Thelazioidea is a superfamily of spirurian nematodes in the large order Spirurida. Like all nematodes, they have neither a ... though none is considered to be monotypic Consequently, the Thelazioidea are among the mid-sized superfamilies of Spirurida. ... The families of the Thelazioidea are: Pneumospiruridae Rhabdochonidae Thelaziidae Bain, O.; Junker, K. (2013). "Trichospirura ...
Part 4: Thelazioidea. Izdatelsto Akademii Nauk SSSR. Washington: Israel Program for Scientific Translations; 1967. ... Analysis of genetic variability within Thelazia callipaeda (Nematoda: Thelazioidea) from Europe and Asia by sequencing and ...
Although S. lupi and Thelazia callipaeda belong to the superfamily Thelazioidea, T. callipaeda did not cluster together with S ...
Swimmers itch, cercarial dermatitis or schistosome dermatitis is a short-term allergic contact dermatitis occurring in the skin of humans that have been infected by water-borne schistosomes, a type of flatworm. It is common in freshwater, brackish and marine habitats worldwide.[1] The incidence of this condition may be increasing, although this may be attributed to better monitoring and reporting. Nevertheless, the condition is considered to be an emerging infectious disease.[2] The main symptom is itchy papules (raised skin) that commonly occur within 2 days of infection. Initially, wheals develop quickly, then turn into maculae in about half an hour. Within 10-12 hours these turn into very itchy papules that reach their worst by the second or third day. The papules disappear in 1-2 weeks but secondary effects from scratching can continue longer. The intense itching, which peaks after 48-72 hours, is associated with pain and swelling of the affected areas.[3] People repeatedly exposed to ...
Pinworm infection spreads through human-to-human transmission, by swallowing infectious pinworm eggs.[18][19] The eggs are hardy and can remain infectious in a moist environment for up to three weeks,[11][18] though in a warm dry environment they usually last only 1-2 days.[20] They do not tolerate heat well, but can survive in low temperatures: at −8 degrees Celsius (18 °F), two-thirds of the eggs are still viable after 18 hours.[11] After the eggs have been initially deposited near the anus, they are readily transmitted to other surfaces through contamination.[19] The surface of the eggs is sticky when laid,[12][11] and the eggs are readily transmitted from their initial deposit near the anus to fingernails, hands, night-clothing and bed linen.[9] From here, eggs are further transmitted to food, water, furniture, toys, bathroom fixtures and other objects.[12][18][19] Household pets often carry the eggs in their fur, while not actually being infected.[21] Dust containing eggs can become ...
Thelazioidea (Superfamily). *Rhabdochonidae (Family). *Rhabdochona (Genus). *Rhabdochona (Globochona) (Subgenus). *Rhabdochona ...
Nash, T. E., Mahanty, S., Loeb, J. A., Theodore, W. H., Friedman, A., Sander, J. W., Singh, G., Cavalheiro, E., Del Brutto, O. H., Takayanagui, O. M., Fleury, A., Verastegui, M., Preux, P. M., Montano, S., Pretell, E. J., White, A. C., Gonzales, A. E., Gilman, R. H. & Garcia, H. H., 1 feb. 2015, En: Epilepsia. 56, 2, p. 177-183 7 p.. Producción científica: Contribución a una revista › Artículo › revisión exhaustiva ...
Nash, T. E., Mahanty, S., Loeb, J. A., Theodore, W. H., Friedman, A., Sander, J. W., Singh, G., Cavalheiro, E., Del Brutto, O. H., Takayanagui, O. M., Fleury, A., Verastegui, M., Preux, P. M., Montano, S., Pretell, E. J., White, A. C., Gonzales, A. E., Gilman, R. H. & Garcia, H. H., 1 Feb 2015, In: Epilepsia. 56, 2, p. 177-183 7 p.. Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review ...
