Search results for "hepatica"

showing 10 items of 101 documents

Molecular characterisation of Galba truncatula, Lymnaea neotropica and L. schirazensis from Cajamarca, Peru and their potential role in transmission …

2012

Abstract Background Human and animal fascioliasis is emerging in many world regions, among which Andean countries constitute the largest regional hot spot and Peru the country presenting more human endemic areas. A survey was undertaken on the lymnaeid snails inhabiting the hyperendemic area of Cajamarca, where human prevalences are the highest known among the areas presenting a "valley transmission pattern", to establish which species are present, genetically characterise their populations by comparison with other human endemic areas, and discuss which ones have transmission capacity and their potential implications with human and animal infection. Methods Therefore, ribosomal DNA ITS-2 an…

EntomologyDisease reservoirMitochondrial DNAFascioliasisSnailsZoologyDNA MitochondrialPolymerase Chain ReactionHost-Parasite Interactionslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesRNA Ribosomal 16SPeruFasciola hepaticaAnimalsHumanslcsh:RC109-216Galba truncatulaDisease ReservoirsPopulation DensityFasciolabiologyBase SequenceEcologyResearchbiology.organism_classificationFasciolaInfectious DiseasesGalbaParasitologyLarvaCyclooxygenase 1ParasitologyParasites & Vectors
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A new baseline for fascioliasis in Venezuela: lymnaeid vectors ascertained by DNA sequencing and analysis of their relationships with human and anima…

2011

Abstract Background Human and animal fascioliasis poses serious public health problems in South America. In Venezuela, livestock infection represents an important veterinary problem whereas there appear to be few human cases reported, most of which are passively detected in health centres. However, results of recent surveys suggest that the situation may be underestimated in particular areas. To obtain a baseline for future fascioliasis assessment, studies were undertaken by means of rDNA ITS-2 and ITS-1 and mtDNA cox 1 sequencing to clarify the specific status of Venezuelan lymnaeids, their geographical distribution and fascioliasis transmission capacity, by comparison with other American …

EntomologyFascioliasisOld WorldLivestockPseudosuccinea columellaFaunaMolecular Sequence DataSnailsZoologyDisease Vectorslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesAnimalsHumanslcsh:RC109-216Amino Acid SequencePhylogenyGalba truncatulabiologyBase Sequencebusiness.industryEcologyResearchSequence Analysis DNAFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationVenezuelaInfectious DiseasesParasitologyVector (epidemiology)ParasitologyLivestockbusinessParasites & Vectors
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Lymnaea schirazensis, an Overlooked Snail Distorting Fascioliasis Data: Genotype, Phenotype, Ecology, Worldwide Spread, Susceptibility, Applicability

2011

BackgroundLymnaeid snails transmit medical and veterinary important trematodiases, mainly fascioliasis. Vector specificity of fasciolid parasites defines disease distribution and characteristics. Different lymnaeid species appear linked to different transmission and epidemiological patterns. Pronounced susceptibility differences to absolute resistance have been described among lymnaeid populations. When assessing disease characteristics in different endemic areas, unexpected results were obtained in studies on lymnaeid susceptibility to Fasciola. We undertook studies to understand this disease transmission heterogeneity.Methodology/principal findingsA ten-year study in Iran, Egypt, Spain, t…

EpidemiologyInternational CooperationSnailAnimal PhylogeneticsGlobal HealthPolymerase Chain ReactionMalacologyFoodborne DiseasesGlobal Change EcologyComparative AnatomyPhylogenyLymnaeaGalba truncatulaMolecular EpidemiologyMultidisciplinaryEcologyGeographybiologyZoonotic DiseasesEcologyQRMalacologyInfectious DiseasesPhenotypeBiogeographyVeterinary DiseasesMedicinePublic HealthResearch ArticleNeglected Tropical DiseasesDisease EcologyFascioliasisConservation of Natural ResourcesSpecies complexFasciolosisGenotypeScienceZoologyDNA MitochondrialDNA RibosomalInfectious Disease EpidemiologyIntraspecific competitionVeterinary EpidemiologyHepaticaPhylogeneticsbiology.animalparasitic diseasesGeneticsParasitic DiseasesAnimalsBiologyEvolutionary BiologyModels GeneticSelfingSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationBiomarker EpidemiologyHaplotypesAnimal TaxonomyBioindicatorsParasitologyVeterinary ScienceZoologyPopulation GeneticsBiomarkersHelminthologyPLoS ONE
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Phenotypic analysis of adults and eggs of Fasciola hepatica by computer image analysis system

