نتایج جستجو برای: echinococcosis multilocularis

تعداد نتایج: 5007  

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2005
Denver W Holt Cyd Hanns Todd O'Hara Kathy Burek Rita Frantz

We identified Echinococcus multilocularis for the first time in brown lemmings (Lemmus trimucronatus) from Barrow, Alaska, USA. Of 467 brown lemmings trapped between 1995 and 2000, two males and two females (0.9%; 95% confidence interval=0.9+/-0.9%) were found to be infected with metacestodes of E. multilocularis. No metacestodes were found in 17 collared lemmings (Dicrostonyx rubricatus) also ...

Journal: :The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health 2003
Akira Ito Hiroshi Yamasaki Minoru Nakao Yasuhito Sako Kazuhiro Nakaya Wulamu Mamuti Ning Xiao Marcello O Sato Yuji Ishikawa

The recent emergence of zoonotic parasitic diseases of public health importance represents a growing global concern. Among zoonotic helminthic diseases, both echinococcosis and cysticercosis are the most serious diseases threatening human life. Neurocysticercosis (NCC) caused by ingestion of eggs of the pork tapeworm, Taenia solium, is spreading worldwide and not rare even in Muslim or Jewish c...

Journal: :Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin 2014
D Antolova M Miterpakova J Radoňak D Hudačkova M Szilagyiova M Začek

Long-term surveillance of Echinococcus multilocularis occurrence in red foxes in Slovakia revealed the existence of highly endemic areas, with an overall prevalence rate of 41.6 % in the northern part of the country. Between 2000 and 2013, 26 human cases of alveolar echinococcosis were detected and only three of them were not in endemic localities in northern Slovakia. Remarkable is the occurre...

Journal: :Trends in parasitology 2004
Peter Deplazes Daniel Hegglin Sandra Gloor Thomas Romig

A distinct increase in fox populations, particularly in urban areas, has been observed in Europe. This is of particular concern in endemic regions of the small fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis, the aetiological agent of human alveolar echinococcosis. Novel tools have facilitated the investigation of the ecology of urban foxes and have demonstrated the urban wildlife cycle of E. multiloc...

Journal: :Vaccine 2009
Zhisheng Dang Kinpei Yagi Yuzaburo Oku Hirokazu Kouguchi Kiichi Kajino Junichi Watanabe Jun Matsumoto Ryo Nakao Hiroyuki Wakaguri Atsushi Toyoda Chihiro Sugimoto

Echinococcus multilocularis causes an important zoonotic cestode disease. The metacestode stage proliferates in the liver of intermediate hosts including human and rodents and forms multiple cysts. Recently, members of a transmembrane protein tetraspanin (TSP) family have been used as vaccines against schistosomosis, or as diagnostic antigens for cysticercosis. In this study, seven tetraspanins...

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2008
Jun Matsumoto Kimitoshi Sakamoto Noriko Shinjyo Yasutoshi Kido Nao Yamamoto Kinpei Yagi Hideto Miyoshi Nariaki Nonaka Ken Katakura Kiyoshi Kita Yuzaburo Oku

Alveolar echinococcosis, which is due to the massive growth of larval Echinococcus multilocularis, is a life-threatening parasitic zoonosis distributed widely across the northern hemisphere. Commercially available chemotherapeutic compounds have parasitostatic but not parasitocidal effects. Parasitic organisms use various energy metabolic pathways that differ greatly from those of their hosts a...

Journal: :Trends in parasitology 2015
Bruno Gottstein Marija Stojkovic Dominique A Vuitton Laurence Millon Audrone Marcinkute Peter Deplazes

Alveolar echinococcosis (AE) is a neglected 'malignant' parasitic disease. The European endemic area of Echinococcus multilocularis in foxes is larger than previously anticipated, and there is new evidence that both fox populations and the prevalence of E. multilocularis have increased in many areas, indicating increased pressure for infection with E. multilocularis eggs in intermediate and acc...

2016
Guneri Atalan Ali Kemal Sivrioglu Güner Sönmez Mahir Celik Berksan Simsek

Alveolar echinococcosis is a chronic and serious, even lethal, parasitic infection caused by the helminth Echinococcus multilocularis. The involvement of Central Nervous System is reported to be 1-3% in literature. Brain involvement is considered a sign of the terminal phase of alveolar echinococcosis. We here in reported a 67-year-old female who had liver alveolar hydatid disease with brain an...

Journal: :Internal medicine 2008
Abdullah Ozkok Emine Gul Gulfer Okumus Ensar Yekeler Mine Gungor Gulluoglu Esen Kiyan Orhan Arseven

Alveolar echinococcosis, which is caused by Echinococcus multilocularis, is a very aggressive and potentially fatal infestation which always affects the liver primarily and metastasizes to any part of the body. Imaging studies are usually highly suspicious of carcinoma or sarcoma, and biopsy may provide the first indication of infection. We report a case of disseminated alveolar echinococcosis ...

Journal: :Infection 2012
A Schweiger F Grimm I Tanner B Müllhaupt K Bertogg N Müller P Deplazes

PURPOSE Human alveolar (AE) and cystic echinococcosis (CE) caused by the metacestode stages of Echinococcus multilocularis and E. granulosus, respectively, lack pathognomonic clinical signs. Diagnosis therefore relies on the results of imaging and serological studies. The primary goal of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of several easy-to-produce crude or partially purified E. granulosus...

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