| Literature DB >> 1216333 |
B O Duke, P J Moore, J Vincelette.
Abstract
The effect of various substances on the output of Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae in the urine was investigated in volunteers infected with the Cameroon forest and Sudan-savanna strains of the parasite. Output of microfilariae in the urine tended to be higher during periods of normal activity than during sleep. During waking hours, the rate of output remained generally steady, but in some patients occasional showers of microfilariae appeared in the urine, possibly associated with the intake of food and drink. Drinking 1.2-2.5 litres water produced a shower of microfilariae in the urine of some subjects. This began within an hour of drinking and its onset preceeded that of the diuresis. Thiazide diuretics, acting on the convoluted tubules, produced no increase in microfilaruria. In savanna subjects intravenous injection of DT TAB vaccine caused pyrexia, and simultaneously large numbers of microfilariae appeared in the urine. There was no associated diuresis, and no increase in the concentration of microfilariae in the venous blood. In forest subjects DT TAB caused no increase in microfilaruria. In all subjects 25-50 mg diethylcarbamazine (DEC) caused large numbers of microfilariae to appear in the urine on day 0, within a few hours of the first dose; and there was an increased output of urine over the first 24 hours. Microfilaruria declined sharply on day 1 of treatment, but in subjects developing a high microfilaraemia, it rose again on day 2, and declined more slowly thereafter. Betamethazone, given in conjunction with DEC, appeared to slow the rate of destruction of microfilariae in the skin and lymph glands, and to prolong the duration of microfilaraemia and microfilaruria. The findings suggest that there is a reservoir of microfilariae in the glomerular capillaries, which fills slowly by accumulating microfilariae from the circulating blood. The microfilariae probably enter the urine by penetrating the glomerular capillary.Entities:
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Year: 1975 PMID: 1216333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tropenmed Parasitol ISSN: 0303-4208