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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An investigation of sheep flocks with unknown histories of fleece derangement, selected at random from the main sheep raising areas of New South Wales, showed that Psorergates ovis was present in 53 of the 177 flocks surveyed and in 162 of the 3495 sheep examined. Of the single causes of fleece derangement, the most prevalent was grass seed contamination (15.7%) followed by infestation with sheep body lice, Bovicola ovis, (14.7%) and infestation with itch mite (7.8%). The prevalence of fleece derangement was significantly higher on sheep in which lice were the only ectoparasites found than on those in which itch mites were the only ectoparasites present. The greatest prevalence of P ovis was in flocks in the Young, Yass, Mudgee and Tenterfield districts. In most affected flocks, more than one potential cause of fleece derangement was present. Itch mite infestation was more prevalent in flocks that received no treatment for ectoparasites than in those that had been treated in the year preceding the survey. Our results did not support a commonly held belief among farmers that arsenical compounds control infestations of itch mites more effectively than other types of pesticides. There was no significant difference in prevalence of fleece derangement between flocks treated with different pesticide groups and those that received no treatment, but mean fleece derangement score was significantly lower in sheep treated with organophosphates than in untreated sheep. Infestations of lice were significantly more prevalent in sheep from flocks treated with synthetic pyrethroids than from those treated with organophosphates or those that received no treatment.
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PMID:Prevalence of the causes of fleece derangement among sheep flocks in New South Wales. 821 84

Human parasitic infestations of the skin by mites (Acari) and insects can be divided into permanent and temporary ectoparasitoses. This fact is important for diagnosis and treatment. Permanent ectoparasites are highly adapted to their host, the human being, and live in permanent contact with him. Diagnosis is usually simple and the parasite can be found on the patient. Treatment is by antiparasitic topical medication. In contrast to permanent ectoparasitosis, temporary ectoparasites are not found on the patient. When a bite reaction is perceptible the insect has left its host. The history of the affected patient is often very vague. However, some stinging insects are rather well known and are sometimes recognized by the patient or brought along for specific determination of the species. The bite reaction is not unique for the insects and does not allow an assumption regarding species diagnosis. The clinical manifestation of a bite reaction is dependent on the immunological situation of the host. Even more difficult is the diagnosis of temporary infestations by mites. Mites are very small and barely visible to the naked eye. Patients are unaware of the existence of mites and did not notice the infestation or the bite. In addition, mites will not be detectable in man at the time when the consequences of the infestation are perceptible. All in all, diagnosis appears to be very difficult. Suspicion may arise from history and the diagnosis must be confirmed by documenting the parasite on its primary host or in the environment of the patient. The treatment of the patient is unspecific against itch.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Domestic ectoparasitoses, a review]. 832 75

Schistosoma mansoni schistosomiasis is widespread in Latin America and Black Africa. Infestation is through the skin where it produces erythema with pruritus. Invasion is manifested by mild or sometimes fairly marked systemic disorders. The gastrointestinal disorders observed in the established phase have no characteristic features. The major complication is portal hypertension due to the portal vein fibrosis provoked by schistosomatic granules with an egg at their centre. The diagnosis rests on the finding of eggs in the faeces and on biopsy of the rectal mucosa. The present treatments are effective and well tolerated, but a portocaval anastomosis may be necessary.
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PMID:[Symptoms and development of Schistosoma mansoni infestation]. 834 4

An adult domestic short-hair cat from south Texas was examined because of excessive dandruff on the back, neck, thorax, and hind limbs. Removal of a few hairs for microscopic evaluation revealed Lynxacarus radovskyi, the cat fur mite. The small (< 0.5 mm) mite could be readily identified by its laterally compressed body and its characteristic grasping of the hair shaft between the gnathosoma and palpi. Thus far, this mite has been identified as a parasite of cats in warm, humid environments. The number of parasites and apparent discomfort in cats varies considerably, from massive infestation with little discomfort to few mites and marked pruritus. Acaricides that are effective against other ectoparasites of cats apparently are effective in controlling L. radovskyi.
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PMID:Lynxacarus radovskyi infestation in a cat. 844 2

