Abstract
Adult Angiostrongylus cantonensis live in the pulmonary arteries.
Unsegmented ova are discharged into the blood stream, and lodge as emboli in
the smaller vessels. First-stage larvae break through into the respiratory
tract, migrate up the trachea, and eventually pass out of the body in the
faeces.
Slugs (Agriolimax laevis) act as intermediate hosts. Two moults occur
in the slug, and third-stage larvae appear about the 17th day. The larvae
remain within the two cast skins until freed in the stomach of the rat by
digestion. They then pass quickly along the small intestine as far as the lower
ileum, where they leave the gut and become blood-borne.
They congregate in the central nervous system, and have been found there
17 hr after ingestion. The anterior portion of the cerebrum is the most
favoured site, and here the third moult takes place on the sixth or seventh
day and the final one between the 11th and 13th days. Young adults emerge on
the surface of the brain from the 12th to 14th day, and spend the next 2 weeks
in the subarachnoid space. From the 28th to 31st days they migrate to the
lungs via the venous system, passing through the right side of the heart to
their definitive site in the pulmonary arteries. The prepatent period in the rat
usually lies between 42 and 45 days.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
214 articles.
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