Author:
ROEPSTORFF A.,ERIKSEN L.,SLOTVED H.-C.,NANSEN P.
Abstract
To study population kinetics during primary Ascaris suum
infections, 3 groups of 52 pigs each were inoculated with 100,
1000, or 10000 infective eggs. In all groups, the majority of larvae was
found in the liver on day 3 post inoculation (p.i.)
and in the lungs on day 7 p.i. Liver white spots, caused by migrating
larvae, were most numerous at day 7 p.i., whereafter
they gradually healed, and only low numbers of granulation-tissue type
white
spots and lymphonodular white spots
persisted at days 21–56 p.i. Independent of dose level,
47–58% of the inoculated eggs were recovered as larvae in the small
intestine on day 10 p.i., but most larvae were eliminated at days
17–21 p.i. This elimination started earlier and removed
a higher percentage of the worms with increasing inoculation dose,
resulting in small strongly aggregated worm
populations by day 28 p.i. (k of the negative binomial distribution
was low: 0·2–0·4) without significant differences between
groups. Thus, overdispersion, which is a characteristic of both porcine
and human ascarosis, is found here under
experimental conditions where aggregation factors like host behaviour,
transmission rate, host status etc have been partly or totally controlled.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
129 articles.
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