In the last decade, human scabies caused by Sarcoptes scabiei and other non human strains is one of the most common contagious parasitic disease. Over a period of one year (June 1991--May 1992), a total of 200 scabietic patients were diagnosed in the outpatients' clinic of Dermatology and Venereology, Benha University Hospitals. They were 120 females and 80 males (sex ratio = 1.5:1). Their ages ranged between three months up to 70 years old. Most of the patients were parasitologically positive (160 or 80%). The most common signs and symptoms were itching, skin burrows, scratch markings, papules and pustules. Regional lymphadenitis was sometimes present as well as fever in patients with secondary bacterial infection. The most affected sites were the abdomen (100%), followed by the buttocks (81.3%), the thigh (50%), legs (50%) and the arms and web spaces (62.5%). The male external genitalia was infested in 60% and the female breast was infested in 72.7%. The sex and site distribution of the infestations were attributed to the risk factor of exposure to infestation. The patients were successfully treated with 5% sulfur precipitate and 2-5% permethrin. The whole results were discussed on the light of the previous work.
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PMID:Clinical and parasitological aspects on human scabies in Qualyobia Governorate, Egypt. 848 72

In two homeless men aged 38 and 32 years, who suffered from itching, infestation with body lice (Pediculus humanus var. corporis, a.k.a. clothes lice) was diagnosed. This infestation is rare in the Netherlands. In 1993 and 1994 and infection with body lice was registered 41 times in 31 patients at the clinic for homeless of the Community Health Service of Utrecht. The body louse can be seen by the naked eye. Treatment is by hygienic measures, pediculicides if necessary, and by prevention. Important to recognize is that P. humanus can be the vector of trench fever (Bartonella quintana), relapsing fever and typhus.
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PMID:[Back again: the clothes louse (Pediculus humanus var. corporis)]. 892 69

A clinical case of Cheyletiella infestation on a dog born and raised in Korea is reported. A three-year old female Whippet was hospitalized due to a multiple fracture and displacement of the left scapula caused by a recent car accident. The mite infestation was not noticed at the time of hospitalization. The dog underwent multiple operations involving internal fixation of the fractured scapula with wire and a plate, followed by extensive chemotherapy with antibiotics and prednisolone. After two months of hospitalization, a pruritic dermatitis near the left scapula developed. Multiple white dandruff-like flakes were seen on the hair coat, especially over the dorsal spine and neck, and the dog expressed increased pruritus by frequently licking and scratching the affected areas. Local dense accumulations of skin debris that became crusty were also observed. Microscopic examination of a skin scraping revealed a heavy infestation of cheyletiella yasguri, as identified by the presence of hoks of the palpi and the heart-shaped sensory organ on genu I. Immunosuppression elicited by the extensive administration of prednisolone was suspected for the initiation of the generalized mite infestation.
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PMID:A case report of Cheyletiella infestation on a Whippet dog in Korea. 901 13

In three women with persistent pruritus, aged 49, 28 and 4 years, infestation with the bird or chicken mite (Dermanyssus gallinae) was demonstrated. These mites live in narrow openings and cracks close to the bird housing during the daytime. At night they attack the birds on whose blood they live. When their host disappears, they may attack men, notably when their breeding places are in or near houses. Mite bites result in urticarial and itchy papulovesicular skin eruptions. Treatment of bird mite infestation consists of removing the old nests. Treatment of the patients is symptomatic. Epizoonosis belongs in the differential diagnosis of pruritus; infestation with bird or chicken mites is one of the possibilities.
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PMID:[Parasitic pruritus: bird mite zoonosis]. 905 46

