Results 161 to 170 of about 718 (190)
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Experimental Infection of Lymnaea glabra and L. truncatula by Fasciola hepatica

The Journal of Parasitology, 1984
Epidemiological studies on human fascioliasis recorded the role of Lymnaea glabra as an accidental intermediate host in the life-cycle of the parasite in the region of Limousin, France (Rondelaud, 1980, Ann. Parasit. Hum. Comp. 55:393405). Only snails averaging 0.5 to 1 mm in length at miracidial exposure (between 1 hr and 8 days of life) supported the
D, Bouix-Busson, D, Rondelaud, D, Barthe
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Hemocyte production in trematode-infectedLymnaea truncatula

Parasitology Research, 1991
In trematode-infected Lymnaea truncatula, as in other lymnaeids, hemocytes are formed in the connective tissue. Mitoses are found singly in blood vessels or connective tissue or occur in hemocyte nodules, developing along the mantle epithelium or associated with blood sinuses. The so-called hemocyte-producing organ in L. truncatula is not equivalent to
J F, Monteil, M, Matricon-Gondran
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The influence of temperature on the infectivity of Fasciola hepatica miracidia to Lymnaea truncatula.

The Journal of parasitology, 1976
Experiments were performed to study the effect of water temperature on the host-finding capacity (snail localization, attachment, and penetration) of Fasciola hepatica miracidia. Specimens of Lymnaea truncatula were exposed to miracidia labeled in vivo with radioselenium, and the radioactivity which subsequently was confined to the snails was taken as ...
N O, Christensen, P, Nansen
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The effects of low temperature on Lymnaea truncatula

Zeitschrift f�r Parasitenkunde, 1976
A group of 20 young and another of 20 adult Lymnaea truncatula were abundantly supplied with food and kept continuously under cold conditions (5 degrees C) in the laboratory for 3 months and the effects of low temperature on their behavior, growth and reproduction were studied. The results indicate that at low temperature the activity of L. truncatula
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Oviposition of Lymnaea truncatula infected by Fasciola hepatica under experimental conditions

Parasitology Research, 1999
Experimental infections of Lymnaea truncatula by Fasciola hepatica (one, two, or three miracidia per snail) were carried out under laboratory conditions to analyze the oviposition of infected snails and determine the characteristics of their egg masses.
G, Dreyfuss   +2 more
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Histochemical changes in the digestive gland of Lymnaea truncatula infected with Fasciola hepatica

Zeitschrift f�r Parasitenkunde, 1973
Histochemical studies of the digestive gland of Lymnaea truncatula have revealed features of the normal digestive processes in which at least 3 cell types are involved: digestive cells, mucus cells and basiphil cells. An intracellular vacuolar digestive system containing lysosomal enzymes appears to operate in the digestive cells.
M N, Moore, D W, Halton
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Fasciola hepatica : an unusual development of redial generations in an isolate of Lymnaea truncatula

Journal of Helminthology, 1999
Single-miracidium infections of Lymnaea truncatula by Fasciola hepatica were experimentally carried out to identify the redial generations of this trematode when the larval development was unusual (when the first-appearing mother redia, or R1a redia ...
Augot, D.   +4 more
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Redial generations of Fasciola gigantica in the pulmonate snail Lymnaea truncatula

Journal of Helminthology, 1992
ABSTRACTLymnaea truncatula, 4 mm in height, were subjected to infection by a single miracidium of Fasciola gigantica, then raised at 23°C until day 60 of the experiment. Histological study of these snails demonstrated a mean redial burden of 34 parasites at day 60, of which one third were degenerating forms. The mean number of living independent rediae
, Rakotondravao   +3 more
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Lymnaea Truncatula Population Studies: The Use of a Soil Sampling Technique in Studies of Fascioliasis

British Veterinary Journal, 1968
SUMMARY Observations are described of the use of a soil sampling technique to recover and estimate densities of L. truncatula in field habitats. Results of counts on farms are related to type and incidence offascioliasis, and the use of this technique in studies of fascioliasis is discussed.
J G, Ross, J, O'Hagan
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A Three-Year Study of Lymnaea Truncatula Habitats, Disease Foci of Fascioliasis

British Veterinary Journal, 1981
SUMMARY The prevalence of infection with Fasciola hepatica in both primary and intermediate hosts was monitored on two farms for a period of three years. A succession of increasingly prolonged and intense droughts in the spring and early summer of each year was associated with a progressive decline in the proportion of hosts affected. The exceptional
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