1.Susceptibility of Laboratory Rodents to Trichinella papuae.
Lakkhana SADAOW ; Pewpan M INTAPAN ; Thidarut BOONMARS ; Nimit MORAKOTE ; Wanchai MALEEWONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(6):629-632
Members of the genus Trichinella are small nematodes that can infect a wide range of animal hosts. However, their infectivity varies depending on the parasite and host species combination. In this study, we examined the susceptibility of 4 species of laboratory rodents, i.e., mice, rats, hamsters, and gerbils to Trichinella papuae, an emerging non-encapsulated Trichinella species. Trichinella spiralis and Trichinella pseudospiralis were also included in this study for comparison. Fifteen animals of each rodent species were infected orally with 100 muscle larvae of each Trichinella species. Intestinal worm burden was determined at day 6 and 10 post-inoculation (PI). The numbers of muscle larvae were examined at day 45 PI. The reproductive capacity index (RCI) of the 3 Trichinella species in different rodent hosts was determined. By day 6 PI, 33.2-69.6% of the inoculated larvae of the 3 Trichinella species became adult worms in the small intestines of the host animals. However, in rats, more than 96% of adult worms of all 3 Trichinella species were expelled from the gut by day 10 PI. In gerbils, only 4.8-18.1% of adult worms were expelled by day 10 PI. In accordance with the intestinal worm burden and the persistence of adults, the RCI was the highest in gerbils with values of 241.5+/-41.0 for T. papuae, 432.6+/-48 for T. pseudospiralis, and 528.6+/-20.6 for T. spiralis. Hamsters ranked second and mice ranked third in susceptibility in terms of the RCI, Rats yielded the lowest parasite RCI for all 3 Trichinella species. Gerbils may be an alternative laboratory animal for isolation and maintenance of Trichinella spp.
Animals
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*Animals, Laboratory
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Cricetinae
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*Disease Susceptibility
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Gerbillinae
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Intestines/parasitology
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Male
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Mice
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Muscles/parasitology
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Parasite Load
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Rats
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Rodent Diseases/*parasitology/pathology
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Trichinella/*growth & development
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Trichinellosis/parasitology/pathology/*veterinary
2.The Fifth Outbreak of Trichinosis in Korea.
Ji Young RHEE ; Sung Tae HONG ; Hye Jung LEE ; Min SEO ; Suk Bae KIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(4):405-408
Trichinosis is a food-borne zoonotic disease caused by the nematode, Trichinella spp., and had been reported several times in Korea. Recently, there was an additional outbreak, involving 5 patients, the findings from which are reported herein. On 30 November 2010, 8 persons ate sashimi of the meat of a wild boar. Then, 2-3 weeks later, they complained of myalgia and fever. Unfortunately, muscle biopsy was not performed, but ELISA was performed using their sera. Two people among 8 were positive for Trichinella on the 34th day post-infection (PI), and 3 patients who initially revealed negative ELISA were additionally proved to be positive for trichinosis on the 42nd day PI. Hence, the confirmed patients of trichinosis were 5 in total in the present outbreak. They were treated with albendazole and discharged uneventfully. This was the fifth outbreak of trichinosis in Korea.
Adult
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Albendazole/therapeutic use
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Animals
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Anthelmintics/therapeutic use
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Antibodies, Helminth/blood
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Disease Outbreaks/*veterinary
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Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
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Female
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Foodborne Diseases/drug therapy/*epidemiology/parasitology
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Humans
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Male
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Meat/*parasitology
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Middle Aged
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Sus scrofa/parasitology
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Swine
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Swine Diseases/parasitology/transmission
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Treatment Outcome
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Trichinella/immunology/*isolation & purification
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Trichinellosis/diagnosis/drug therapy/*epidemiology
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Zoonoses
3.Molecular Identification of a Trichinella Isolate from a Naturally Infected Pig in Tibet, China.
Ling Zhao LI ; Zhong Quan WANG ; Peng JIANG ; Xi ZHANG ; Hui Jun REN ; Jing CUI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(4):381-384
The first human case with trichinellosis was reported in 1964 in Tibet, China. However, up to the present, the etiological agent of trichinellosis has been unclear. The aim of this study was to identify a Tibet Trichinella isolate at a species level by PCR-based methods. Multiplex PCR revealed amplicon of the expected size (173 bp) for Trichinella spiralis in assays containing larval DNA from Tibet Trichinella isolate from a naturally infected pig. The Tibet Trichinella isolate was also identified by PCR amplification of the 5S ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer region (5S ISR) and mitochondrial large-subunit ribosomal RNA (mt-lsrDNA) gene sequences. The results showed that 2 DNA fragments (749 bp and 445 bp) of the Tibet Trichinella isolate were identical to that of the reference isolates of T. spiralis. The Tibet Trichinella isolate might be classifiable to T. spiralis. This is the first report on T. spiralis in southwestern China.
Animals
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DNA, Helminth/chemistry/genetics
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DNA, Mitochondrial/chemistry/genetics
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DNA, Ribosomal/chemistry/genetics
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DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics
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Genotype
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Humans
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Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
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RNA, Ribosomal, 5S/genetics
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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Swine
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Swine Diseases/*parasitology
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Tibet
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Trichinella spiralis/*classification/genetics/isolation & purification
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Trichinellosis/parasitology/*veterinary