نتایج جستجو برای: naegleria

تعداد نتایج: 586  

2011
Yang-Jin Lee Chang-Eun Park Jong-Hyun Kim Hae-Jin Sohn Jinyoung Lee Suk-Yul Jung Ho-Joon Shin

Naegleria fowleri, a ubiquitous free-living ameba, causes fatal primary amebic meningoencephalitis in humans. N. fowleri trophozoites are known to induce cytopathic changes upon contact with microglial cells, including necrotic and apoptotic cell death and pro-inflammatory cytokine release. In this study, we treated rat microglial cells with amebic lysate to probe contact-independent mechanisms...

2013
R. M. HAGGERTY E. C. Nelson

Incubation temperature, growth phase, and strain of parasite were examined for their effect upon the virulence of Naegleria fowleri for mice. Agitated cultures of amebae incubated at 30 and 37°C were more virulent than amebae cultured at 23 and 44°C. Mortality was greater for mice inoculated with amebae harvested at late logarithmic and early stationary growth phases than it was with amebae har...

Journal: :British medical journal 1970
J Apley S K Clarke A P Roome S A Sandry G Saygi B Silk D C Warhurst

Meningoencephalitis proved to be due to an amoeba (Naegleria) has been diagnosed in Great Britain for the first time. The first patient (a boy of 2) survived longer than any previously recorded cases, but in spite of early diagnosis and treatment he died 15 days after the onset of meningeal symptoms.Two other children who were exposed to the same possible source of infection (a warm, muddy pudd...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1986
F M Marciano-Cabral D E Fulford

The cytopathology for rat neuroblastoma cells (B-103) and the pathogenicity for B6C3F1 mice of four species of Naegleria have been compared. Both live amoebae and cell-free extracts of N. australiensis, N. fowleri, N. gruberi, and N. lovaniensis added to 51Cr-labeled B-103 cells caused release of radiolabel. All four species of Naegleria exhibited surface extensions termed food cups. Only N. fo...

2015
Cheridah D. Todd María Reyes-Batlle Basilio Valladares John F. Lindo Jacob Lorenzo-Morales

Free-living amoebae (FLA) occupy a wide range of freshwater, marine, and soil habitats, and are opportunistic pathogens in human beings. While Acanthamoeba spp., Naegleria fowleri, and Balamuthia mandrillaris are well-known opportunistic organisms, Vannella epipetala is nonpathogenic. Sediments were collected from a freshwater source from a park in Jamaica to investigate the presence of FLA. Ac...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1980
R T Cursons T J Brown E A Keys K M Moriarty D Till

Pathogenic free-living amoebae are common in nature, but few clinical infections by these amoebae have been reported. This has prompted studies of host susceptibility factors in humans. A survey of normal human sera from three New Zealand Health Districts was made; antibodies to pathogenic free-living amoebae were found in all sera, with titers ranging from 1:5 to 1:20 for Naegleria spp. and fr...

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2006
Juan A Morales Aida J Chaves G S Visvesvara J P Dubey

Species of Naegleria, Acanthamoeba, and Balamuthia are soil amoebae that can cause encephalitis in animals and humans. Of these, Naegleria fowleri is the cause of often fatal primary meningoencephalitis in humans. N. fowleri-associated encephalitis was diagnosed in a cow that was suspected to have rabies. Only formalin-fixed brain was available for diagnosis. There was severe meningoencephaliti...

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