Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (volvulus)
4,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum samples from persons who lived in areas where onchocerciasis occurred or who had filariasis were examined with the complement fixation test and the indirect hemagglutination test for the presence of antibodies against crude extracts from Dirofilaria immitis, Onchocerca volvulus, Dipetalonema viteae, and Ascaris suum. The results could be interpreted as follows: 1. The indirect hemagglutination test was more sensitive than the complement fixation test for the demonstration of antibodies in sera from European and indigenous inhabitants of endemic areas. 2. There were no differences between the responses to the four crude worm extracts among the groups of 21 patients with Loa loa, 12 patients with Onchocerca volvulus, 11 patients with Dipetalonema perstans, and 22 patients with clinical filariasis in whom no microfilaria had been found. It was concluded that the examination with crude extracts cannot give any information about the antigens that had caused the stimulation of antibodies.
Infection 1977
PMID:[Immunological diagnosis of filariosis in persons returning from tropical countries and in European and indigenous inhabitants of endemic areas (author's transl)]. 27 33

Gastrointestinal disease in middle Africa is changing. The traditional patterns were high frequencies of parasitic and infectious diseases and sigmoid volvulus, and low incidences of colonic polyps, carcinoma of the colon, appendicitis, diverticulosis, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. The current disease patterns are compared with those for gastrointestinal disease in developed countries and etiological factors are discussed.
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PMID:Epidemiology of chronic intestinal disease in middle Africa. 44 97

Dilated colon is provoked by obstructing lesions, toxic megacolon or colonic pseudoobstruction. The obstructing lesions of the colon are colonic volvulus, inflammatory bowel disease with stenosis or colonic cancer. Toxic megacolon is more often caused by I.B.D. and rarely by infectious diseases. Etiological diagnosis is possible after clinical and radiological evaluation. Colonoscopy is always indicated, except in toxic megacolon. Balloon dilatation of strictures, palliative treatment of colonic carcinoma by Laser procedures, reduction of colonic volvulus and aspiration of colonic pseudoobstruction are the principal indications of therapeutic colonoscopy in the non surgical treatment of dilated colon.
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PMID:[Acute dilatation of the colon]. 179 37

Infection due to Onchocerca volvulus was investigated in the Nimiyama Chiefdom, Kono District, Sierra Leone, where Simulium damnosum s.l. is known to breed but no data on the prevalence and intensity of O. volvulus infection exists. Of the 735 individuals sampled by the skin snip method in five villages, 471 (64%) were infected. The infection rate for males was significantly (p less than 0.05) higher than that of the females. Two hundred and ninety-one (70.0%) of the 416 males skin snipped and 180 (56.0%) of the 323 of their female cohorts were infected. The intensity of infection increased with age, with the younger cohorts presenting lower microfilarial density (MFD). Palpable nodules were observed in 230 (48.4%) of individuals found positive for skin microfilariae and in 37 (5.0%) individuals found negative for skin microfilariae. It is concluded that O. volvulus infection is mesoendemic in the Nimiyama Chiefdom, with the intensity of infection increasing with age.
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PMID:Parasitologic survey of Onchocerca volvulus infection in the Nimiyama Chiefdom, Kono District, Sierra Leone. 259 98

Human onchocerciasis is found along the Nile in Northern Sudan, on the border with Ethiopia and in the Southern and Western Sudan--all areas where there is fast flowing water suitable for S. damnosum S.L. (in Sudan, the only fly in which the O. volvulus has been found) to breed. Epidemiological studies of this disease are still in progress however it is clear that in the huge area between Bahr El-Arabe and the white Nile, which is the most serious focus with blindness rates equalling or exceeding those in the worst affected foci elsewhere in Africa. Infection rates and parasite populations are highest in villages situated on rivers--near the probable breeding sites. Intensity of infection is generally highest in skin snip taken from the pelvi region, where the palpable nodules are more frequent. Microfilariae are commonly detected in the anterior chamber of the eye and in the peripheral blood. Fundus oculi lesions have been also detected in significant numbers causing impairment of vision and blindness, specially in the group of old people. Males are more commonly infected than females. These data provide a reasonable, though far from complete, account of the present situation concerning the importance and severity of onchocerciasis in this part of Sudan.
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PMID:[Onchocerciasis in Sudan: epidemiological situation in the south-west]. 343 81

Onchocerciasis is one of the major filarial diseases affecting humans and a leading cause of blindness. Control of the disease by chemotherapy and by elimination of the vector is not feasible in most areas of endemicity. The host immune response is thought to play a major role in the pathogenesis of complications. However, there is no clear evidence of protective immunity to reinfection in individuals who continue to be exposed to infective larvae. Antigens of Onchocerca volvulus are complex and show extensive cross-reactivity with other filarial parasites of humans and animals. Infection in humans results in the production of precipitating and reaginic antibodies to the parasite and in increases in levels of immunoglobulins that have no apparent specificity for parasitic antigens. Chronic antigenic stimulation in the presence of an antibody response leads to increased levels of circulating immune complexes. Cell-mediated immunity to parasite-derived antigens, as measured by migration inhibition, lymphocyte blastogenesis, and delayed skin-test reactivity, is decreased during infection. In addition, there is a decrease in delayed skin-test reactivity and in lymphocyte blastogenesis in response to unrelated antigens.
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PMID:Humoral and cellular immune responses to Onchocerca volvulus infection in humans. 407 Sep 16

