Search results for "fasciola gigantica"

showing 10 items of 23 documents

Higher physiopathogenicity byFasciola giganticathan by the genetically closeF. hepatica: experimental long-term follow-up of biochemical markers

2016

Background: Fascioliasis is caused by Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica. The latter, always considered secondary in human infection, nowadays appears increasingly involved in Africa and Asia. Unfortunately, little is known about its pathogenicity, mainly due to difficulties in assessing the moment a patient first becomes infected and the differential diagnosis with F. hepatica. Methods: A long-term, 24-week, experimental study comparing F. hepatica and F. giganticawas made for the first time in the same animal model host, Guirra sheep. Serum biochemical parameters of liver damage, serum electrolytes, protein metabolism, plasma proteins, carbohydrate metabolism, hepatic lipid metabolism and…

0301 basic medicineFascioliasisMitochondrial DNAFasciola gigantica030231 tropical medicineAntibodies HelminthProtein metabolismSheep DiseasesPhysiologyCarbohydrate metabolismDiagnosis Differential03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineSpecies SpecificityHepaticaparasitic diseasesAnimalsFasciola hepaticaBiochemical markersSheepbiologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineDNA Helminth030108 mycology & parasitologybiology.organism_classificationBlood proteinsFasciolaDisease Models AnimalInfectious DiseaseschemistryImmunoglobulin GParasitologyBiomarkersTransactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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CIAS detection of Fasciola hepatica/F. gigantica intermediate forms in bovines from Bangladesh

2015

Fascioliasis is an important food-borne parasitic zoonosis caused by two trematode species, Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica. The characterisation and differentiation of Fasciola populations is crucial to control the disease, given the different transmission, epidemiology and pathology characteristics of the two species. Lineal biometric features of adult liver flukes infecting livestock have been studied to characterise and discriminate fasciolids from Bangladesh. An accurate analysis was conducted to phenotypically discriminate between fasciolids from naturally infected bovines (cattle, buffaloes) throughout the country. Morphometric analyses were made with a computer image analys…

0301 basic medicineFascioliasisVeterinary medicineBiometryFasciola gigantica030231 tropical medicineCattle DiseasesCattle Diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHepaticaparasitic diseasesmedicineAnimalsFasciola hepaticaBangladeshbiologyFasciolabusiness.industryZoonosis030108 mycology & parasitologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseFasciolaMalalties parasitàriesParasitologyCattleParasitologyLivestockbusinessBestiar boví
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SSU rDNA Characterization of Lymnaeid Snails Transmitting Human Fascioliasis in South and Central America

1997

The small subunit (18S) rRNA gene sequences of the lymnaeid morphs I and II (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Basommatophora: Lymnaeidae) transmitting human fascioliasis in the high endemic zone of the northern Bolivian Altiplano and of Lymnaea cubensis from Mexico and Guadeloupe island (Caribbean) have been obtained by direct polymerase chain reaction PCR cycle sequencing and silver staining methods and compared to that of the 6 most common European Lymnaeidae species. Results allow us to establish definitively the distinction between the lymnaeids from the northern Bolivian Altiplano and L. cubensis. Lymnaea cubensis is a valid species distributed in North and Central America but absent in the north…

BasommatophorabiologyEcologyFasciola giganticaZoologybiology.organism_classificationLymnaeaLymnaeidaeType speciesParasitologySubgenusRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGalba truncatulaThe Journal of Parasitology
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A PCR-RFLP assay for the distinction between Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica.

2002

Fascioliasis is of well-known veterinary importance and an increasing human health problem, with reported cases in the five continents. The causative agents, Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica, present geographical distributions, which overlap in many regions of Africa and Asia, and in which the differentiation of both species is usually difficult because of the many variations in their morphological characteristics. Moreover, in humans, liver fluke classification cannot be achieved by clinical, pathological, coprological or immunological methods. The differential diagnosis between F. hepatica and F. gigantica infection is very important because of their different transmission and epi…

FascioliasisFasciola giganticaZoologyPolymerase Chain Reactionlaw.inventionDiagnosis DifferentiallawHepaticaparasitic diseasesRNA Ribosomal 28SFasciola hepaticaAnimalsMolecular BiologyPolymerase chain reactionSheepbiologyFasciolaBase SequenceCell BiologyLiver flukeDNA HelminthFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationFasciolaRestriction enzymeLiverImmunologyCattleRestriction fragment length polymorphismPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthMolecular and cellular probes
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Fascioliasis and other plant-borne trematode zoonoses

2005

Fascioliasis and other food-borne trematodiases are included in the list of important helminthiases with a great impact on human development. Six plant-borne trematode species have been found to affect humans: Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola 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. The fasciolids and the gastrodiscid cause important zoonoses distributed throughout many countries, while W. watsoni and F. elongatus have been only accidentally detected in humans. Present climate and glob…

FascioliasisFood ChainEndemic DiseasesFasciola giganticaSnailsHelminthiasisDisease VectorsGlobal HealthFasciolidaeHost-Parasite InteractionsFood ParasitologyHepaticaFasciolopsisZoonosesmedicineAnimalsHumansFasciolopsiasisIntestinal Diseases ParasiticGalba truncatulaLife Cycle StagesbiologyFasciolaEcologyPlantsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseFasciolaInfectious DiseasesParasitologyGastrodiscoides hominisInternational Journal for Parasitology
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Impact of climate change and man-made irrigation systems on the transmission risk, long-term trend and seasonality of human and animal fascioliasis i…

