1.Echinostome Flukes Receovered from Humans in Khammouane Province, Lao PDR.
Jong Yil CHAI ; Woon Mok SOHN ; Tai Soon YONG ; Keeseon S EOM ; Duk Young MIN ; Eui Hyug HOANG ; Bounlay PHAMMASACK ; Bounnaloth INSISIENGMAY ; Han Jong RIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(3):269-272
Echinostome eggs were detected in 22 (1.1%) of 2,074 people residing in riparian villages along the Mekong River in Khammouane Province, Lao PDR. In order to recover the adult flukes, 9 persons were treated with praziquantel and purged with magnesium salts. A total of 55 echinostome specimens (4 species) were recovered from the 9 persons. Echinostoma revolutum (8 specimens) was recovered from 3 persons, Artyfechinostomum malayanum (8 specimens) was from 2 persons, Echinochasmus japonicus (33 specimens) was from 7 persons, and Euparyphium sp. (6 specimens) was from 1 person. In Lao PDR, only human infections with E. japonicus were previously known. Therefore, the present study describes human infections with E. revolutum, A. malayanum, and Euparyphium sp. for the first time in Lao PDR. These results indicate that the surveyed villages of Khammouane Province, Lao PDR are low-grade endemic foci of echinostomiasis.
Adult
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Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage
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Echinostomatidae/*classification/*isolation & purification
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Female
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Humans
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Laos
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Magnesium/administration & dosage
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Male
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage
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Trematode Infections/*parasitology
2.Four Human Cases of Acanthotrema felis (Digenea: Heterophyidae) Infection in Korea.
Jong Yil CHAI ; Jae Lip KIM ; Min SEO
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(3):291-294
Acanthotrema felis is an intestinal trematode of cats originally reported from the Republic of Korea. Only 1 human case infected with a single adult worm has been previously recorded. In the present study, we report 4 human cases infected with a total of 10 worms recovered after anthelmintic treatment and purging. All 4 patients reside in coastal areas of Jeollanam-do, Korea, and have consumed brackish water fish including the gobies, Acanthogobius flavimanus. The worms averaged 0.47 mm in length and 0.27 mm in width, and had 3 sclerites on the ventrogenital sac; 1 was short and thumb-like, another was long and blunt-ended, and the 3rd was long and broad-tipped. They were identified as A. felis Sohn, Han, & Chai, 2003. Surveys on coastal areas to detect further human cases infected with A. felis are required.
Adult
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Animals
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Antiparasitic Agents/administration & dosage
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Feces/parasitology
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Feeding Behavior
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Humans
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Male
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Microscopy
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Middle Aged
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage
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Republic of Korea
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Trematoda/*isolation & purification
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Trematode Infections/*diagnosis/*parasitology
3.Efficacy and adverse effects of film coated praziquantel for treatment of schistosomiasis japonica.
Jing XU ; Jia-gang GUO ; Xiao-hua WU ; Xiao-jun ZENG ; Wei-ping YANG ; Guang-bin YANG ; Jiang ZHENG ; Xiao-nong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2009;43(8):718-722
OBJECTIVETo understand the adverse and curative effects of film coated praziquantel for treatment of schistosomiasis japonica.
METHODSA questionnaire survey was conducted among 6 to 65 years old inhabitants from epidemic areas of schistosomiasis japonica in Jiangxi, Anhui and Hubei provinces, while indirect haemagglutination assay (IHA) was also administrated. The Serological positives were tested by Kato-Katz technique. A total of 509 habitats of serological positives and healthy persons were given praziquantel. 460 targets with no relative symptoms were followed up for adverse effect of drugs in one month and efficacy evaluation of praziquantel was carried out in 104 parasitological positives 3 months post-treatment.