Two species of Simulium were used to examine the effect of experimental Onchocerca lienalis infections on their fecundity and oviposition rates. S. ornatum s.l. was chosen as a natural vector of bovine onchocerciasis in Britain, and S. lineatum was selected because of its suitability as an experimental model for oviposition studies. Infection was either by feeding with blood containing microfilariae, or by intrathoracic injection of the parasites. Using the blood feeding technique, reductions in the fecundity of S. lineatum were observed at rates of 21 to 76%, depending on the concentration of parasites. A reduction of 21% in the fecundity of S. ornatum s.l. (P less than 0.05) was achieved when flies were fed on microfilariae at 69,000 per ml. Although individual flies feeding on infected blood may take as much as those in control groups, the feeding rates were reduced in several instances. S. lineatum also showed a depression of oviposition rate when infected by O. linenalis larvae. Fecundity was also significantly reduced when the route of infection was intrathoracic. Reductions for S. lineatum depended on the inoculum, but were either 36% (10 microfilariae per fly) or 54% (50 microfilariae per fly). S. ornatum s.l. showed a 13% reduction in fecundity when given 20 microfilariae per fly. It was concluded that similar experimental studies could be usefully performed with S. damnosum s.l. infected with O. volvulus microfilariae.
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PMID:The effect of experimental Onchocerca infections on the fecundity and oviposition of laboratory reared Simulium sp. (Diptera, Simuliidae). 671 Jun 3

Three species of British blackflies, Simulium ornatum s.l., S. erythrocephalum and S. lineatum, were infected with the cryopreserved microfilariae of Onchocerca volvulus obtained from human skin-snips in the Sudan. Doses of 5 or 10 microfilariae per fly were administered by intrathoracic injection into females, 1-2 days after eclosion from pupae. After 7 days at 27.5 degrees C and 85% relative humidity, microfilariae had completed development to third-stage larvae. Fly survival rates were highest for S. ornatum (96%) and lowest for S. lineatum (56%), and fell only marginally in each species when the larger dose of microfilariae was given. Infection rates ranged from 42% in S. lineatum up to 58% in S. ornatum following the lower dose of microfilariae, and 58% in S. lineatum up to 79% in S. ornatum following the higher dose. The proportion of microfilariae which completed development was relatively constant in each species of fly, ranging from 3.1-4.2% in S. lineatum to 10.5-16.8% in S. erythrocephalum. The greatest number of third-stage larvae recovered came from S. erythrocephalum at the higher dose of microfilariae, with a mean of 2.4 larvae per infected fly. As S. erythrocephalum has been successfully colonized through several generations in the laboratory, it is concluded that this is a promising species for reselection for increased susceptibility to O. volvulus.
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PMID:Development of Onchocerca volvulus from cryopreserved microfilariae in three temperate species of laboratory-reared blackflies. 687 7

Two species of Nearctic black fly, Simulium decorum and S. pictipes, exhibit partial susceptibility to infection with the bovine parasite, Onchocerca lienalis, when inoculated intrathoracically with microfilariae. In addition, a proportion of S. decorum females will support the development of the human parasite, O. volvulus, to the third larvae stage. Infection rates with second- or third-stage larvae seven or more days after varied among geographic strains of S. decorum, ranging from 6.5% in a strain from northern New York State to 48.7% in a strain from Georgia. The average number of larvae per infected female ranged from 1.00 to 1.78 in the three strains examined. Partial susceptibility to O. lienalis was found to persist in colonized strains of s. decorum, and cryopreserved microfilariae of this parasite retained their infectivity. Seven or more days after inoculation with microfilariae of the Guatemalan strain of O. volvulus, 16.7% of the females of S. decorum harbored second- or third-stage larvae. Development of O. lienalis and O. volvulus proceeded normally in these black flies, and moderate increases in susceptibility rate and number of infective larvae were noted in response to increased microfilarial dosages.
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PMID:The development of Onchocerca spp. in Simulium decorum Walker and Simulium pictipes Hagen. 723 46

Chronic hyperreactive onchodermatitis (sowda) is a severe form of onchocerciasis observed in a subset of individuals infected with the filarial nematode Onchocerca volvulus. SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analyses of O. volvulus adult worm extracts were used to characterize the antigens of the marked antibody response of sowda patients. One 2.5-kD antigen was recognized by sera from all 35(100%) sowda patients that were studied. In comparison, only 7 of 44 (16%) patients with generalized onchocerciasis and 11 of 21 (52%) of exposed individuals with no microfilariae in skin snips and no signs of disease showed reactivity to this antigen. Microfilaricidal treatment of sowda patients with improvement of the clinical status was associated with a decrease or disappearance of antibodies to the 2.5-kD antigen. Amino acid sequencing of the antigen indicated identity to human defensins 1-3 of neutrophils. Defensin was demonstrated by immunohistochemical staining in onchocercal nodules on the surface of adult filariae and in the surrounding tissue. A similar staining pattern was observed for other proteins present in neutrophils such as myeloperoxidase, elastase, and the L-1 protein complex (MRP 8/MRP 14), indicating that neutrophils, macrophages, and their proteins predominate in the environment adjacent to the worms. These results demonstrate an association between the presence of autoantibodies to defensins and an infectious disease of known etiology. The association with a particular form of onchocerciasis, sowda, suggests a link between formation of autoantibodies to defensin and enhanced immune reactivity towards the parasite.
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PMID:Human autoantibody to defensin: disease association with hyperreactive onchocerciasis (sowda). 779 Aug 22


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