Literature DB >> 16402562

Parasites of the squirrel Sciurus spadiceus (Rodentia: Sciuridae) from Amazonian Brasil, with particular reference to Eimeria damnosa n. sp. (Apicompiexa: Eimeriidae).

R Lainson1, M C O Brigido, F T Silveira.   

Abstract

A description is given of the mature oocysts and endogenous stages of Eimeria damnosa n. sp. from the small intestine of the red squirrel, Sciurus spadiceus, from the State of Acre, north Brazil. Ten of 12 animals examined were infected. Oocysts ovoid to ellipsoidal, occasionally cylindrical but not with parallel sides, 30.2 x 20.0 microm (18.0 x 15.0-40.2 x 30.0), shape-index (ratio length/width) 1.5 (1.3-1.8), n = 40. Oocyst wall smooth, colourless, with no micropyle, apparently of a single layer measuring approximately 1.0-1.5 microm thick. No oocyst residuum, but approximately 50 % of the oocysts with a single spherical, ovoid or dumbbell-shaped polar body. Sporocysts pear-shaped, 15.0 x 8.0 microm (11.0 x 6.0-16.0 x 8.0), shape index 1.9 (1.8-2.0), n = 33. Stieda body, if it merits this name, appears only as a slight thickening of the sporocyst wall at the more pointed extremity. Endogenous stages intracytoplasmic in the epithelial cells of the duodenum and throughout the ileum, above the host cell nucleus. Sporulation frequently completed in the lumen of the intestine, but most oocysts mature outside the host at some time within 24 hours. Massive infections may result in extensive desquamation of the gut epithelium, and sometimes in the death of the animal. In addition to this coccidian, one squirrel showed abundant trophozoites of a Giardia sp., in the ileum. The liver of two others contained developing and mature meronts, producing large numbers of slender merozoites, and other cyst-like bodies containing a small number of large zoites (sporozoites?). No parasites were detected in the blood of any of the squirrels that could be associated with this unidentified protozoan. Histological sections of the ileum of one squirrel revealed a globidium-like parasite in the lamina propria: it contained a very large number of slender, curved zoites. Three animals were with a sheathed microfilaria in the peripheral blood and liver smears. Finally, a Trypanosoma cruzi-like trypanosome was isolated from the blood of one squirrel and a T. lewisi-like trypanosome from two others.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16402562     DOI: 10.1051/parasite/2005124305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasite        ISSN: 1252-607X            Impact factor:   3.000


  2 in total

1.  Three new species of Eimeria Schneider 1875 in the montane grass mouse, Akodon montensis (Rodentia: Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae), and redescription of Eimeria zygodontomyis Lainson and Shaw 1990 from southeastern Brazil.

Authors:  Marcos Tobias de Santana Miglionico; Lúcio André Viana; Helene Santos Barbosa; Ester Maria Mota; Sócrates Fraga da Costa Neto; Paulo Sergio D'Andrea; Edwards Frazão-Teixeira
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2019-12-09       Impact factor: 2.289

Review 2.  Giardiasis as a neglected disease in Brazil: Systematic review of 20 years of publications.

Authors:  Camila Henriques Coelho; Maurício Durigan; Diego Averaldo Guiguet Leal; Adriano de Bernardi Schneider; Regina Maura Bueno Franco; Steven M Singer
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2017-10-24
  2 in total

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