Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0022568 (keratitis)
5,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The conditions were examined for in vitro antibody-mediated adherence of granulocytes to microfilariae of Onchocera volvulus and Dirofilaria immitis. Reactivity in human sera from patients in endemic foci in Sudan was specific for O. volvulus and no reactions were observed with heterologous Onchocerca species or with Mansonella perstans. Microfilariae from skin, nodules or adult female worms were satisfactory targets for cell adherence, and the cells involved were almost exclusively eosinophils. The reaction was inhibited by indomethacin but not by nordihydroguaiaretic acid, an inhibitor of leukotriene production. Agents that slowed or stopped microfilarial motility (e.g. nifedipine, lidocaine, chloroquine) inhibited the reaction, probably by reducing target/cell contact. Ivermectin did not enhance the reaction, and in the absence of cells exerted only slight effects on the movement of microfilariae at higher concentrations (greater than 10 micrograms/ml). Antibody activity was labile, and did not persist well through freeze-thaw cycles. Some differences between homologous and heterologous mixtures (microfilariae/cells/serum) were seen but they could not be resolved satisfactorily. There were no apparent geographical differences between microfilariae from different foci in Sudan. In the D. immitis system neutrophils were the dominant cell type adhering to microfilariae, and the activity was stable to storage and freeze-thaw. No enhancement was detectable with diethylcarbamazine. Antibody activity was absorbable with microfilarial antigens and was reduced by agents that inhibited microfilarial motility. In dogs, adherence-mediating antibody was seen only in amicrofilaraemic animals with occult infection, and in only a minority of these sera. In humans the relationship to clinical findings was less clear, but patients with punctate keratitis were the most likely to have positive serum and were the most reactive in the assay. This system may therefore offer some insights into disease mechanisms in vivo, and its molecular mechanisms deserve further characterization.
...
PMID:Cell adherence to microfilariae of Onchocerca volvulus: a comparative study. 359 20

Different immune responses to Onchocerca volvulus cause considerable variation in clinical manifestations of human onchocerciasis. Onchocercal lesions result from inflammatory reactions involving immunologic mechanisms; the role of the immune system in pathogenesis is emphasized by the phenomena accompanying accelerated worm destruction during microfilaricidal chemotherapy (e.g., eosinophilia, changes in total immunoglobulin level, and anaphylactic symptoms). Although most pathologic changes are associated with the microfilarial stage, the extent to which circulating antibodies are directed against antigens in the adult worm or its uterine constituents is unknown. Microfilarial destruction can be mediated by antibody to the surface-associated antigens of the worms and enhanced by complement; a correlation exists between the presence of these antibodies and punctate keratitis. Heterogeneous immunologic components are associated with the surface of dermal and nodular microfilariae in vivo. Preliminary findings indicate that the level of O. volvulus-specific immune complexes is inversely proportional to the microfilarial load. To monitor a patient's clinical status and immunologic response, a quantitative system dividing symptoms into those associated with active responses to the microfilariae and those representing long-term consequences of these reactions is suggested.
...
PMID:Variations in host responses and the pathogenesis of human onchocerciasis. 407 Sep 18

The microfiladermia of Monanema martini was studied in two natural murid hosts, Lemniscomys striatus and Arvicanthis niloticus, with 137 and 39 rodents respectively inoculated once, twice or several times. Microfilarial densities (mf/mm2) were measured at the ear pinna every three months. Almost all the rodents developed a microfiladermia. When L. striatus rodents were inoculated once with 30, 80, or 400 infective larvae, microfiladermia increased (peaks of 108, 148, 174 mf/mm2 respectively, at six to nine months p.i.); this fits with the fact that, in this filaria-host pair, the number of adult filariae is proportional to the number of inoculated larvae, and remains at a constant level for more than eight months. Nevertheless microfiladermia was limited, especially during the peak, showing the complexity of its regulatory mechanisms. Several low doses over one year, resulting in 145 L3, increased the microfiladermia at the same level than one dose of 400 larvae; the recovery rate of the larvae was reduced but the total number of filariae recovered was increased. A. niloticus, from which the filarial strain originates, showed a much lower microfiladermia than L. striatus (7 mf/mm2 with 80 larvae, at six months p.i.). This was due to a smaller recovery rate of the infective larvae in this host and, overall, to a reduced fertility of the female worms and a shorter lifetime of adult filariae. However, repeated inoculations increased the microfiladermia (32 mf/mm2), due to the constant presence of small numbers of young filariae producing microfilariae. It is to be noted that the two biological systems presented by M. martini in L. striatus and A. niloticus correspond to the two types of ocular pathology described in a recent opthalmological study, chorioretinal atrophy and keratitis respectively.
...
PMID:Monanema martini in its murid hosts: microfiladermia related to infective larvae and adult filariae. 793 58