2014

Large areas of the province of Punjab, Pakistan are endemic for fascioliasis, resulting in high economic losses due to livestock infection but also affecting humans directly. The prevalence in livestock varies pronouncedly in space and time (1-70%). Climatic factors influencing fascioliasis presence and potential spread were analysed based on data from five mete- orological stations during 1990-2010. Variables such as wet days (Mt), water-budget-based system (Wb-bs) indices and the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), were obtained and correlated with geographical distribution, seasonality patterns and the two-decade evolution of fascioliasis in livestock throughout the province. …

FascioliasisVeterinary medicineIrrigationLivestockHealth (social science)Climate ChangeFasciola giganticaGeography Planning and Developmentlcsh:G1-922Medicine (miscellaneous)Climate changeDistribution (economics)Normalized Difference Vegetation IndexRisk Factorsparasitic diseasesPrevalencemedicineAnimalsHumansPakistanbiologybusiness.industryHealth PolicyAgriculturefascioliasis Fasciola hepatica Fasciola gigantica livestock humans climatic data forecast indices normalized difference vegetation index climate change Pakistan.Fasciola hepaticaSeasonalitymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationFasciolaGeographyAgricultureLivestockSeasonsbusinesslcsh:Geography (General)Geospatial health
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Fascioliasis: A worldwide parasitic disease of importance in travel medicine

2014

Fascioliasis is a foodborne zoonotic disease caused by the two parasite species Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica. This trematodiasis has never been claimed special relevance for travellers and migrants. However, the situation has drastically changed in the last two decades, in a way that fascioliasis should today be included in the list of diseases to be enhanced in Travel Medicine. Different kind of travellers have been involved in human infection reports: business travellers, tourists, migrants, expatriated workers, military personnel, religious missionaries, and refugees. Europe is the continent where more imported cases have been reported in many countries. More cases would have…

Fascioliasismedicine.medical_specialtyFasciola giganticaDeveloping countryDiseaseFoodborne DiseasesZoonosesParasitic DiseasesAnimalsHumansMedicineEosinophiliaTravel medicineIntensive care medicineTravelEndoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatographybiologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseFasciolaInfectious DiseasesParasitic diseaseCommunicable Disease ControlImmunologyAnti-Infective Agents Localmedicine.symptomWater MicrobiologybusinessDeveloped countryTravel MedicineTravel Medicine and Infectious Disease
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Genetically 'pure' Fasciola gigantica discovered in Algeria: DNA multimarker characterization, trans-Saharan introduction from a Sahel origin and spr…

2020

Fascioliasis is a freshwater snail-borne zoonotic helminth disease caused by two species of trematodes: Fasciola hepatica of almost worldwide distribution and the more pathogenic F. gigantica restricted to parts of Asia and most of Africa. Of high pathological impact in ruminants, it underlies large livestock husbandry losses. Fascioliasis is moreover of high public health importance and accordingly included within the main neglected tropical diseases by WHO. Additionally, this is an emerging disease due to influences of climate and global changes. In Africa, F. gigantica is distributed throughout almost the whole continent except in the north-western Maghreb countries of Morocco, Algeria a…

General VeterinaryGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybiologybusiness.industryFasciola giganticaDistribution (economics)Nomadic pastoralismGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationGeographyHepaticaVector (epidemiology)HerdNeglected tropical diseasesLivestockbusinessSocioeconomicsTransboundary and emerging diseasesREFERENCES
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Molecular characterization of fasciola spp. From some parts of Iran

2020

Background: Identification of liver flukes, Fasciola hepatica, and Fasciola gigantica by morphometric parameters is not always reliable due to the overlapping measurements. This study aimed to characterize the liver flukes of animals from different parts of Iran by the genetic markers, ITS1, and COXI. Methods: We collected flukes from infected livestock in six provinces of Iran from Sep to Nov 2016. The flukes were identified by amplification of a 680 bp sequence of ITS1 locus followed by a restriction fragment polymorphism (RFLP) assay. The genetic diversity among isolates was evaluated by amplification and sequencing of a 493 bp fragment of the COXI gene. Results: We obtained 38 specimens…

Genetic diversityVeterinary medicine030505 public healthFasciolabiologyMolecular epidemiologyFasciola giganticalcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthFasciola giganticalcsh:RA1-1270Liver flukeFasciola hepaticaIranbiology.organism_classification03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHepaticaparasitic diseasesFasciola hepaticaOriginal Article030212 general & internal medicineRestriction fragment length polymorphism0305 other medical science
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Human case of Fasciola gigantica-like infection, review of human fascioliasis reports in Nepal, and epidemiological analysis within the South Central…

2018

Abstract The diagnosis of a 22 year-old male patient from Kerabari, Morang District, Nepal led to the review of human fascioliasis cases and analysis of the epidemiological situation in that country not included in the WHO fascioliasis map. Symptom onset one month before egg detection and normal levels of ALT and AST did not agree with the 3–4-month migratory period of fascioliasis. A shorter acute phase may happen when the main biliary duct is reached by the migratory juveniles directly from the intestinal lumen. The causal agent was ascribed to F. gigantica-like worms after considering adult fluke morphology, altitude of the patient’s infection area, fasciolid characteristics in the neigh…

Male0301 basic medicineFascioliasisLivestockBuffaloesFasciola giganticaSnails030231 tropical medicinePopulationCattle DiseasesFecesYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNepalAsia WesternAnimalsHumansHelminthseducationSocioeconomicsParasite Egg Counteducation.field_of_studyGoat DiseasesFasciolabiologybusiness.industryGoats030108 mycology & parasitologyLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationFasciolaVector (epidemiology)CattleParasitologyLivestockRural areabusinessActa Parasitologica
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