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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinicopathological studies on lymph nodes of 32 Africans with onchocerciasis--some complicated by hanging groin and elephantiasis of the genitalia--revealed atrophic lymphoid tissue, lymphoedema, chronic inflammation and fibrosis. We identified microfilariae of Onchocerca
volvulus
in nodes of 24 of 32 Africans (75%). There microfilariae were most numerous in the capsule and in the fibrous tissue of the medulla, but smaller numbers were also found within lymphoid tissue, in dilated lymphatics and in blood vessels. We believe that in Africians, antigens released from microfilariae of O.
volvulus
lead to the deposition of immune complex in tissues, which in turn causes inflammation and fibrosis and eventually obstructive lymphadenitis. This causes hanging groin and, possibly, also elephantiasis. A distinctive pattern of perivascular fibrosis contains "fibrinoid material" that we interpret as immune complexes involving microfilarial antigens. In contrast, nodes from two Yemenites with severe onchocercal
dermatitis
of the lower limbs (sowda) had hyperplastic follicles, minimal fibrosis and no microfilariae.
...
PMID:Onchocercal lymphadenitis: Clinicopathologic study of 34 patients. 65 85
Specimens of skin from four Cameroon patients with severe onchocercal
dermatitis
, before and after treatment with diethylcarbamazine (DEC), were studied by light and electron microscopy. Microfilariae of Onchocerca
volvulus
have ultrastructural features resembling those of microfilariae of other genera. Between the surface layer of the cuticle and the trilaminate membrane, there is an electrolucent zone which is much wider in degenerating microfilariae than in intact microfilariae. Widening of the zone may result from DEC-induced release of component(s) of the cuticle, possibly collagen or mucopolysaccharide. Between the cuticle and dermal collagen there are granular deposits which might be immune complexes involving the collagenous component of cuticle. Others have shown that DEC does not kill microfilariae in vitro. Treatment with DEC presumably "unmasks" microfilariae in the skin so that they are recognized as foreign bodies and are destroyed by the host's defenses. Histiocytes and eosinophils are seen in close proximity to degenerating microfilariae. Enzymes from histiocytes and eosinophils might readily penetrate the cuticle altered by DEC treatment, and digest various components within the microfilariae. Alternatively, the widening of the electrolucent zone might result directly from the action of leucocytic or histiocytic enzymes, after the microfilaria has been killed by other mechanisms.
...
PMID:Onchocercal dermatitis: ultrastructural studies of microfilariae and host tissues, before and after treatment with diethylcarbamazine (Hetrazan). 94 62
A total of 2,552 persons living in 9 villages along the Benue river valley, Mutum Biyu district of Gongola State, Nigeria were examined between October and December 1989 for filariasis. It is the first time a filariasis survey will be carried out in this state. 276 (10.8%) had Wuchereria bancrofti, 50 (2.0%) had Loa loa, 281 (11.0%) were positive for Mansonella perstans while 12 (0.5%) were positive for Onchocerca
volvulus
. Villages located near the Benue river had higher prevalence rates than those further away.
Dermatitis
and hydrocoele were common and clinical manifestations were associated with parasite types. Clinical symptoms without microfilaremia and microfilaremia without clinical symptoms were also observed.
...
PMID:Filariasis in Gongola State Nigeria. I: Clinical and parasitological studies in Mutum-Biyu District. 141 17
A total of 2552 persons living in 9 villages along the Benue river valley, Mutum-Biyu district of Gongola State, Nigeria were examined between October and December 1989 for filariasis. It is the first time a filariasis survey will be carried out in this State. 276 (10.8%) had Wuchereria bancrofti, 50 (2.0%) had Loa loa, 281 (11.0%) were positive for Mansonella perstans while 12 (0.5%) were positive for Onchocerca
volvulus
. Villages located near the Benue river had higher prevalence rates than those further away.
Dermatitis
and hydrocoele were common and clinical manifestations were associated with parasite types. Clinical symptoms without microfilaremia and microfilaremia without clinical symptoms were also observed. The study will fill the gap in our knowledge of filariasis in this part of Nigeria.
...
PMID:Filariasis in Gongola State Nigeria. I: Clinical and parasitological studies in Mutum-Biyu district. 180 69
Onchocerciasis can cause severe dermal and ocular disease due, it is thought, to the events surrounding the destruction of the microfilarial stage. The evolution of papular pruritic
dermatitis
and punctate keratitis is clearly related to the killing of microfilariae. Other more chronic changes such as dermal and epidermal atrophy are probably due to repeated episodes of microfilarial killing. It is common to find that not all patients are, at any one time, mounting clinically obvious destructive host responses against the microfilariae, and such individuals can carry very high loads of parasites without any apparent adverse effects. The immunological basis of the differences between these types of patients forms one of the most important questions in the pathogenesis of onchocerciasis today. Various explanations are now emerging. These include immunosuppressive factors and variation in the form of Onchocerca
volvulus
antigens presented to the host. Clinical presentations of this disease appear to reflect variations in host responses and can be used to provide information concerning the protective immune responses an individual can mount against this parasite.
...
