Results 291 to 300 of about 137,936 (326)

Intestinal parasitic infections

Current Opinion in Gastroenterology, 1999
Our understanding of the biology of several intestinal parasites has progressed considerably in the past year, especially in the area of molecular biology. Information from molecular and genetic analyses has been used increasingly to improve understanding of pathogenesis, to apply improved diagnostic methods, and to seek new vaccination strategies ...
A, Das, E P, Variyam
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Intestinal parasitic infection

Abdominal Imaging, 2007
In general, gastrointestinal tract is the primary involvement site of parasites during their life cycle. In this article, we will describe amebiasis, ascariasis, and anisakiasis among the many common intestinal parasitic diseases. We will review the epidemiology, life cycles, clinical manifestations and complications, and illustrate detailed imaging ...
Mi-Suk, Park   +3 more
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Intestinal parasites

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2002
Although safe and efficacious broad-spectrum antiparasitic drugs have been developed, their availability for use in mass-treatment programs and for individual treatment worldwide can be limited by economic resources, existing manufacturing and distribution networks, and national regulations.
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Immunity to intestinal parasites

Nature, 1978
Intestinal parasites are common in man and animals and can cause severe disease. Knowledge of immunity to such infections is limited and comes largely from studies using laboratory host-parasite systems. Understanding how immunity can operate, and why it often does not, is not only of intrinsic interest but necessary for the development of ...
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Intestinal Parasites

The Nurse Practitioner, 1983
The incidence of intestinal parasite infection is on the increase in the United States due, in part, to the recent entry into this country of more than 500,000 Southeast Asian refugees. Most symptoms of parasitic infections are nonspecific and many infected individuals are asymptomatic.
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Vaccination against intestinal parasites

International Journal for Parasitology, 1987
The capacity of mammalian hosts to respond to gastrointestinal nematodiasis is a function of the age, nutritional and reproductive status, and genotype of the host and the ability of the parasite to evade, suppress, or modify, the host response. Infective nematode larvae may be rapidly expelled from the immune host before they can establish in the ...
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Intestinal parasites

Baillière's Clinical Gastroenterology, 1993
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Intestinal parasites

Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 1997
Richard CG Pollok, Michael JG Farthing
openaire   +1 more source

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