Search results for "Mesocestoides"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Monitoring campaign over an edible dormouse population (Glis glis; rodentia: Gliridae) in Sicily: First report of mesocestodiasis

2021

Simple Summary In Nebrodi Park (Sicily, Italy), live many wild mammal species that move closer to human beings every day. The edible dormouse (Glis glis), in 2017 and 2018, was responsible for nut crop damage in the area. For this reason, a sanitary monitoring campaign involving 30 dormice was carried out by collecting rectal and conjunctival swabs and fur and nest content, which were then processed for laboratory examinations. A large presence of fleas belonging to Monopsyllus sciurorum was found. Necropsy of a dead dormouse revealed an infection of Mesocestoides lineatus, whose cysts were found in the abdomen cavity and on the liver; this is the first report of this in this species. Furth…

0301 basic medicineMesocestoides lineatus030231 tropical medicinePopulationSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaZoologyCrop (anatomy)ArticleMesocestoides lineatus03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNestbiology.animallcsh:Zoologylcsh:QL1-991DormouseeducationEdible dormouseeducation.field_of_studyDormicelcsh:Veterinary medicineGeneral Veterinarybiology<i>Glis glis<i>biology.organism_classification<i>Monopsyllus sciorum<i>030104 developmental biologylcsh:SF600-1100Monopsyllus sciorumAnimal Science and Zoology<i>Mesocestoides lineatus<i></i></i></i></i></i></i>Glis glis
researchProduct

Cestode parasites release extracellular vesicles with microRNAs and immunodiagnostic protein cargo.

2017

Intercellular communication is crucial in multiple aspects of cell biology. This interaction can be mediated by several mechanisms including extracellular vesicle (EV) transfer. EV secretion by parasites has been reported in protozoans, trematodes and nematodes. Here we report that this mechanism is present in three different species of cestodes, Taenia crassiceps, Mesocestoides corti and Echinococcus multilocularis. To confirm this we determined, in vitro, the presence of EVs in culture supernatants by transmission electron microscopy. Interestingly, while T. crassiceps and M. corti metacestodes secrete membranous structures into the culture media, similar vesicles were observed in the int…

0301 basic medicineOtras Ciencias Biológicas030231 tropical medicineMesocestoides cortiPlatyhelminthCiencias Biológicas03 medical and health sciencesExtracellular Vesicles0302 clinical medicineTandem Mass SpectrometryAnimalsSecretionSecretionTaenia crassicepsbiologymicroRNATaeniaVesicleRNAExtracellular vesicleHelminth Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationIn vitroCell biologyEchinococcusMicroRNAs030104 developmental biologyInfectious DiseasesImmunologyTaeniaCestodaParasitologyExtracellular vesicleCestodeCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASIntracellularChromatography LiquidInternational journal for parasitology
researchProduct

First Data on the Helminth Community of the Smallest Living Mammal on Earth, the Etruscan Pygmy Shrew, Suncus etruscus (Savi, 1822) (Eulipotyphla: So…

2021

Suncus etruscus is the smallest living mammal on Earth by mass. Most adults weigh 1.8–3 g with a body length of 35–48 mm. Catching it in small mammal traps in nature is extremely difficult due to its minute size, and therefore special trapping methods must be used. We had the unique opportunity of studying, for the first time, the helminth parasites of 166 individuals of S. etruscus, part of the largest collection in the world, which belonged to the French scientist Dr Roger Fons (1942–2016). A total of 150 individuals were captured in the Banyuls-Cerbère area (France) and 16 in the island of Corsica (France). We found seven helminth species, specifically, the cestodes Joyeuxiella pasqualei…

0301 basic medicineVeterinary medicineZoologyMesocestoidesBiology<i>Joyeuxiella pasqualei larvae</i>Trapping methods03 medical and health sciences<i>Pseudhymenolepis</i> sp.biology.animalSF600-1100HelminthsSuncus etruscus<i>Suncus etruscus</i><i>Staphylocystis claudevaucheri</i><i>S. cerberensis</i>LarvaGeneral VeterinaryShrew<i>Mesocestoides</i> sp. <i>larvae</i><i>Aonchotheca</i> sp.Insectivore030108 mycology & parasitologybiology.organism_classificationhelminth community<i>S. banyulsensis</i>030104 developmental biologyQL1-991Animal Science and ZoologyMammalZoologyAnimals
researchProduct

Short report - A new case report of human Mesocestoides infection in the United States

2003

The twenty-seventh documented case of human Mesocestoides infection, which corresponds to the seventh documented case in the United States, is reported. The case had its origin in Alexandria, Louisiana in the summer of 1998. The patient was a 19-month-old boy. The strobila consisted of 35 proglottids that included mature as well as gravid segments containing a ventral genital pore and a parauterine organ. After a detailed microscopic examination, the tapeworm was identified as belonging to the genus Mesocestoides. Mesocestoides variabilis is the probable species responsible for the infection, since the six cases previously reported in the United States were identified as this species. After…

DiarrheaMaleMesocestoides variabilisCestodaHelminthiasisZoologyMesocestoidesFecesFood ParasitologyMesocestoidesGenusVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansSex organFecesbiologyInfantAnatomyCestode InfectionsLouisianamedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationPraziquantelInfectious DiseasesParasitologymedicine.drug
researchProduct