Doenças das Aves; Colinus; Resíduos de Drogas; Thelazioidea; Animais; Humanos; Colinus/parasitologia; Fenbendazol; ... Thelazioidea / Resíduos de Drogas / Colinus Tipo de estudo: Guia de prática clínica Limite: Animais / Humanos Idioma: Inglês ... Thelazioidea / Resíduos de Drogas / Colinus Tipo de estudo: Guia de prática clínica Limite: Animais / Humanos Idioma: Inglês ...
Results and discussion Identification of novel bacterial symbiont in S. lupi from the Thelazioidea super family DNA of S. lupi ...
... and Thelazioidea were collected from freshwater fishes of the Congo River basin in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the ...
... : Nematoda ( (Chromadorea), (Enoplea (Dorylaimia ))), Eukaryota (Metamonada, Opisthokonta, Discoba (Euglenozoa), Sar (Alveolata), Amoebozoa)
The first intermediate hosts of Metagonimus takahashii include freshwater snails Semisulcospira coreana[2][3] and Koreanomelania nodifila.[2][3] The second intermediate host include freshwater fish: crucian carp Carassius carassius, common carp Cyprinus carpio, and Tribolodon brandtii.[2] Natural definitive hosts are humans.[2][4] Experimental definitive hosts are: mice, and dogs.[2][4] ...
Most nematode species are dioecious, with separate male and female individuals, though some, such as Caenorhabditis elegans, are androdioecious, consisting of hermaphrodites and rare males. Both sexes possess one or two tubular gonads. In males, the sperm are produced at the end of the gonad and migrate along its length as they mature. The testis opens into a relatively wide seminal vesicle and then during intercourse into a glandular and muscular ejaculatory duct associated with the vas deferens and cloaca. In females, the ovaries each open into an oviduct (in hermaphrodites, the eggs enter a spermatheca first) and then a glandular uterus. The uteri both open into a common vulva/vagina, usually located in the middle of the morphologically ventral surface.[49] Reproduction is usually sexual, though hermaphrodites are capable of self-fertilization. Males are usually smaller than females or hermaphrodites (often much smaller) and often have a characteristically bent or fan-shaped tail. During ...
The infection causes a red, intensely pruritic (itchy) eruption, and may look like twirling lesions.[4] The itching can become very painful and if scratched may allow a secondary bacterial infection to develop. Cutaneous larva migrans usually heals spontaneously over weeks to months and has been known to last as long as one year.[5] However, the severity of the symptoms usually causes those infected to seek medical treatment before spontaneous resolution occurs. Following proper treatment, migration of the larvae within the skin is halted and relief of the associated itching can occur in less than 48 hours (reported for thiabendazole).[2] This is separate from the similar cutaneous larva currens which is caused by Strongyloides. Larva currens is also a cause of migratory pruritic eruptions but is marked by 1) migratory speed on the order of inches per hour 2) perianal involvement due to autoinfection from stool and 3) a wide band of urticaria.[6] ...
Thelazioidea) from Europe and Asia by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-coupled sequencing and mutation scanning of the ... Analysis of genetic variability within Thelazia callipaeda (Nematoda: Thelazioidea) from Europe and Asia by sequencing and ... Analysis of genetic variability within Thelazia callipaeda (Nematoda: Thelazioidea) from Europe and Asia by sequencing and ... This study investigated genetic variability within the eyewormThelazia callipaeda (Nematoda: Thelazioidea) from Europe and ...
Thelazioidea / isolation & purification ...
taxonomy source De Ley, P.; Blaxter, M. L. (2004). A new system for Nematoda: combining morphological characters with molecular trees, and translating clades into ranks and taxa. ,em,Nematology Monographs & Perspectives - Proceedings of the Fourth International Congress of Nematology 8 - 13 June 2002, Tenerife, Spain.,/em, 2: 633-653. [details] Available for editors ...
Thelazioidea Skrjabin, 1915 (redescription). Black Sea for Cystoopsis scomber Zlatev, 1936 Camallanus truncatus (Rudolphi, 1814 ...
additional source Pereira, F. B.; González-Solís, D. (2022). Review of the parasitic nematodes of marine fishes from off the American continent. ,em,Parasitology.,/em, 1-14., available online at https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182022001287 ...
