نتایج جستجو برای: cryptosporidium parvum

تعداد نتایج: 5552  

Cryptosporidium parasite is a cause of diarrhea in humans and other cold and endotherm animals that have been widely distributed throughout the world. This study aimed to determine the genetic diversity of Cryptosporidium in children with diarrhea using the GP60 gene by Polymerase Chain Reaction Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) method. In this study, stool specimens were coll...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1993
G R Finch C W Daniels E K Black F W Schaefer M Belosevic

Cryptosporidium parvum infectivity in a neonatal CD-1 mouse model was used to determine the dose needed to infect 50% of the population. The 50% infective dose was estimated to be 79 oocysts. It was observed that a mean oral inoculum of 23 oocysts produced infection in 2 of 25 neonatal mice 7 days postinoculation. All animals became infected when the mean oral dose exceeded 310 oocysts per anim...

Journal: :iranian journal of veterinary research 2010
b. mosallanejad h. hamidinejat, r. avizeh m. ghorbanpoor najafabadi m. h. razi jalali

cryptosporidium parvum is a zoonotic protozoan parasite with a wide range of vertebrate hosts. the present study was conducted to determine the prevalence of cryptosporidium parvum in urban and rural dogs of the ahvaz area. faecal samples were collected randomly from 93 dogs between may 2005 and september 2007. the studied dogs were divided into two groups (urban and rural) and based on age int...

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 2006
Nihal T Godiwala Alain Vandewalle Honorine D Ward Brett A Leav

Established methods for quantifying experimental Cryptosporidium infection are highly variable and subjective. We describe a new technique using quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) that can be used to measure in vitro and in vivo laboratory infections with Cryptosporidium. We show for the first time that qPCR permits absolute quantification of the parasite while simultaneously controlling for the...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1997
P A Rochelle D M Ferguson T J Handojo R De Leon M H Stewart R L Wolfe

The presence of Cryptosporidium in drinking water supplies is a significant problem faced by the water industry. Although a variety of methods exist for the detection of waterborne oocysts, water utilities currently have no way of assessing the infectivity of detected oocysts and consequently are unable to accurately determine the risks posed to public health by waterborne Cryptosporidium. In t...

The protozoan intestinal parasite Cryptosporidium commonly infects cattle throughout the world and Iran. The present study was undertaken to determine the abundance and associated risk factors of Cryptosporidium infection in cattle herds of northwestern Iran. A total number of 246 fecal samples from 138 (56.1%) diarrheic (D) and 108 (43.9%) non-diarrheic (ND) cattle were rando...

2015
Gabriela Certad Jean Dupouy-Camet Nausicaa Gantois Ourida Hammouma-Ghelboun Muriel Pottier Karine Guyot Sadia Benamrouz Marwan Osman Baptiste Delaire Colette Creusy Eric Viscogliosi Eduardo Dei-Cas Cecile Marie Aliouat-Denis Jérôme Follet Gordon Langsley

Cryptosporidium, a protozoan parasite that can cause severe diarrhea in a wide range of vertebrates including humans, is increasingly recognized as a parasite of a diverse range of wildlife species. However, little data are available regarding the identification of Cryptosporidium species and genotypes in wild aquatic environments, and more particularly in edible freshwater fish. To evaluate th...

2017
Rongjun Wang Guanghui Zhao Yunya Gong Longxian Zhang

Major progress has been made in understanding the epidemiology of bovine Cryptosporidium in China in the past 30 years. The overall infection rate in that period was 14.50% (5265/36316), with different prevalence being observed among dairy cattle, yaks, beef cattle, and buffalo. The infection rate declined as the animals' ages increased and the lowest prevalence occurred in winter. Ten Cryptosp...

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2006
Ronald Fayer Mónica Santín James M Trout Ellis Greiner

The prevalence of Cryptosporidium species in 1-2-year-old heifers was determined for 571 animals on 14 dairy farms in seven states on the East Coast of the United States. A fecal specimen collected directly from each heifer was processed to concentrate oocysts that were then examined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). For every PCR-positive specimen the 18S rRNA gene of Cryptosporidium was seq...

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