Pathologic Changes of Human Onchocerciasis: Implications for Future Research
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 7 (6) , 809-819
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinids/7.6.809
Abstract
Onchocerciasis — infection by Onchocerca volvulus — has four cardinal manifestations: dermatitis, subcutaneous nodules, sclerosing lymphadenitis, and eye disease. The first three are discussed here. The dermatitis begins when micro filariae degenerate in the dermis. This process is accompanied by inflammation, with degranulation of eosinophils and deposition of the major basic protein of the eosinophil granules on the cuticle of the microfilariae. So far as is known, the chronic effects of onchocerciasis are all a consequence of the degeneration of microfilariae. Subcutaneous nodules contain coiled adult worms and have an outer layer of fibrous scar and a central inflammatory cell exudate, which may cavitate. Perfusion of India ink reveals arborization of capillaries around adult worms, which derive nutrition from these networks. Onchocercal lymphadenitis is characterized initially by histiocytic hyperplasia and follicular atrophy and later by fibrosis and obstruction of lymph flow, a condition causing adenolymphocele (“hanging groin”) and elephantiasis of the genitalia. Some patients appear to have immune tolerance to degenerating microfilariae, perhaps as a result of exposure in utero to microfilarial antigens in the maternal circulation. In contrast, other patients (Yemenites, for example) have a localized but intense response to a few micro filariae; these patients are hypersensitive — perhaps because they were not exposed to microfilarial antigens in utero. Autopsy data on infection of deep organs are limited.Keywords
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