Genetic and antigenic evidence supports the separation of Hepatozoon canis and Hepatozoon americanum at the species level. (17/479)

Recognition of Hepatozoon canis and Hepatozoon americanum as distinct species was supported by the results of Western immunoblotting of canine anti-H. canis and anti-H. americanum sera against H. canis gamonts. Sequence analysis of 368 bases near the 3' end of the 18S rRNA gene from each species revealed a pairwise difference of 13.59%.  (+info)

The impact of health communication and enhanced laboratory-based surveillance on detection of cyclosporiasis outbreaks in California. (18/479)

We investigated the timing of diagnosis, influence of media information on testing for Cyclospora, and the method used to identify cases during eight cyclosporiasis outbreaks in California in spring of 1997. We found that Internet information, media reports, and enhanced laboratory surveillance improved detection of these outbreaks.  (+info)

Malaria, intestinal parasites, and schistosomiasis among Barawan Somali refugees resettling to the United States: a strategy to reduce morbidity and decrease the risk of imported infections. (19/479)

In 1997, enhanced health assessments were performed for 390 (10%) of approximately 4,000 Barawan refugees resettling to the United States. Of the refugees who received enhanced assessments, 26 (7%) had malaria parasitemia and 128 (38%) had intestinal parasites, while only 2 (2%) had Schistosoma haematobium eggs in the urine. Mass therapy for malaria (a single oral dose of 25 mg/kg of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine) was given to all Barawan refugees 1-2 days before resettlement. Refugees >2 years of age and nonpregnant women received a single oral dose of 600 mg albendazole for intestinal parasite therapy. If mass therapy had not been provided, upon arrival in the United States an estimated 280 (7%) refugees would have had malaria infections and 1,500 (38%) would have had intestinal parasites. We conclude that enhanced health assessments provided rapid on-site assessment of parasite prevalence and helped decrease morbidity among Barawan refugees, as well as, the risk of imported infections.  (+info)

Effect of chronic inflammation on ileal short-chain fatty acid/bicarbonate exchange. (20/479)

Short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) have been demonstrated to at least partially ameliorate chronic intestinal inflammation. However, whether and how intestinal SCFA absorption may be altered during chronic intestinal inflammation is unknown. A rabbit model of chronic ileitis produced by coccidia was used to determine the effect of chronic inflammation on ileal SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange. SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange was present in the brush-border membrane (BBM) of villus but not crypt cells from normal rabbit ileum. An anion-exchange inhibitor, DIDS, significantly inhibited SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange. Extravesicular Cl(-) did not alter the uptake of SCFA, suggesting that SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange is a transport process distinct from Cl(-)/HCO(-)(3) exchange. In chronically inflamed ileum, SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange was also present only in BBM of villus cells. The exchanger was sensitive to DIDS and was unaffected by extravesicular Cl(-). However, SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange was significantly reduced in villus cell BBM vesicles (BBMV) from chronically inflamed ileum. Kinetic studies demonstrated that the maximal rate of uptake of SCFA, but not the affinity for SCFA, was reduced in chronically inflamed rabbit ileum. These data demonstrate that a distinct SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange is present on BBMV of villus but not crypt cells in normal rabbit ileum. SCFA/HCO(-)(3) exchange is inhibited in chronically inflamed rabbit ileum. The mechanism of inhibition is most likely secondary to a reduction in transporter numbers rather than altered affinity for SCFA.  (+info)

The inhibitory effect of interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha on intracellular multiplication of Neospora caninum in primary bovine brain cells. (21/479)

Primary culture of bovine brain cells was examined for its susceptibility to Neospora caninum infections, and this model was used to investigate the effects of bovine interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) and tumor necrosis factors alpha (TNF-alpha) on tachyzoite growth. Tachyzoites of N. caninum grew well in this culture, and tachyzoite growth in astroglia and microglia were confirmed by immunocytochemical staining. IFN-gamma inhibited the tachyzoite growth, and this inhibition was not reversed by the addition of nitric oxide antagonist. TNF-alpha, to a lesser extent, also inhibited the tachyzoite growth. Th-1 type cytokines may play an important role in host defense mechanisms in N. caninum infection.  (+info)