RESULTSThe 84.7% (144/170) individuals thought film coated tablets were no smell or only with little smell while 92.9%(315/339) targets in control group fell that tablets smelled bad. The total side effect rates of film coated praziquantel group and control group in 1-2 hours post-treatment were 20.30% (27/133) and 83.18% (272/327) respectively. There was significantly different between two groups (chi(2) = 164.316, P < 0.05). The adverse effect rates of film coated praziquantel group in neuromuscular system, digestive system and cardiovascular system were 15.79% (21/133), 9.77% (13/133), 2.26% (3/133) individually which were significantly lower than those of control groups with 81.65% (267/327), 49.24% (161/327), 12.84% (42/327) in corresponding systems (chi(2)(neuromuscular system) = 175.188, chi(2)(digestive system) = 62.601, chi(2)(cardiovascular system) = 12.010, P < 0.05). And the adverse effect rate of allergic reaction of film coated group was no significant difference with control group (2.26%(3/133) versus 0.92% (3/327), chi(2) = 1.315, P = 0.235). One day after treatment, the adverse effect rate of film coated tablets of praziquantel decreased to 3.01% (4/133), significantly lower than that of control group (P < 0.05). There was no significant difference after 2 weeks treatment while the adverse effect rates decreased to 0.75%(1/133), 0.61% (2/327) in film coated praziquantel group and control group respectively (chi(2) = 0.029, P = 0.642). The curative rates 3 months post treatment were 84.91% (45/51) in film coated tablets of praziquantel group and 82.35% (42/53) in control group without significant difference (chi(2) = 1.536, P = 0.215).
CONCLUSIONThe smell and adverse effects of film coated tablets of praziquantel were decreased significantly and its efficacy for treatment of schistosomiasis japonica was equal to the control tablets. The film coated tablets of praziquantel might be applied in field widely after a further verification.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Child ; China ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Praziquantel ; administration & dosage ; adverse effects ; therapeutic use ; Schistosomiasis japonica ; drug therapy ; Tablets ; Treatment Outcome ; Young Adult
4.Prevalence of the Intestinal Flukes Haplorchis taichui and H. yokogawai in a Mountainous Area of Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR.
Jong Yil CHAI ; Tai Soon YONG ; Keeseon S EOM ; Duk Young MIN ; Eun Hee SHIN ; Virasack BANOUVONG ; Bounnaloth INSISIENGMAY ; Sithat INSISIENGMAY ; Bounlay PHOMMASACK ; Han Jong RIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2010;48(4):339-342
Phongsaly Province, located in the northernmost area of Lao PDR, was previously suggested to be endemic for the liver fluke Opisthorchis viverrini infection. To confirm, or rule out, this suggestion, the Phonxay village in the Khoua District, Phongsaly Province, was selected for a survey. Ten volunteers (8 men and 2 women aged 31-57 years) who consumed raw freshwater fish and had gastrointestinal troubles were treated with a single dose of praziquantel (40 mg/kg) and pyrantel pamoate (10 mg/kg) and purged with magnesium sulfate to recover any worm parasites. Eight of the 10 volunteers expelled 1 or more species of trematodes, nematodes, or cestodes (worm positive rate; 80%). The worms were morphologically identified as H. taichui (861 worms from 8 people), H. yokogawai (59 from 6 people), Phaneropsolus bonnei (1 from 1 person), Trichostrongylus sp. (2 from 2 people), Ascaris lumbricoides (2 from 1 person), Enterobius vermicularis (11 from 3 people), and Taenia saginata (1 strobila with scolex from 1 person). The results indicate that the mountainous area of Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR, is not endemic for the liver fluke but endemic for intestinal flukes, in particular, Haplorchis taichui and H. yokogawai.
Adult
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Animals
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Antiparasitic Agents/administration & dosage
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Feces/parasitology
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Female
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Heterophyidae/anatomy & histology/classification/*isolation & purification
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Humans
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Laos/epidemiology
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage
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Prevalence
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Pyrantel Pamoate/administration & dosage
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Trematode Infections/drug therapy/*epidemiology/*parasitology
5.Control of clonorchiasis by repeated praziquantel treatment and low diagnostic efficacy of sonography.
Sung Tae HONG ; Kisung YOON ; Mejeong LEE ; Min SEO ; Min Ho CHOI ; Jung Suk SIM ; Byung Ihn CHOI ; Chong Ku YUN ; Soon Hyung LEE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 1998;36(4):249-254
In Korea, Clonorchis sinensis infection is still highly prevalent because case detection in the field is difficult and the detected cases used to be incompletely cured due to treatment failure. The present study tried to control clonorchiasis in an endemic village by repeated treatments with praziquantel every 6 months and to evaluate sonography as a diagnostic measure. By stool examinations, the egg positive rate in the endemic village was 22.7%, but it decreased to 19.6% at 6 months, 15.1% at 12 months. 12.2% at 18 months, 6.3% at 24 months, 11.4% at 30 months, and 6.3% at 42 months after the beginning of repeated praziquantel administration. The sonography showed 61 (49.6%) positive cases of 123 screened residents: among egg-positives the sonography positive rate was 52.2% and among egg-negatives it was still 49%. The rate among cured cases was 64.3% after 6 months, 50.0% after 12 months, 50.0% after 18 months, and 66.7% after 24 months. In a non-endemic village, 64 residents were found egg-negative by fecal examination, but 20 (31.3%) of them were positive by sonography. The present findings indicate that control of clonorchiasis in an endemic village by repeated praziquantel treatment for 42 months is still insufficient and sonography is of little value for diagnosis of clonorchiasis.
