Results 181 to 190 of about 4,039 (220)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
An outbreak of trichinellosis in Hungary
Acta Microbiologica et Immunologica Hungarica, 2012In a small village of Hungary, a human trichinellosis outbreak (affecting eight people) occurred in January–February, 2009. In the outbreak investigation (i) Trichinella spiralis larvae were detected in meat products derived from the pigs slaughtered in the backyard of one of the patients (a foxhunter) in December 2008, and in a brown rat captured in ...
Glatz, Katalin +5 more
openaire +3 more sources
Congenital trichinellosis in the rat
Veterinary Parasitology, 199857 female rats were divided into four groups according to age and gestation. Trichinella spiralis infection was induced by feeding the rats with rat muscle containing about 10000 larvae per gram. The mating and sacrificing of females were done differently for each group.
I, Cosoroabă, N, Orjanu
openaire +2 more sources
Experimental trichinellosis in goats
Veterinary Parasitology, 1996The susceptibility and distribution of Trichinella spiralis infection in goats were examined in ten autochthonous kids, 2 months old and about 10 kg body weight. The animals were divided into two groups: one experimental group with eight animals, infected with 10,000 T.
Reina, D. +4 more
openaire +3 more sources
Myositis in Mouse Trichinellosis
The Journal of Parasitology, 1982Studies on pathophysiology in mouse trichinellosis have revealed a need for information on the temporal relationship between myopathophysiologic alterations and the development of myositis in trichinous mice. Most information presently available on trichinous myositis is qualitative, derived from histological studies carried out primarily on rats and ...
G L, Stewart, L, Charniga, R B, Boley
openaire +2 more sources
2011
Trichinellosis is caused by nematodes of the genus Trichinella. These zoonotic parasites show a cosmopolitan distribution in all the continents, but Antarctica. They circulate in nature by synanthropic-domestic and sylvatic cycles. Today, eight species and four genotypes are recognized, all of which infect mammals, including humans, one species also ...
openaire +1 more source
Trichinellosis is caused by nematodes of the genus Trichinella. These zoonotic parasites show a cosmopolitan distribution in all the continents, but Antarctica. They circulate in nature by synanthropic-domestic and sylvatic cycles. Today, eight species and four genotypes are recognized, all of which infect mammals, including humans, one species also ...
openaire +1 more source
Epidemiology of trichinellosis in the People's Republic of China during 2009–2020
Acta Tropica, 2022Xin Zhuo Zhang +2 more
exaly