2005

AbstractKnowledge of the morphological phenotypes of the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica (Trematoda: Digenea) is analysed. The influence of parasite age on its dimensions, the adult fluke growth model, variation in a biometric variable versus time, and variation in a biometric variable versus another biometric variable (allometric model) are revised. The most useful allometric model appears to be (y2m]#x2212;y2)/y2=c [(y1m−y1)/y1]b, where y1=body area or body length, y2=one of the measurements analysed, y1m, y2m=maximum values towards which y1 and y2, respectively, tend, and c, b=constants. A method based on material standardization, the measurement proposal and allometric analysis is detaile…

FascioliasisBiometryZoologyDigeneaHost-Parasite InteractionsHepaticaImage Processing Computer-AssistedAnimalsParasite hostingFasciola hepaticaRats WistarParasite Egg CountbiologyAltitudeComputer imageGeneral MedicineAnatomyFasciola hepaticaLiver flukebiology.organism_classificationRatsPhenotypeAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyAllometryTrematodaJournal of Helminthology
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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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Remote sensing and climate data as a key for understanding fasciolosis transmission in the Andes: review and update of an ongoing interdisciplinary p…

2006

Fasciolosis caused by Fasciola hepatica in various South American countries located on the slopes of the Andes has been recognized as an important public health problem. However, the importance of this zoonotic hepatic parasite was neglected until the last decade. Countries such as Peru and Bolivia are considered to be hyperendemic areas for human and animal fasciolosis, and other countries such as Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela are also affected. At the beginning of the 1990s a multidisciplinary project was launched with the aim to shed light on the problems related to this parasitic disease in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano. A few years later, a geographic information system (GIS…

FascioliasisHealth (social science)Geographic information systemAdvanced very-high-resolution radiometerGeography Planning and DevelopmentMedicine (miscellaneous)lcsh:G1-922Risk Assessmentfasciolosis geographic information system climatic forecast indices remote sensing data Andes.Normalized Difference Vegetation IndexTropical climatemedicineAnimalsHumansFasciolosisRemote sensinggeographyTropical Climategeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industryHealth PolicyFasciola hepaticaSouth Americamedicine.diseaseRemote sensing (archaeology)Epidemiological MonitoringGeographic Information SystemsInterdisciplinary CommunicationEpidemiological MonitoringbusinessMountain rangelcsh:Geography (General)Environmental MonitoringProgram EvaluationGeospatial Health
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Fascioliasis transmission by Lymnaea neotropica confirmed by nuclear rDNA and mtDNA sequencing in Argentina

2009

Fascioliasis is widespread in livestock in Argentina. Among activities included in a long-term initiative to ascertain which are the fascioliasis areas of most concern, studies were performed in a recreational farm, including liver fluke infection in different domestic animal species, classification of the lymnaeid vector and verification of natural transmission of fascioliasis by identification of the intramolluscan trematode larval stages found in naturally infected snails. The high prevalences in the domestic animals appeared related to only one lymnaeid species present. Lymnaeid and trematode classification was verified by means of nuclear ribosomal DNA and mitochondrial DNA marker sequ…

FascioliasisMitochondrial DNAArgentinaZoologyDNA MitochondrialDNA Ribosomal18S ribosomal RNAElectron Transport Complex IVDNA Ribosomal Spacerparasitic diseasesRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsFasciola hepaticaRibosomal DNAFreshwater molluscLymnaeaGalba truncatulaGeneral VeterinarybiologyEcologySequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationFasciolaLarvaCattleParasitologyType localityVeterinary Parasitology
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DNA sequence characterisation and phylogeography of Lymnaea cousini and related species, vectors of fascioliasis in northern Andean countries, with d…

2011

Abstract Background Livestock fascioliasis is a problem throughout Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela, mainly in Andean areas where the disease also appears to affect humans. Transmission patterns and epidemiological scenarios of liver fluke infection have shown to differ according to the lymnaeid vector snail species involved. These Andean countries present the vectors Lymnaea cousini, L. bogotensis and L. ubaquensis, unknown in the rest of Latin America. An exhaustive combined haplotype study of these species is performed by means of DNA sequencing of the nuclear ribosomal 18S RNA gene, ITS-2 and ITS-1, and mitochondrial DNA cox 1 gene. Results The conserved 5.8S rDNA sequence corroborated t…

FascioliasisMitochondrial DNAPseudosuccinea columellaMolecular Sequence DataZoologyColombiaDisease VectorsDNA Ribosomal18S ribosomal RNALymnaeidaelcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesHepaticaDNA Ribosomal SpacerRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsCluster Analysislcsh:RC109-216LymnaeabiologyPhylogenetic treeResearchSequence Analysis DNAVenezuelabiology.organism_classificationRNA Ribosomal 5.8SPhylogeographyPhylogeographyInfectious DiseasesCyclooxygenase 1MicrosatelliteParasitologyEcuadorParasites & Vectors
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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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