Animal
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Antiplatyhelmintic Agents/administration & dosage*
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Clonorchiasis/ultrasonography*
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Clonorchiasis/prevention & control
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Clonorchiasis/epidemiology
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Follow-Up Studies
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Human
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Korea/epidemiology
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Parasite Egg Count
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage*
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Prevalence
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Treatment Failure
6.Echinostoma ilocanum Infection in Oddar Meanchey Province, Cambodia.
Woon Mok SOHN ; Hyeong Jin KIM ; Tai Soon YONG ; Keeseon S EOM ; Hoo Gn JEONG ; Jae Kwang KIM ; A Reum KANG ; Mok Ryun KIM ; Jung Mi PARK ; Soo Hyeon JI ; Muth SINUON ; Duong SOCHEAT ; Jong Yil CHAI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(2):187-190
Fecal examinations using the Kato Katz technique were performed on a total of 1,287 villagers (945 students and 342 general inhabitants) of Oddar Meanchey Province, Cambodia in May 2007 and November 2009. The overall intestinal helminth egg positive rate was 23.9%, and the most prevalent helminth species was hookworms (21.6%). Other helminth eggs detected included echinostomes (1.0%), Enterobius vermicularis (0.8%), small trematode eggs (0.7%), which may include Opisthorchis viverrini and Haplorchis spp., and Hymenolepis nana (0.4%). In order to recover adult echinostomes, we treated 2 patients with 10-15 mg/kg praziquantel and purged. Total 14 adult echinostomes, 1 and 13 worms from each patient, were collected. The echinostomes characteristically had 49-51 collar spines and 2 round or slightly lobated testes. They were identified as Echinostoma ilocanum (Garrison, 1908) Odhner, 1911. So far as literature are concerned, this is the first record on the discovery of human E. ilocanum infection in Cambodia.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage
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Cambodia/epidemiology
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Child
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Feces/parasitology
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Female
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Helminthiasis/*epidemiology/parasitology
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Helminths/*classification/*isolation & purification
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Humans
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Male
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage
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Prevalence
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Rural Population
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Young Adult
7.Four Human Cases of Diphyllobothrium latum Infection.
Hee Jung CHOI ; Junghye LEE ; Hyun Jong YANG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(2):143-146
Diphyllobothrium latum infections in 4 young Korean men detected from 2008 to 2012 are presented. Three were diagnosed based on spontaneously discharged strobila of the adult worm in their feces, and 1 case was diagnosed by finding the worm at colonoscopy examination in a local clinic. The morphologic characteristics of the gravid proglottid and eggs were consistent with D. latum. All patients were treated with praziquantel 15 mg/kg, and follow-up stool examinations were done at 2 months after the medication. The main clinical complaints were intermittent gastrointestinal troubles such as indigestion, abdominal distension, and spontaneous discharge of tapeworm's segments in their feces. The most probable source of infection was the flesh of salmon or trout according to a patient's past history. These are the 45th to 48th recorded cases diagnosed by the adult worm in the Republic of Korea since 1971.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage
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Colonoscopy
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Diphyllobothriasis/*diagnosis/drug therapy/parasitology/*pathology
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Diphyllobothrium/anatomy & histology/*isolation & purification
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Feces/parasitology
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Humans
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Male
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Microscopy
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage
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Republic of Korea
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Young Adult
8.Hypersensitive Reaction to Praziquantel in a Clonorchiasis Patient.