In the onchocerciasis-endemic rain forest area of the Rumpi Hills in southwestern Cameroon, a community-based trial of ivermectin, given either once or twice a year over a three-year period (1988-1991), confirmed that the drug is a potent microfilaricide. The side effects recorded following the first treatment were edema, fever, pruritus, generalized body pains and lymphadenitis. Following subsequent treatments, the same adverse reactions were recorded, but these were generally milder when compared with those of the first treatment. The prevalence of skin microfilaria (mf) was more reduced in zone two, in which treatment was given every six months (76.9% reduction at the end of one year) than in the zone one, in which treatment was given once a year (7.4% reduction). In both zones, the impact of the drug in reducing the intensity of infection was more significant than that for prevalence. Besides pruritus, other skin symptoms were not significantly modified by ivermectin treatment. Ivermectin reduced the prevalence of ocular mf as well as the mf load of the anterior chamber of the eye, resulting in improvement of certain eye lesions such as punctate keratitis, anterior uveitis, and papillary anomalies. There was also some improvement in visual acuity. The level of participation of the village populations was somewhat low, ranging from 52% to 66%, despite excitement over the drug's additional benefit of expelling intestinal round worms.
...
PMID:A community-based trial of ivermectin for onchocerciasis control in the forest of southwestern Cameroon: clinical and parasitologic findings after three treatments. 842 94

Onchocerciasis is caused by the parasitic worm Onchocerca volvulus, which releases millions of offspring (microfilariae). Microfilariae migrate through the skin and can enter the anterior or posterior regions of the eye. While alive, the microfilariae appear to cause little or no inflammation, being in the anterior chamber. However, when they die, either by natural attrition or after chemotherapy, the host response to degenerating worms can result in ocular inflammation (keratitis, uveitis, chorioretinitis, neuritis of the optic nerve) that causes progressive loss of vision and ultimately leads to blindness. With the use of a mouse model of corneal inflammation to study the pathogenesis of ocular onchocerciasis by injecting worm extracts directly into the corneal stroma, it was found that worms treated with the antibiotic doxycycline, which destroys Wolbachia, induced lower corneal stromal thickness and stromal haze (indicators of corneal oedema and opacity) and neutrophil infiltration compared with both untreated worms and worms that do not harbour Wolbachia. These data indicate that endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria in filarial parasites have a key role in the pathogenesis of river blindness. Worms recovered from patients treated for 6 weeks with doxycycline contained fewer Wolbachia bacteria and had abnormal embryogenesis, indicating a role for Wolbachia in the survival or fecundity of the worms. Antibiotic treatment may also reduce the severity of the inflammatory response in the cornea.
...
PMID:[Ocular onchocerciasis: a key role for Wolbachia]. 1797 45

