| Literature DB >> 12354530 |
J I Alvarez1, D P Londoño, A L Alvarez, J Trujillo, M M Jaramillo, B I Restrepo.
Abstract
Taenia solium cysticerci infect human beings and pigs, causing cysticercosis. In this study the pig was used as a model to characterize the immune response against cysticerci, given the difficulties in analysing the developing immune response in infected human brains. Metacestodes in different stages of viability or degeneration were isolated from the brain, heart and skeletal muscle of naturally infected swine, and the adjacent tissue was examined histologically. The immune response elicited by the cysticerci was classified into four separate stages. In stage I the parasites were surrounded by a thin layer of collagen type I, and by stage II there was a sparse inflammatory infiltrate. In stage III, granuloma formation was evident, and by stage IV the parasite was surrounded by an eosinophil-rich infiltrate and its vesicular membrane had begun to degenerate. The final stage, IV, was detected mainly in the heart but not in the brain. The granulomatous reaction in swine resembled that described previously in human patients, but differed in the abundance of eosinophils, the relative paucity of plasma cells, and the discrete deposition of collagen. These differences were probably due to the fact that in pigs the immune response can be examined earlier than in human patients, in whom sampling is inevitably made at a more chronic stage.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12354530 DOI: 10.1053/jcpa.2002.0579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Pathol ISSN: 0021-9975 Impact factor: 1.311