Literature DB >> 1776782

The murid filaria Monanema martini: a model for onchocerciasis. Part I. Description of lesions.

P N Vuong1, S Wanji, L Sakka, S Klager, O Bain.   

Abstract

A study of the anatomo-pathological lesions induced by Monanema martini, a filaria with skin-dwelling microfilariae, was performed using 65 Lemniscomys striatus fixed from 30 minutes to 36 months after inoculation of the infective larvae, 5 Arvicanthis niloticus and 3 Meriones unguiculatus fixed during the patent phase, and controls. Attempts at quantification of lesions in L. striatus was made. Approximately 20% of L. striatus had microfilariae in the eyeballs, and many more presented ocular lesions. The delay of the patent period seems to have more effects on the gravity of lesions than repeated inoculations. The location of the lesions and parasites presuppose that microfilariae enter the eyeball through the lymphatic capillaries of the irido-corneal angles. Cutaneous lesions were often severe: there is a parallel between the importance of lesions and the abundance of microfilariae. Larvae are responsible for damage to various structures of the lymphatic system (thrombo-lymphangitis, acute or granulomatous lymphadenitis...) into which they migrate, explaining the mechanism of elephantiasis. These rodent lesions appear similar to those observed in human onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis. Whatever the M. martini stage and the organ examined, major lesions belonged to the inflammatory process. Various types of inflammatory reaction (acute, subacute, or chronic inflammation, scarring sclerosis etc.) can co-exist within a single tissue area. The accidental escape of a microfilaria from a lymphatic capillary into the connective tissue (including the corneal stroma) induces an inflammatory reaction. Thus M. martini, as human Onchocerca species, causes a chronic disease, associating recent lesions to old ones.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1776782     DOI: 10.1051/parasite/1991663109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Parasitol Hum Comp        ISSN: 0003-4150


  4 in total

1.  Drastic reduction of a filarial infection in eosinophilic interleukin-5 transgenic mice.

Authors:  C Martin; L Le Goff; M N Ungeheuer; P N Vuong; O Bain
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2000-06       Impact factor: 3.441

2.  New insights into the evolution of Wolbachia infections in filarial nematodes inferred from a large range of screened species.

Authors:  Emanuele Ferri; Odile Bain; Michela Barbuto; Coralie Martin; Nathan Lo; Shigehiko Uni; Frederic Landmann; Sara G Baccei; Ricardo Guerrero; Sueli de Souza Lima; Claudio Bandi; Samuel Wanji; Moustapha Diagne; Maurizio Casiraghi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-06-22       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  The human parasite Loa loa in cytokine and cytokine receptor gene knock out BALB/c mice: survival, development and localization.

Authors:  Nicholas Tendongfor; Samuel Wanji; Julius C Ngwa; Mathias E Esum; Sabine Specht; Peter Enyong; Klaus I Matthaei; Achim Hoerauf
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2012-02-21       Impact factor: 3.876

4.  Monanema joopi n. sp. (Nematoda, Onchocercidae) from Acomys (Acomys) spinosissimus Peters, 1852 (Muridae) in South Africa, with comments on the filarial genus.

Authors:  K Junker; K Medger; H Lutermann; O Bain
Journal:  Parasite       Date:  2012-11       Impact factor: 3.000

  4 in total

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