolopsis buski (Fasciolidae), Gastrodiscoides hominis (Gastrodiscidae), Watsonius watsoni, and Fischoederius elongatus (Paramphistomidae). Whereas F. hepatica and F. gigantica are hepatic, the other four species are intestinal parasites.

Veterinary medicinebiologyHepaticaFasciolopsismedicineFasciola hepaticaFasciolopsiasisLiver flukemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationGastrodiscoides hominisPyrantel PamoateFasciolidae
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Isolation and characterization of microsatellite markers in the liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica)

2004

PRIMER NOTE; International audience; Six microsatellite markers were isolated from Fasciola hepatica, a re-emerging parasite that causes important veterinary and public health problems. In a sample of 52 liver flukes from a region of hyperendemicity (Bolivian Altiplano), five microsatellite were polymorphic. Our results showed that liver flukes present important genetic variability, suggesting a preferential outcrossing reproduction mode for this hermaphroditic parasite.

microsatellitemedia_common.quotation_subjectOutcrossingBiochemistryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology030308 mycology & parasitology03 medical and health sciences[SDE.BE.PARA]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology/domain_sde.be.paraparasitic diseasesParasite hostingFasciola hepaticaGenetic variability030304 developmental biologymedia_commonGenetics0303 health sciencesliver flukeEcologybiologyFasciola hepaticaLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationIsolation (microbiology)3. Good healthMicrosatelliteReproductionMolecular Ecology Notes
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