Central nervous system involvement in goats undergoing primary infections withTrypanosoma bruceiand relapse infections after chemotherapy
- 6 April 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Parasitology
- Vol. 90 (2) , 255-268
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000050964
Abstract
Relapse of infection after trypanocidal drug treatment of trypanosome infections is normally attributed to drug resistance on the part of the parasite, under-dosage of the drug, or reinfection of the host. We have demonstrated relapse infections in goats arising from none of these. Fourteen goats infected withTrypanosoma bruceisuffered severe illness and 3 died within 45 days. Despite treatment with the trypanocidal drug Berenil, a 4th goat died 2 days later. Recovery of the remainder followed chemotherapy, and in 2 goats, necropsiecl 45 days after treatment, no trypanosomes or abnormalities were detected. However 2–3 months after Berenil chemotherapy, despite trypanosomes being undetectable in the blood during the intervening period, infections in 4 of the remaining 8 animals relapsed. At all stages of the primary and relapse infections, trypanosomes isolated from the blood of the goats were completely susceptible to Berenil when tested in mice, as were parasites isolated from cerebrospinal fluid and brain tissue at necropsy. At the time of treatment, only minimal cellular infiltration was found in the central nervous system (CNS), but death from the relapse infection was associated with a very severe meningoencephalitis. We conclude that the relapse infections were caused by the re-emergence of trypanosornes from the CNS, where sequestered parasites were inaccessible to the trypanocidal effects of the drug.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The brain as a source of relapsing Trypanosoma brucei infection in mice after chemotherapyInternational Journal for Parasitology, 1979
- The relationship between duration of infection with Trypanosoma brucei in mice and the efficacy of chemotherapyParasitology, 1977
- Review of Pathology of Diseases in Domestic and Laboratory Animals Caused by Trypanosoma congolense, T. vivax, T. brucei, T. rhodesiense and T. gambienseVeterinary Pathology, 1972
- The aparasitaemic interval following diminazine aceturate therapy of a relapsing strain ofT. vivax infecting cattleTropical Animal Health and Production, 1971
- An amastigote phase of the sleeping sickness trypanosomeTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1971
- The occult visceral phase of mammalian trypanosomes with special reference to the life cycle of Trypanosoma (Trypanozoon) BruceiTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1971
- The low pathogenicity of trypanosoma brucei to cattleTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1971
- JUNCTIONS BETWEEN INTIMATELY APPOSED CELL MEMBRANES IN THE VERTEBRATE BRAINThe Journal of cell biology, 1969
- THE INITIAL LESION IN EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGIC NEURITISThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1968
- Trypanosoma rhodesiense encephalitisActa Neuropathologica, 1965