Results 211 to 220 of about 7,561 (235)
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1998
Abstract Trichinella is unusual among parasitic nematodes in that the worm undergoes a complete developmental cycle, from larva to adult to larva, in the body of a single host, which has a profound influence on the epidemiology of trichinellosis as a zoonosis.
Inger Ljungström +3 more
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Abstract Trichinella is unusual among parasitic nematodes in that the worm undergoes a complete developmental cycle, from larva to adult to larva, in the body of a single host, which has a profound influence on the epidemiology of trichinellosis as a zoonosis.
Inger Ljungström +3 more
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Reticulocytopenia in Trichinellosis
The Journal of Parasitology, 1984This study characterizes the peripheral blood, erythrocytic profile of mice experimentally infected per os with three different doses of Trichinella spiralis larvae. Such results have not been previously detailed despite reports of hemorrhagic episodes associated with the disease (Gould, S. E., 1970. In Trichinosis in man and animals, S. E. Gould (ed.).
B Z, Ngwenya, B L, Capaci
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EXPERIMENTAL TRICHINELLOSIS IN REINDEER
Journal of Parasitology, 2000Six female reindeer calves were inoculated intraruminally with various doses of Trichinella muscle larvae. Four calves were inoculated with T. nativa, receiving 15,000 (n = 1), 5,000 (1), and 2,500 (2) larvae each. Two calves were inoculated with 5,000 T. spiralis larvae each. Blood samples were collected twice per week for total white blood cell (WBC)
A, Oksanen +4 more
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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 ...
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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 ...
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Trichinellosis and trichinellosis control in Germany.
The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health, 1992In nineteenth century Germany, trichinellosis was a relatively frequent disease. From 1861 to 1890 more than 12,500 cases, with an average mortality rate of 5%, were reported. As a consequence, trichinoscopy was made compulsory for the kingdom of Prussia in 1877, and a respective law was issued on June 3, 1900, for Germany as a whole.
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