Results 61 to 70 of about 210 (87)
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An update on human echinostomiasis
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2016Echinostomiasis, caused by trematodes belonging to the family Echinostomatidae, is an important intestinal foodborne parasitic disease. Humans become infected after ingestion of raw or insufficiently cooked molluscs, fish, crustaceans and amphibians, thus, understanding eating habits is essential to determine the distribution of the disease.
Rafael Toledo
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Echinostoma and Echinostomiasis
Advances in Parasitology, 1990Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the studies on the biology, life history, infectivity, immunology, pathology, epidemiology, physiology, and biochemistry of Echinostoma . Some studies on other genera of Echinostomatidae are considered as they relate to Echinostoma. The systematics of the 37-collar-spined Echinostoma in the E. revoluturn
Jane E Huffman, B Fried
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Insights about echinostomiasis by paleomolecular diagnosis
Parasitology International, 2014Echinostomiasis is a zoonosis caused by intestinal trematodes and transmitted by the ingestion of mollusks, crustaceans, fish, amphibians, and reptiles, either raw or poorly cooked. Today human infection is endemic in Southeast Asia and the Far East, but has been reported more recently in other regions of the world.
Arnaldo Maldonado +2 more
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A case of echinostomiasis in a tribal community in Bengal
Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, 1990(1990). A case of echinostomiasis in a tribal community in Bengal. Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 84, No. 2, pp. 193-193.
U K Chattopadhyay +2 more
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Echinostomiasis in the highlands of Irian Jaya, Indonesia
Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, 1993(1993). Echinostomiasis in the highlands of Irian Jaya, Indonesia. Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 87, No. 4, pp. 417-419.
M J Bangs
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Echinostomiasis: a common but forgotten food-borne disease.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1998Human echinostomiasis, endemic to southeast Asia and the Far East, is a food-borne, intestinal, zoonotic parasitosis attributed to at least 16 species of digenean trematodes transmitted by snails. Two separate life cycles of echinostomes, human and sylvatic, efficiently operate in endemic areas.
T K Graczyk, B Fried
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Immunobiology and Immunodiagnosis of Echinostomiasis
2000Intestinal trematodes, such as echinostomes, elicit detectable immune responses in vertebrate hosts (Simonsen and Anderson, 1986; Andersen et al., 1989; Simonsen et al., 1990; Agger et al., 1993; Graczyk and Fried, 1994; 1995). Much of the information on echinostome immunobiology is derived from research which utilizes rodent models, i.
Thaddeus K Graczyk, Graczyk Thaddeus K
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Hydrobiologia, 1988
Studies were carried out to investigate the effects of 5°, 10°, 15°, 20°, 25°, 30°, 35°, 40° and 45°C on growth, sexual maturity, reproduction and survival of the freshwater planorbid snail, Gyraulus convexiusculus, vector of echinostomiasis, under laboratory conditions.
B D Parashar, K M Rao
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Studies were carried out to investigate the effects of 5°, 10°, 15°, 20°, 25°, 30°, 35°, 40° and 45°C on growth, sexual maturity, reproduction and survival of the freshwater planorbid snail, Gyraulus convexiusculus, vector of echinostomiasis, under laboratory conditions.
B D Parashar, K M Rao
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Human Echinostomiasis: Mechanisms of Pathogenesis and Host Resistance
2000Human echinostomiasis refers to infection of the human intestine by digenetic trematodes of the family Echinostomatidae which primarily infect a variety of birds and mammals other than humans. The life cycles of these worms are completed in nature without human involvement and the natural definitive hosts may also serve as reservoirs for human ...
M A Haseeb
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