Thelazioidea B01.050.500.500.294.400.937.700.722.375 Gnathostoma B01.050.500.500.294.400.968 Strongylida B01.050.500.500. ...
Thelazioidea Preferred Term Term UI T040512. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1986). ... Thelazioidea Preferred Concept UI. M0021281. Registry Number. txid103829. Related Numbers. txid103826. txid304460. Scope Note. ... Thelazioidea [B01.050.500.500.294.400.937.700.722] * Gnathostoma [B01.050.500.500.294.400.937.700.722.375] ... use THELAZIOIDEA to search THELAZIA 1975-85; use SPIRUROIDEA 1966-74. History Note. 86; GNATHOSTOMA & THELAZIA were see under ...
Thelazioidea Preferred Term Term UI T040512. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1986). ... Thelazioidea Preferred Concept UI. M0021281. Registry Number. txid103829. Related Numbers. txid103826. txid304460. Scope Note. ... Thelazioidea [B01.050.500.500.294.400.937.700.722] * Gnathostoma [B01.050.500.500.294.400.937.700.722.375] ... use THELAZIOIDEA to search THELAZIA 1975-85; use SPIRUROIDEA 1966-74. History Note. 86; GNATHOSTOMA & THELAZIA were see under ...
Superfamily Thelazioidea (organism) {106670008 , SNOMED-CT } Parent/Child (Relationship Type) Cyrnea (organism) {17715002 , ...
Camallanoidea, Dracunculoidea, Gnathostomatoidea, Physalopteroidea, Rictularoidea and Thelazioidea. In: Anderson RC, Chabaud AG ...
After a filariform "infective" larva penetrates the intact skin - most commonly through the feet - the larva enters the blood circulation. It is then carried to the lungs, breaks into alveoli, ascends the bronchi and trachea, and is coughed up and swallowed back into the small intestine, where it matures. The larva later matures into an adult in the small intestine (jejunum mainly), where they attach to the villi and female worms can lay 25,000 eggs per day. The eggs are released into the feces and reside on soil; when deposited on warm, moist soil, a larva rapidly develops in the egg and hatches after 1 to 2 days. This rhabditiform larva moults twice in the soil and becomes a skin-penetrating third-stage infective larva within 5-10 days. The infective rhabditiform larvae are able to sense vibrations in the soil, heat, or carbon dioxide, and are able to use dendritic processes similar to cilia. They use these processes as thermosensory, chemosensory, and mechanosensory receptors to migrate ...
Thelazioidea Medicine & Life Sciences 100% * Spirocerca lupi Agriculture & Biology 98% * Onthophagus Agriculture & Biology 86% ...
THELAZIOIDEA. Gnathostomiasis is a food-borne zoonosis caused by eating undercooked or raw fish or meat. HN - 2011 BX - ...
Phylogenetic analyses suggest a closer relationship of the genus Stephanofilaria with Thelazioidea, instead of the family ...
Results and discussion Identification of novel bacterial symbiont in S. lupi from the Thelazioidea super family DNA of S. lupi ...
Thelazioidea) from Europe and Asia by sequencing and mutation scanning of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 gene ...
Other countries followed the example of Pakistan, and by 2004, Guinea worm was eradicated in Asia. In December 2008, The Carter Center announced new financial support totaling $55 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the United Kingdom Department for International Development.[23] The funds will help address the higher cost of identifying and reporting the last cases of Guinea worm disease. Since the worm has a one-year incubation period, there is a very high cost of maintaining a broad and sensitive monitoring system and providing a rapid response when necessary.[23] One of the most significant challenges facing Guinea worm eradication has been the civil war in Southern Sudan, which was largely inaccessible to health workers due to violence.[9][24] To address some of the humanitarian needs in Southern Sudan, in 1995, the longest ceasefire in the history of the war, and the longest humanitarian cease-fire in history,[25] was achieved through negotiations by Jimmy Carter.[9][24] ...