Literature DB >> 809563

Intracellular (muscle-fiber) habitat of Ancylostoma caninum in some mammalian hosts.

K T Lee, M D Little, P C Beaver.   

Abstract

The persistence and precise location of Ancylostoma caninum larvae in tissues of vertebrate paratenic hosts and the nature of host responses were studied in mouse, cat, and monkey. Mice were infected percutaneously and examined at various intervals up to 260 days after exposure. Long-persisting larvae were found only in the muscles. Histologic sections revealed that within 4 hr after exposure some larvae had migrated through the skin and had entered individual fibers of the underlying muscles. After the 1st day nearly all larvae found in muscles were within fibers. Granuloma formation and encapsulation were not observed, suggesting that inside the fibers the larvae produced no direct inflammatory reaction. Only diffuse infiltration of inflammatory cells was observed in muscles and this appeared to be in response to destruction of muscle fibers. Larvae were similarly located in muscles of a cat and a rhesus monkey examined 16 and 17 days, respectively, after cutaneous exposure. The histologic changes observed in muscle fibers invaded by A. caninum larvae are similar to those observed in early Trichinella spiralis infections. The larvae of A. canninum lying coiled within the muscle fibers also bear superficial resemblance to the larvae of T. spiralis. A. caninum larvae were also recovered by tissue digestion from muscles of naturally infected dogs, which suggests that larvae reside in this location in the bitch prior to transfer to the neonate via the milk.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 809563

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Parasitol        ISSN: 0022-3395            Impact factor:   1.276


  4 in total

1.  The efficacy of anthelmintics against third stage larvae of Ancylostoma caninum in Mastomys natalensis.

Authors:  G Lämmler; A Y El-Gendi
Journal:  Z Parasitenkd       Date:  1978-12-21

2.  Parasite infections in a social carnivore: Evidence of their fitness consequences and factors modulating infection load.

Authors:  Susana Carolina Martins Ferreira; Heribert Hofer; Luis Madeira de Carvalho; Marion L East
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-07-11       Impact factor: 2.912

Review 3.  Of dogs and hookworms: man's best friend and his parasites as a model for translational biomedical research.

Authors:  Catherine Shepherd; Phurpa Wangchuk; Alex Loukas
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2018-01-25       Impact factor: 3.876

4.  High-throughput multiplex qPCRs for the surveillance of zoonotic species of canine hookworms.

Authors:  Luca Massetti; Vito Colella; Patsy A Zendejas; Dinh Ng-Nguyen; Lana Harriott; Lara Marwedel; Anke Wiethoelter; Rebecca J Traub
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2020-06-15
  4 in total

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