Changing patterns of serum and bile antibodies in re-infected rats with Clonorchis sinensis. (49/114)

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Experimental and clinical trial of albendazole in the treatment of Clonorchiasis sinensis. (50/114)

Rats and dogs experimentally infected with Clonorchias sinensis metacercariae were treated orally with albendazole. Necropsy done seven days after treatment revealed that the worm reduction rates were 83.6% and 96.8% respectively. Clinically, 131 patients were treated with 3 different dosage regimens in 3 study groups. In patients receiving 5 mg/kg b.i.d. for 7 consecutive days, the stool egg negative conversion rates 1-month and 6-month post treatment were 90% and 92.6%, while in patients receiving 10 mg/kg b.i.d. for 7 consecutive days the rate were both 100%. In another group of patients receiving 10 mg/kg b.i.d. for 3 consecutive days, the 1-month and 3-month average stool egg conversion rates after treatment were only 40.0% and 28.3% respectively. The side reactions of albendazole were mild and transient. The liver and renal function tests, electrocardiography and blood and urine examinations showed no remarkable changes before and after treatment. The therapeutic effect of albendazole is comparable to praziquantel. It has the advantage of clearing various intestinal helminthic infections simultaneously, very low toxicity, excellent tolerance and relatively low cost, though its treatment course for clonorchiasis needs 7 days.  (+info)

Effects of excretory/secretory products from Clonorchis sinensis and the carcinogen dimethylnitrosamine on the proliferation and cell cycle modulation of human epithelial HEK293T cells. (51/114)

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Prevalence of clonorchiasis in southern endemic areas of Korea in 2006. (52/114)

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Prevalence of clonorchiasis in patients with gastrointestinal disease: a Korean nationwide multicenter survey. (53/114)

AIM: To investigate prevalence of Clonorchis sinensis in patients with gastrointestinal symptoms, and the relation of the infection to hepatobiliary diseases in 26 hospitals in Korea. METHODS: Consecutive patients who had been admitted to the Division of Gastroenterology with gastrointestinal symptoms were enrolled from March to April 2005. Of those who had been diagnosed with clonorchiasis, epidemiology and correlation between infection and hepatobiliary diseases were surveyed by questionnaire. RESULTS: Of 3080 patients with gastrointestinal diseases, 396 (12.9%) had clonorchiasis and 1140 patients (37.2%) had a history of eating raw freshwater fish. Of those with a history of raw freshwater fish ingestion, 238 (20.9%) patients had clonorchiasis. Cholangiocarcinoma was more prevalent in C. sinensis-infected patients than non-infected patients [34/396 (8.6%) vs 145/2684 (5.4%), P = 0.015]. Cholangiocarcinoma and clonorchiasis showed statistically significant positive cross-relation (P = 0.008). Choledocholithiasis, cholecystolithiasis, cholangitis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and biliary pancreatitis did not correlate with clonorchiasis. CONCLUSION: Infection rate of clonorchiasis was still high in patients with gastrointestinal diseases in Korea, and has not decreased very much during the last two decades. Cholangiocarcinoma was related to clonorchiasis, which suggested an etiological role for the parasite.  (+info)

Immunohistochemical study on the antigenicity of each organ structure of Clonorchis sinensis. (54/114)

An immunohistochemical study was performed to demonstrate comparative antigenicity of each body structure of the liver fluke, Clonorchis sinensis, such as the digestive tract, reproductive organs, excretory system, tegument and suckers. Indirect immunoperoxidase technique was applied, using formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded sections of C. sinensis as the antigen. Pooled cat sera obtained 10 weeks after an experimental infection with C. sinensis and peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-cat IgG were used as the primary and secondary antibodies, respectively. The intensity of immunohistochemical stain was very sensitive upon the titers of the primary and secondary antibodies, and their optimum dilutions were found to be 1:1,000-1:2,000 and 1:1,000, respectively. The intestinal epithelial cells, intestinal content and excretory bladder showed strong positive coloring reactions even at lower titer (1:2,000) of the primary antibody, whereas the uterine wall and eggs, vitelline glands, and male reproductive organs showed only weak positive reactions despite an increase in the antibody titer (1:1,000). On the other hand, the suckers, tegument, subtegumental cells and other parenchyma portions did not reveal any positive immunoperoxidase reaction at the same antibody titers. From the above results, it is highly suggested that the most potent antigenicity of C. sinensis occur from their excretory-secretory substances originated from the digestive and excretory organs.  (+info)

Infection status of freshwater fish with metacercariae of Clonorchis sinensis in Korea. (55/114)

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A new PCR-based approach indicates the range of Clonorchis sinensis now extends to Central Thailand. (56/114)

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