Vertical transmission ofSchistosoma japonicum in the rabbit

Abdel-Moneim Mohamad Salim , You’en Shi , Jiajun Han , Changxiu Ning

Current Medical Science ›› 2002, Vol. 22 ›› Issue (4) : 281 -284.

PDF
Current Medical Science ›› 2002, Vol. 22 ›› Issue (4) : 281 -284. DOI: 10.1007/BF02896764
Article

Vertical transmission ofSchistosoma japonicum in the rabbit

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to confirm observations on the vertical transmission ofSchistosoma japonicum in the rabbit.S. japonicum-infected pregnant rabbits were used in this study. Perfusion of mother rabbits was done 9 weeks after infection in order to obtain worm burdens in relation to their initial cercarial dose. Anti-schistosoma specific IgM antibodies in serum samples collected from rabbit kittens were detected by ELISA. Our results showed that gestation period lasted the normal 29–31 days. All the exposed mother rabbits became infected withS. japonicum. Positive IgM antibody OD values were detected in 12 out of the 60 kittens examined (20.0%). In group C and A, 40.0% and 17.9% of the kitten were congenitally infected, respectively. 18.1% of the kittens born to mothers infected with a single dose of 200 cercariae per rabbit were positives; this is not significantly different from that obtained for the 600 dose group (22.2%). Three randomly selected IgM+ kittens harbored between one and two adult worms. The livers of these kittens displayed granulomatous lesions. It is concluded that congenitalS. japonicum infection does occur in the rabbit and is affected by the mother stage of pregnancy and to a lesser extent by its infection load.

Keywords

S. japonicum / rabbit / vertical transmission / congenital infection / IgM

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Abdel-Moneim Mohamad Salim, You’en Shi, Jiajun Han, Changxiu Ning. Vertical transmission ofSchistosoma japonicum in the rabbit. Current Medical Science, 2002, 22(4): 281-284 DOI:10.1007/BF02896764

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

RossA G P, LiY, DavisG M, et al. . Schistosomiasis in the People’s Republic of China: Prospects and Challenges for the 21st Century. Clin Microb Rev, 1993, 14(2): 270-270

[2]

Chen M G.Schistosoma Japonicum andS. japonicum-like infections: epidemiology, clinical and parasitological findings. In: Jordan P and Webbe G (Eds). Human schistosomiasi. Willingham, Oxon, CAB International, 1998. 270–273

[3]

WillinghamA L, JohansenM V, BøghH O, et al. . Congenital transmission ofSchistosoma Japonicum in pigs. Am J Trop Med Hyg, 1999, 60: 311-311

[4]

QianB Z, BøghH O, JohansenM V, et al. . Congenital transmission ofSchistosoma Japonicum in the rabbit. J Helmenthol, 2000, 74: 267-267

[5]

JohansenM V, IburgT, MoradJ, et al. . Congenital infection withSchistosoma Japonicum but not with Schistosoma bovis in sheep. J Parasitol, 2002, 88(2): 414-414

[6]

ShiY E, JohansenM V, LiF R, et al. . An epidemiological investigation of congenitalSchistosoma Japonicum transmission in Hubei province, PR China. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health, 2001, 33(2): 323-323

[7]

EvengardB, HagiH, LinderE. A filter-paper technique for the detection of IgG and IgM class schistosome-specific antibodies in endemic areas. Ann Trop Med Parasit, 1998, 82: 307-307

[8]

RobinsonA. Serum IgG, IgM, and C3 levels inSchistosoma Japonicum infected rabbits. Microbios, 1986, 48(194): 37-37

[9]

BjørkmanN, DantzerV, LeiserR. Comparative placentation in laboratory animals a review. Scan J Lab Anim Sci, 1989, 16: 129-129

[10]

CamusD, CarlierY, BinaJ C, et al. . Sensitization to Schistosoma mansoni antigen in uninfected children born to infected mothers. J Infect Dis, 1976, 134: 405-405

[11]

FearonD T. Seeking wisdom in innate immunity. Nature, 1997, 388: 323-323

[12]

SacksG, SargentI, RedmanC. An innate view of human pregnancy. Immuno Today, 1999, 20: 114-114

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

86

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/