Jung Min LEE ; Hyun Sul LIM ; Sung Tae HONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(3):273-275
Praziquantel is the drug of choice for clonorchiasis. Since clonorchiasis is endemic in most river basins, praziquantel has been widely used for 30 years in Korea. A 54-year-old Korean woman suffered from hypersensitive reactions, such as nausea, dyspnea, rash, and urticaria after taking the first dose of praziquantel to treat clonorchiasis. She ingested one dose again and the same symptoms appeared, and she was treated at a clinic with anti-histamines. She tried one more dose with anti-histamines but found the same symptoms. Later, she was found to pass eggs of Clonorchis sinensis and medicated with flubendazole. The hypersensitive reaction to praziquantel is rare but occurs. This is the 5th case report in the world.
Animals
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Anthelmintics/*administration & dosage/*adverse effects
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Clonorchiasis/*complications/*drug therapy
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Clonorchis sinensis/isolation & purification
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Drug Hypersensitivity/*diagnosis/drug therapy/pathology
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Feces/parasitology
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Female
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Histamine Antagonists/administration & dosage
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Humans
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Mebendazole/administration & dosage/analogs & derivatives
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Middle Aged
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Praziquantel/*administration & dosage/*adverse effects
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Republic of Korea
9.Development of resistance to reinfection by Clonorchis sinensis in rats.
Byung Suk CHUNG ; Hongman ZHANG ; Min Ho CHOI ; Deogkyu JEON ; Shunyu LI ; Mejeong LEE ; Sung Tae HONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2004;42(1):19-26
We investigated the induction of resistance to Clonorchis sinensis infection by prior infection in rat and hamster models. Animals were challenged with C. sinensis metacercariae, then treated with praziquantel and reinfected. Worm recovery rate in reinfected animals was used to estimate resistance to reinfection. The determined resistance rates to reinfection in rats and hamsters were 97.7% and 10.3%, respectively. In rats, cure from the primary infection of C. sinensis increased resistant to reinfection, and the greatert the worm burden and the longer the duration of primary infection, the higher was the resistance rate. For primary infection doses of 10, 40 and 100 metacercariae per rat, the resistance rates were 87.4%, 93.8% and 98.4%, respectively. The resistance rates in rats after 2 or 8-week primary infection were 78.7% and 95.3%, respectively. All worms recovered from reinfected rats were immature. When cured rats were administered with methylprednisolone, resistance to reinfection became impaired. These findings indicate that rats develop a high degree of resistance to reinfection by C. sinensis after cure. The growths and maturations of reinfected worms were also impaired.
Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage/therapeutic use
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Anti-Inflammatory Agents/administration & dosage
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Clonorchiasis/*immunology/parasitology/*pathology
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Clonorchis sinensis/*pathogenicity
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Disease Models, Animal
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Female
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Hamsters
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Immunocompetence
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Immunosuppression
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Male
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Mesocricetus
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Methylprednisolone/administration & dosage
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage/therapeutic use
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
10.Bile duct changes in rats reinfected with Clonorchis sinensis.
Dongil CHOI ; Sung Tae HONG ; Shunyu LI ; Byung Suk CHUNG ; Jae Hoon LIM ; Soon Hyung LEE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2004;42(1):7-17
This study describes an evaluation of the sonographic, cholangiographic, pathological, and immunological findings, and the protective effect shown by rats reinfected with Clonorchis sinensis. Eight experimental rat groups were, namely, a normal control, a primary infection control, a reinfection I (reinfection 7 week after treatment following 3-week infection), a reinfection II (reinfection 2 week after treatment following 8-week infection), a reinfection III (exploration of the intrahepatic bile ducts 1 week after reinfection 4 week after treatment following 4-week infection), a superinfection, a secondary infection control, and an infection following immunization group. Sonographic and cholangiographic findings showed moderate or marked dilatation of the bile duct confluence in the primary infection control, reinfection II, and secondary infection control groups. Juvenile worms survived in the intrahepatic bile ducts 1 week after reinfection following treatment in the reinfection III group. It was concluded that reinfecting juvenile worms found during the first week following reinfection failed to survive or grow further. Anatomical, pathophysiological, or immunological changes may induce protection from reinfection in rats.
Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage/therapeutic use
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Antibodies, Helminth/blood
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Antigens, Helminth/administration & dosage/immunology
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Bile Duct Diseases/parasitology/*pathology/ultrasonography
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Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic/parasitology/*pathology/ultrasonography
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Cholangiography
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Clonorchiasis/parasitology/*pathology/ultrasonography
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Clonorchis sinensis/*pathogenicity
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Immunization
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Praziquantel/administration & dosage/therapeutic use
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Sound Spectrography
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Support, Non-U.S. Gov't