نتایج جستجو برای: cryptosporidium oocysts

تعداد نتایج: 6207  

1997
J. K. Donnelly

Cryptosporidium , a gastrointestinal protozoan parasite, is increasingly being identified as a cause of diarrhoeal disease in humans. During the 1980s Cryptosporidium emerged as a common cause of infection in both developed and developing nations. The infection rate for individuals with diarrhoeal illness is 2 per cent in industrialized countries and 5-10 per cent in Third World countries. Cryp...

2017
Yadong Kong Ping Lu Tao Yuan Jinghui Niu Zhaoji Li Baisong Yang

Swimming in surface water bodies (e.g., lakes, rivers) can expose the human body to substantial risk of infection by Cryptosporidium. These findings are from a one-year investigation on the occurrence and distribution of the protozoan parasite Cryptosporidium in Yunlong Lake, Xuzhou, China. Cryptosporidium oocysts were detected by immunofluorescence microscopy. From January to November of 2015,...

Journal: :Archives of disease in childhood 1989
R C Shepherd P J Smail G P Sinha

Two cases of reactive arthritis in association with cryptosporidial enteritis in childhood are reported. Oocysts of cryptosporidium should be sought when arthritis complicates diarrhoeal illnesses.

Journal: :Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin 2012
J Artieda M Basterrechea L Arriola M Yagüe E Albisua N Arostegui U Astigarraga R Botello J M Manterola

From October to December 2011, an outbreak of 26 cases of cryptosporidiosis occurred in a day-care centre in Gipuzkoa, Spain. The infection spread from person to person and affected 24 children under two years of age (attack rate: 38%) and two caregivers. Cryptosporidium oocysts were observed in 10 of 15 samples. During 2010, only four cases of cryptosporidium were detected in Gipuzkoa, and 27 ...

Journal: :The Journal of veterinary medical science 2003
Hiroaki Sakai Yoshinori Tsushima Hideyuki Nagasawa Rio John T Ducusin Shigeyuki Tanabe Yuji Uzuka Takao Sarashina

The prevalence of Cryptosporidium infection was examined in 480 healthy cattle (0-39 months old) in the Tokachi district in Hokkaido during the period from June to September in 2000 and from June to July in 2001. C. parvum oocysts were detected in 6 of 50 cattle (0-2 months old) in 2001; while C. muris was detected in 2 of 56 cattle (6-8 months old) in 2001, in 1 of 15 cattle (9-11 months old) ...

Journal: :Cytometry. Part A : the journal of the International Society for Analytical Cytology 2008
Joana M M Barbosa Sofia Costa-de-Oliveira Acácio G Rodrigues Thomas Hanscheid Howard Shapiro Cidália Pina-Vaz

Cryptosporidium parvum is transmitted through water and can cause severe diarrhea. The diagnosis is usually based upon observer-dependent microscopic detection of oocysts, with rather low sensitivity and specificity. Our objective was to optimize a flow cytometric (FC) protocol for the detection of C. parvum. A specific monoclonal antibody conjugated with R-phycoerythrin was incubated with dead...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2006
Hanping Feng Weijia Nie Abhineet Sheoran Quanshun Zhang Saul Tzipori

Bile salts such as sodium taurocholate (NaTC) are routinely used to induce the excystation of Cryptosporidium oocysts. Here we show that NaTC significantly enhanced the invasion of several cultured cell lines by freshly excysted Cryptosporidium parvum and Cryptosporidium hominis sporozoites. A variety of purified bile salts or total bile from bovine also enhanced the invasion of cultured cells ...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1998
M J Walker C Montemagno J C Bryant W C Ghiorse

We determined and compared the method detection limits (MDLalpha) of a PCR and an immunofluorescence assay (IFA) for detection of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in soils. Based on the MDLalpha and the quantitative nature and stability of the IFA, PCR analysis is not a useful screening step for soil studies of oocyst transport.

Journal: :The Kobe journal of medical sciences 2016
Tatsuya Tomonaga Shiba Kumar Rai Shoji Uga

The use of nucleic acid staining with a fluorochrome dye to differentiate viable and dead (heat-killed) Cryptosporidium oocysts was assessed. The specificities (percentage of unstained viable oocysts) and sensitivities (percentage of stained dead oocysts) of the seven tested dyes (SYTO-17® and SYTO-59® to 64®) ranged from 65 to 76% (average 71%) and 83 to 95% (average 91%), respectively. SYTO-5...

Journal: :Applied and Environmental Microbiology 2006

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