PMID:Clinical responses in human onchocerciasis: parasitological and immunological implications. 329 60
Onchocerciasis--infection by Onchocerca
volvulus
--has four cardinal manifestations:
dermatitis
, subcutaneous nodules, sclerosing lymphadenitis, and eye disease. The first three are discussed here. The
dermatitis
begins when microfilariae degenerate in the dermis. This process is accompanied by inflammation, with degranulation of eosinophils and deposition of the major basic protein of the eosinophil granules on the cuticle of the microfilariae. So far as is known, the chronic effects of onchocerciasis are all a consequence of the degeneration of microfilariae. Subcutaneous nodules contain coiled adult worms and have an outer layer of fibrous scar and a central inflammatory cell exudate, which may cavitate. Perfusion of India ink reveals arborization of capillaries around adult worms, which derive nutrition from these networks. Onchocercal lymphadenitis is characterized initially by histiocytic hyperplasia and follicular atrophy and later by fibrosis and obstruction of lymph flow, a condition causing adenolymphocele ("hanging groin") and elephantiasis of the genitalia. Some patients appear to have immune tolerance to degenerating microfilariae, perhaps as a result of exposure in utero to microfilarial antigens in the maternal circulation. In contrast, other patients (Yemenites, for example) have a localized but intense response to a few microfilariae; these patients are hypersensitive--perhaps because they were not exposed to microfilarial antigens in utero. Autopsy data on infection of deep organs are limited.
...
PMID:Pathologic changes of human onchocerciasis: implications for future research. 407 Sep 19
The current status of onchocerciasis in Abu Hamed, Northern Province, Sudan, was studied. Of 208 persons attending out-patient clinics in villages in this region, 71 were microfilariae-positive on skin snips or had palpable nodules. Microfilariae and worms in nodules were identified as Onchocerca
volvulus
. No microfilariae were seen in peripheral blood. Most nodules and microfilariae were found in the pelvic region, but the intensity of infection was uniformly low (av. less than 3 mf/mg). Despite this, signs of onchocercal
dermatitis
were common and severe, especially over the buttocks. Papular eruptions and scarring often appeared to lead to black-grey hyperpigmentation, but no cases were seen of the unilateral, hyper-reactive 'sowda' described in Arabs in Yemen. No microfilariae were detected in the eyes of any of the patients who had positive outer canthus snips. Serum retinol concentrations were normal but mildly elevated concentrations of serum IgG, IgM and IgA were detected in many patients. Immunoglobulin E values in a sample of 20 microfilariae-positive patients were markedly higher than normal, with most in the 4,000 to 15,000 U/ml range. Eosinophil levels in differential counts of peripheral blood from the 208 villagers were markedly elevated. In skin snip surveys of over 400 villagers and school pupils, sample prevalence rates of 2 to 17.5% were recorded. Simulium biting was seasonal (November to May) and peaked in March. Over-all, the results indicate that O.
volvulus
infection persists in the Abu Hamed region as a serious cause of skin disease in the absence of other complicating filariases.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis in Sudan: the Abu Hamed focus. 408 57
Onchocerca
volvulus
, a major filarial parasite of humans, infects tens of millions of people and is a leading cause of blindness. It also causes disabling or disfiguring
dermatitis
and lymph node involvement. The infection is transmitted by the bite of female blackflies of Simulium species, which breed around freely flowing waterways. Vector control by aerial spraying of rivers and streams with larvicide has achieved some success in the Volta River Basin, but other areas are less well-suited for such an approach. Efforts to control onchocerciasis are plagued by emerging resistance of blackflies, excessive costs of spraying, and the lack of suitable chemotherapy for existing cases. Mass chemotherapy for infected persons as a means to limit the disease and its impact is not feasible because existing drug regiments are too complex, too toxic, or not effective enough. Selective chemotherapy directed at persons at high risk of complications may be a more effective means of minimizing the impact of the disease.
...
PMID:Selective primary health care: strategies for control of disease in the developing world. VI. Onchocerciasis. 662 90
Sowda is an unusual form of onchocerciasis in Yemenites that differs from African onchocerciasis. Clinical and pathological studies were performed on 18 patients in Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen). Biopsies of skin and lymph nodes were taken, and then processed at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, D.C. The most striking clinical features were swollen, darkened, pruritic, papular skin changes that were usually limited to one leg, more rarely to one arm, and large soft regional lymph nodes. Dermal changes were deeper and more diffuse than in African onchocerciasis, with many large fibroblasts and plasma cells. Microfilariae of Onchocerca
volvulus
were much rarer in skin from Yemenites with sowda. When patients were treated with diethylcarbamazine, the
dermatitis
became suddenly worse as the microfilariae degenerated and provoked acute inflammation. The
dermatitis
decreased after several days of treatment. Enlarged lymph nodes from sowda have shown follicular hyperplasia, in contrast to follicular atrophy and perivascular fibrosis that are characteristic of lymph nodes from cases of African onchocerciasis. Cell-mediated and humoral immunity may be more active in sowda than in African onchocerciasis.
...
PMID:Sowda--onchocerciasis in north Yemen: a clinicopathologic study of 18 patients. 682 18
We examined the immunogenicity of various connective tissue proteins in patients with chronic onchocercal
dermatitis
and the effect of filarial proteases on this host-parasite interaction. Sera from patients with onchocerciasis reacted strongly with cuticular collagens from filarial parasites and with mammalian laminin. Some sera also contained antibodies to elastin and collagen type IV, but none reacted with collagen types I-III or fibronectin. This pattern of reactivity was characteristic for onchocerciasis: sera from patients with mansonellosis reacted strongly with collagen type IV but only weakly with laminin. Reactivity with mammalian laminin or collagen could not be absorbed with cuticular proteins from filarial worms and vice versa. Digestion fragments of laminin treated with filarial proteases retain antigenic determinants recognized by sera from patients with onchocerciasis. In contrast, proteases from Onchocerca
volvulus
adults and microfilariae drastically decreased the reactivity of the same sera with collagen type IV. These results indicate that filarial proteases may contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic onchocercal
dermatitis
, directly, by enzymatically destroying connective tissue of the skin, and indirectly, by triggering autoimmune responses to self-determinants on connective tissue proteins that are normally hidden within the supramolecular structure of the extracellular matrix complex.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of onchocercal dermatitis: possible role of parasite proteases and autoantibodies to extracellular matrix proteins. 752 5
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