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The Behavior and Pathogenicity of Toxacara Canis Larvae in Mice of Different Strains

Overview
Journal Parasitol Res
Specialty Parasitology
Date 1994 Jan 1
PMID 7886040
Citations 19
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Abstract

In the present study the behavior and pathogenicity of second-stage larvae of Toxocara canis were examined in different mouse strains with special emphasis on the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Mice of the inbred strains BALB, C3H, C57BL, and DBA and the outbred strain NMRI were infected orally with 1000 second-stage larvae of T. canis. The clinical behavior of the animals; the numbers of larvae detected in the liver, lungs, brain, and musculature; the hematological and serological parameters; and histological sections were examined. In mice of the BALB strain, no death occurred during the entire period of the investigation and the pattern of body-weight development of infected and uninfected animals was almost identical. The highest larval counts in the brain of all strains were found in BALB mice. The percentage of eosinophils in the blood of BALB mice increased after the 8th week postinfection, whereas it decreased in the other strains. Histological and pathophysiological changes developed to a lesser extent in this strain than in the other strains. In mice of the strains C3H, C57BL, DBA, and NMRI, deaths occurred from the 4th week postinfection onward. The infected animals lost weight in comparison with the uninfected controls; the number of larvae found in the brains of infected mice of the above-mentioned strains were lower than those detected in the BALB strain. There is no evidence that mechanical damage caused by migrating larvae in the brain tissue is mainly responsible for symptoms of central nervous toxocariasis. Likewise, the assumption that the MHC is involved in the allergic-inflammatory response in the brain could not be proven: infected mice of the BALB and DBA strains reacted completely differently, although both are equipped with the same MHC haplotype.

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