In Europe, Thelazia callipaeda has been reported in Italy and France in the eyes of dogs, cats and foxes and, recently, also in humans. In southern Switzerland (Ticino), the first case of T. callipaeda in a dog was detected in 2000 and because of an increasing number of dog thelaziosis, a survey in veterinary practices was carried out. A total of 106 Thelazia-positive dogs from a retrospective analysis and from ongoing cases between 2005 and 2007 as well as five positive cats were reported. For a cross-sectional study, 529 randomly selected dogs (from six veterinary practices), to which anaesthesia was given for other medical reasons, were additionally checked for the presence of adult specimens of Thelazia in 2006: 28 dogs were found positive indicating an overall prevalence of 5.3%. Thelazia-infection was furthermore diagnosed in 7 of 126 foxes (5.6%) shot in Ticino in winter 2005-2006. Affected foxes, dogs and cats originated from the same regions up to 863m of altitude. The cats and 57.9% (55/95) of the infected dogs had never crossed the Swiss border. Collected nematodes were morphologically identified as T. callipaeda, and this diagnosis was confirmed by the analysis of a part of the sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 gene (cox1), revealing haplotype 1, the only one so far found in Europe. Animals harboured 1-23 eye worms. The most common symptoms were conjunctivitis and epiphora, while keratitis was present only in a low number of animals. Young and small sized dogs were significantly less involved than large animals and over 3 years of age. The results indicate that thelaziosis is endemic in that area.
...
PMID:Emergence of canine ocular Thelaziosis caused by Thelazia callipaeda in southern Switzerland. 1877 29

Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) is an essential mediator of corneal inflammation induced by the filarial nematode Onchocerca volvulus, which harbors endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria. TLR2 is also required for dendritic cell activation, gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) production, and neutrophil recruitment to the cornea. To examine the role of IFN-gamma in O. volvulus keratitis, C57BL/6 and IFN-gamma(-/-) mice were immunized subcutaneously, and a soluble antigen extract from O. volvulus adult worms (OvAg) was injected into the corneal stroma of each animal. We found that, in the absence of IFN-gamma, neutrophil recruitment to the cornea was significantly impaired, whereas there was no effect on eosinophil infiltration. Since the cornea contains resident macrophages and fibroblasts and our previous studies showed that CXC chemokines mediate neutrophil recruitment, we examined the role of recombinant IFN-gamma (rIFN-gamma) on each cell type. We found no effect of rIFN-gamma on CXC chemokine production by macrophages or corneal fibroblasts, either alone or with filarial extracts; in contrast, rIFN-gamma was found to enhance OvAg-induced tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-1alpha, and IL-1beta in macrophages. Furthermore, we found that rTNF-alpha, rIL-1alpha, or rIL-1beta induced CXC chemokine production by corneal fibroblasts but not by macrophages. To determine the relative contributions of endogenous cytokines, we injected OvAg into the corneal stroma of C57BL/6, IL-1 receptor 1(-/-) (IL-1R1(-/-)), and TNF-alphaR1/2(-/-) mice and examined neutrophil recruitment. We found that neutrophil infiltration was impaired in IL-1R1(-/-) mice but not in TNF-alphaR1/2(-/-) mice. IFN-gamma therefore appears to regulate neutrophil recruitment to the corneal stroma by enhancing TLR2 expression and OvAg-induced IL-1alpha and IL-1beta production by macrophages in the cornea, which then induce IL-1R1-dependent production of CXC chemokine by resident corneal fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Gamma interferon and interleukin-1 receptor 1 regulate neutrophil recruitment to the corneal stroma in a murine model of Onchocerca volvulus keratitis. 1916 46

Parasitic agents have been associated with keratitis, but a diagnosis of parasitic keratitis has not been commonly made in domestic animals. The purpose of this study was to describe the clinical and histopathological findings in seven dogs with chronic keratitis caused by microfilariae diagnosed in Brazil. All dogs presented with superficial corneal opacities of varying degrees affecting the perilimbal and central regions of the cornea, with other opaque areas appearing as crystalline deposits and corneal vascularization. The lesions were bilateral and were associated with mild-to-moderate conjunctival hyperemia. There was no history of blepharospasm or pruritus, and no subjects presented with epithelial erosions. Corneal biopsy revealed free microfilariae in the corneal stroma, with varying degrees of inflammation and collagen fiber destruction. The microfilariae were also found in skin lesions by skin snip technique. No adult worms were found in these dogs, and no dogs were on heartworm preventative before diagnosis. Monthly doses of oral ivermectin improved ocular and dermal lesions. One dog showed complete remission with the treatment. The species of the microfilariae was not identified.
...
PMID:Keratitis due to microfilariae in dogs: a newly recognized disease. 2850 67