Neutralization of maternal IL-4 modulates congenital protozoal transmission: comparison of innate versus acquired immune responses. (22/479)

IL-4 levels were modulated in mice to test the hypothesis that induction of a maternal type 1 response would decrease the frequency of congenital Neospora caninum transmission. This hypothesis tested the relationship between IL-4 and both innate and adaptive immunity utilizing two basic experimental designs. In the first, maternal IL-4 was neutralized with mAb during pregnancy in naive mice concomitant with initial, virulent infection. In the second, maternal IL-4 was neutralized before pregnancy concomitant with a priming inoculation consisting of live, avirulent N. caninum tachyzoites followed by virulent challenge during subsequent gestation. In mice that were naive before pregnancy, neutralization of IL-4 during gestational challenge did not result in decreased congenital transmission as measured by PCR performed on 1-day-old neonatal mice. In mice that were primed and modulated before pregnancy, congenital transmission from gestational challenge was significantly decreased compared with control mice. Reduction in transmission constituted a decrease in the numbers of mice transmitting N. caninum and a lower frequency of transmission by individual dams (p < 0.05). Decreased congenital transmission was associated with significantly lower levels of maternal splenocyte IL-4 secretion, lower IL-4 mRNA levels, and higher levels of IFN-gamma secretion. Protected mice had significantly decreased Neospora-specific IgG1 compared with nonmodulated mice. These studies define a relationship between maternal Ag-specific immunity and the frequency of congenital transmission and demonstrate that modulation of type 2 cytokine responses can change the frequency of congenital protozoal transmission.  (+info)

Cyclospora cayetanensis in sputum and stool samples. (23/479)

We report the observation of acid-fast Cyclospora cayetanensis oocysts in a sputum sample. The patient, a 60 year-old, HIV negative man, was successfully treated for pulmonary tuberculosis during 1997. On February 1998, he was admitted to our center due to loss of weight, cough with purulent expectoration, dysphonia and a radiological picture of pulmonary fibrosis. Bacilloscopic study of sputum (negative for acid-fast bacilli) stained with Ziehl-Neelsen technique showed large (8-10 microm) spherical, acid-fast Cyclospora cayetanensis oocysts. No other pathogens were isolated on cultures from this sample or from laryngeal biopsy. Serial parasitologic studies showed C. cayetanensis and also eggs of Trichuris trichiura, Ascaris lumbricoides and Hymenolepis nana and of Entamoeba coli cysts. The patient lives in the outskirts of Buenos Aires in a brick-made house with potable water and works as builder of sewers. He travelled in several occasions to the rural area of province of Tucuman which has poor sanitary conditions. C. cayetanensis is an emergent agent of diarrhea and as far as we know this is the first time the parasite is observed in respiratory samples.  (+info)

Skeletal lesions of canine hepatozoonosis caused by Hepatozoon americanum. (24/479)

Canine hepatozoonosis, caused by Hepatozoon americanum, is an emerging tick-borne disease of dogs in North America. In addition to the skeletal and cardiac myositis that are prominent features of the disease, there is disseminated periosteal bone proliferation in most dogs that manifest clinical disease. Each of six experimentally infected animals (four dogs and two coyotes) and seven of eight naturally infected dogs had gross or histopathologic osteoproliferative lesions. Experimental animals were 6-9 months of age when exposed. Naturally infected dogs were 8 months to 11 years old when subjected to necropsy. Lesions occurred primarily on the diaphysis of the more proximal long bones of the limbs; however, flat and irregular bones were frequently involved. Lesions involving metacarpals, metatarsals, and digits were infrequent. The earliest observed periosteal lesions were in an experimentally infected dog 32 days after exposure to sporulated oocysts of H. americanum. There were hypertrophy and hyperplasia of osteoprogenitor cells, and osteoblasts appeared in the cellular zone of the periosteum. Spicules of woven bone oriented perpendicularly to bone cortex followed. Later yet, periosteal new bone was remodeled and tended to become oriented parallel to the cortical bone. Horizontally oriented zones of remodeled, condensed bone sometimes occurred in multiple layers on the original cortex, forming "pseudocortices." The osseous lesions of American canine hepatozoonosis, with few variations, are remarkably similar to those of hypertrophic osteopathy in domestic dogs and other mammalian species, including humans.  (+info)