Infection of Aedes aegypti with Brugia pahangi administered by enema: results of quantitative infection and loss of infective larvae during blood feeding
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
- Vol. 75 (3) , 354-358
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0035-9203(81)90091-2
Abstract
Chickens were susceptible to infection with three different stocks of the subgenus Trypanozoon: two of presumptive Trypanosoma b. brucei and one of T. b. rhodesiense. Two groups of chickens were used: the first hatched following inoculation with either T. b. brucei or T. b. rhodesiense during embryonic development, and the second were infected as adult birds. In both experimental groups, parasitaemia persisted for prolonged periods, but was mostly subpatent and detectable only by subinoculation of blood into mice. In chickens infected as embryos, parasitaemias were patent for five weeks after hatching, but subpatent thereafter (to weeks 13 to 17). Quantitative estimations of the parasitaemias of seven of the birds hatched from embryos inoculated with T. b. brucei revealed fluctuations in the number of circulating trypanosomes, with an initial peak between days 2 to 9 after hatching. Between weeks 13 to 17 after hatching the chickens appeared to have recovered spontaneously from the trypanosome infections. Homologous challenge at week 20 failed to produce a recrudescence of parasitaemia, indicative of a possible acquired immunity.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationship between protein and proteolytic activity in the midgut of mosquitoesJournal of Insect Physiology, 1975
- Comparisons of microfilaria density in blood sampled by finger-prick, venipuncture, and ingestion by mosquitoes *The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1973
- Transmission des FilariosesAnnales de Parasitologie Humaine et Comparée, 1971
- Experimental transmission of filarial larvae in relation to feeding behaviour of the mosquito vectorsTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1967
- The fate of Brugia pahangi larvae immediately after feeding by infective vector mosquitoesTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1967
- Bancroftian Filariasis in Tanganyika: A Quantitative Study of the Uptake, Fate and Development of Microfilariae ofWuchereria BancroftiinCulex FatigansPathogens and Global Health, 1962
- Transmission of Filarioid NematodesAnnual Review of Entomology, 1961
- Studies on the Intake of Microfilariae by their Insect Vectors, Their Survival, and their Effect on the Survival of their VectorsPathogens and Global Health, 1953
- Factors influencing infection of the mosquito with Dirofilaria immitis (Leidy, 1856)Experimental Parasitology, 1953
- A Study of the Behaviour of the Mouth-Parts of Mosquitoes when Taking Up Blood from Living Tissue; Together with Some Observations on the Ingestion of MicrofilariaePathogens and Global Health, 1939