Sarcoptic mange is one of the common swine diseases worldwide. Although mange-free populations can be established with caesarean derived stock, by herd repopulation programmes or by eliminating mange with ivermectin, mange remains prevalent in many countries. Field and experimental studies indicate that hypersensitive mange is detrimental to performance of growing pigs. Typically, producers tolerate mange infestation in their herds and control measures are often haphazard. This tolerance to mange infestation is attributable to the covert nature of the losses (reduced growth rate and feed efficiency without mortality) and to the fact that clinical signs of hypersensitive mange (pruritus) are usually viewed as normal. Lack of tools to evaluate mange severity in pigs and to demonstrate its importance has hindered the efforts of veterinarians to control the disease. Traditionally, veterinarians have used slaughter inspections to assess respiratory diseases such as enzootic pneumonia and atrophic rhinitis. Much of the value of slaughter inspections is as a tool with which veterinarians can educate and motivate their clients to improve disease control measures. The potential for evaluating hypersensitive mange by inspecting slaughtered pigs for lesions of papular dermatitis was recognised some time ago, but quantitative evaluation of the reliability of this approach has been lacking. We have conducted several studies in Australia, the USA, Canada, Europe and Latin America to evaluate associations between Sarcoptes infestation and the severity of papular dermatitis at slaughter, using a simple ordinal scale for classifying carcasses. Our initial field and experimental data in Australia indicated the specificity of localised dermatitis to be in the order of 75-80%, but that the generalised dermatitis was highly specific (> 98%) for mange. Subsequent studies in the US Midwest yielded almost identical results, and indicated that the method may also have some utility for surveillance of mange-free herds. Results from other locations invariably have shown significant associations between dermatitis lesions and mange infestation. Relative to other methods such as skin scrapings and monitoring pruritus, this method is simple and relatively objective, and should be considered for routine inclusion in slaughter inspection protocols.
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PMID:Using slaughter inspections to evaluate sarcoptic mange infestation of finishing swine. 919 23

Eosinophils are believed to play an important part in the pathogenesis of equine diseases such as helminth infestation and the allergic skin disease, sweet itch. It has been shown that adherence of human eosinophils to the connective tissue matrix protein fibronectin enhances cell activation and survival time. If adherence causes similar changes in the properties of equine eosinophils, cell-induced tissue damage at a site of parasitic infestation or allergic response would be exacerbated. However, investigation of this hypothesis requires identification of mediators that cause equine eosinophil adherence. Since the equivalent recombinant equine proteins were not available, the present study reports the effects of recombinant human (rh) C5a and IL-5 on the adherence of equine peripheral blood eosinophils (EPBEs) to fibronectin in vitro. The effects of LTB4 and PAF on EPBE adherence to fibronectin were also examined and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) was used as a positive control. PMA caused a dose-related increase in EPBE adherence to fibronectin-coated plastic. In comparison, rh C5a produced a much smaller response which was only evident at the highest dose tested. On the other hand, rhIL-5 induced a small, but significant dose-related increase in EPBE adherence. Moreover, this response was in part dependent on the beta 1 integrin Very Late Antigen-4 (VLA4). Since adherence to serum-coated plastic was also increased by IL-5, beta 2 integrins may be activated and/or up-regulated on EPBEs by the cytokine. Neither LTB4 nor PAF caused EPBE adherence to fibronectin but prior incubation with these mediators increased the response of cells to IL-5. There were no differences between the responses of EPBEs isolated from horses with clinical signs of sweet itch and normal animals. Thus, whilst up-regulation of IL-5-induced adherence may occur locally in tissues in vivo, it does not appear to take place in the circulation. Finally, C5a, PAF and LTB4, but not IL-5, caused equine neutrophil adherence to fibronectin demonstrating the different responses of granulocytes to these mediators. The results obtained in the present study have shown that mediators which may be released at sites of inflammatory or allergic reactions can induce or enhance eosinophil adherence to tissue matrix protein. Thus, these mediators can now be used in future studies to determine if cell adherence may alter eosinophil activation or survival time.
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PMID:Agonist-induced adherence of equine eosinophils to fibronectin. 922 26


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