نتایج جستجو برای: babesia ovis

تعداد نتایج: 4328  

2017
Zi-Hou Gao Tao-Hua Huang Bao-Gui Jiang Na Jia Zheng-Xiang Liu Zong-Ti Shao Rui-Ruo Jiang Hong-Bo Liu Ran Wei Yu-Qiong Li Hong-Wu Yao Michael E von Fricken Jia-Fu Jiang Chun-Hong Du Wu-Chun Cao

BACKGROUND Babesia, usually found in wild and domestic mammals worldwide, have recently been responsible for emerging malaria-like zoonosis in infected patients. Human B. microti infection has been identified in China, primarily in the Southwest along the Myanmar border but little direct surveillance of B. microti infection in rodents has been carried out here (Yunnan province). In this region,...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2006
Fresia E Steiner Robert R Pinger Carolyn N Vann Melanie J Abley Bridget Sullivan Nate Grindle Keith Clay Clay Fuqua

The blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis Say, first reported in Indiana in 1987, has now been detected in more than half of Indiana's counties. The first case of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (human anaplasmosis) in Indiana was reported in 2002. We now report the detection of Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia odocoilei (Emerson and Wright 1968) in I. scapularis ticks collected in northern ...

Journal: :Experimental parasitology 2013
Claire A M Becker Laurence Malandrin Thibaut Larcher Alain Chauvin Emmanuel Bischoff Sarah I Bonnet

Babesiosis is a tick-transmitted disease of mammalian hosts, caused by the intraerythrocytic protozoan parasites of the genus Babesia. Transmission of Babesia parasites from the vertebrate host to the tick is mediated by sexual stages, the gametocytes which are the only intraerythrocytic stages that survive and develop inside the vector. Very few data are available concerning these parasite sta...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2015
Zeferino García-Vázquez J Alfonso Ortega-S Antonio Cantu-Covarruvias Juan Mosqueda David G Hewitt Randall W DeYoung Tyler A Campbell Fred C Bryant

We harvested 21 fallow deer (Dama dama) and 17 axis deer (Axis axis) in northern Mexico. Two fallow deer were positive for Babesia bigemina and one for Babesia bovis. Amplicons had the expected 170 and 291 base pairs and were identical to B. bigemina (S45366) and B. bovis (M38218), respectively.

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2003
Akiko Nagai Naoaki Yokoyama Tomohide Matsuo Sabine Bork Haruyuki Hirata Xuenan Xuan Yinchang Zhu Florencia G Claveria Kozo Fujisaki Ikuo Igarashi

Three antimalarial drugs, artesunate, pyrimethamine, and pamaquine, were evaluated for their growth-inhibitory effects against Babesia equi and Babesia caballi in in vitro culture. B. equi was more resistant to pyrimethamine than B. caballi. B. equi was also found to be more sensitive to artesunate and pamaquine than B. caballi. Of the three compounds, pyrimethamine gave the most promise for in...

2005
Darja Duh Miroslav Petrovec Andrej Bidovec Tatjana Avsic-Zupanc

We describe cervids as potential reservoir hosts of Babesia EU1 and B. divergens. Both babesial parasites were found in roe deer. Sequence analysis of 18S rRNA showed 99.7% identity of roe deer Babesia EU1 with the human EU1 strain. B. divergens detected in cervids was 99.6% identical to bovine B. divergens.

2012
Julie T. Joseph Kerry Purtill Susan J. Wong Jose Munoz Allen Teal Susan Madison-Antenucci Harold W. Horowitz Maria E. Aguero-Rosenfeld Julie M. Moore Carlos Abramowsky Gary P. Wormser

Babesiosis is usually acquired from a tick bite or through a blood transfusion. We report a case of babesiosis in an infant for whom vertical transmission was suggested by evidence of Babesia spp. antibodies in the heel-stick blood sample and confirmed by detection of Babesia spp. DNA in placenta tissue.

2012
M.A. Peirce N.J. Parsons

A new species of haematozoa, Babesia ugwidiensis sp. nov. from a cormorant is described. This is the first species of piroplasm to be recorded from the Phalacrocoracidae and the relationship of this parasite to other Babesia spp. from marine hosts is discussed.

Journal: :Annals of clinical and laboratory science 2008
M Kent Froberg Devon Dannen Nicholas Bernier Wun-Ju Shieh Jeannette Guarner Sherif Zaki

Babesia is a malaria-like protozoan parasite spread by Ixodes ticks primarily from the white-footed deer mouse to humans. Typically it causes subclinical disease, but occasionally causes acute febrile disease with hepatosplenomegaly. We report a case of spontaneous splenic rupture of a 56-yr-old man with acute Babesia microti infection.

Journal: :Wiadomosci parazytologiczne 2011
Edward Siński Renata Welc-Faleciak Ryszard Pogłód

Babesiosis in humans is caused by infection with various species of Babesia (Apicomplexa, Piroplasmida), mainly transmitted by an arthropod vector--Ixodes spp. ticks. This review will focus on blood transfusion as another mode of Babesia transmission, especially in endemic areas, as well as the impact of human babesiosis on transfusion medicine.

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