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)

Histochemical differentiation of Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae from 164 patients in West African rain-forest (Liberia), Sudan-savanna (Upper Volta), Guatemala and the Yemen has been carried out using a staining method for the demonstration of acid phosphatase. Intrauterine microfilariae showed considerable changes in their enzyme activity during embryonic development which are probably associated with the maturation of the parasite before migration to the tissues. Five distinct types of staining patterns could be distinguished among microfilariae from the skin according to the localization of the enzyme in specific structures of the microfilaria. Two or more types of staining patterns were found in most persons in the different geographic regions. There were significant differences in the overall distribution of the various staining patterns in persons from the different areas. At the present state of our knowledge, little is known about the nature and significance of these differences in the staining patterns of microfilariae. The question of whether they can be ascribed to an ageing process, strain differences or other factors is discussed.
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PMID:Histochemical enzyme-staining patterns of onchocerca volvulus microfilariae and their occurrence in different onchocerciasis areas. 8 19

Skin snips were taken from 75 people living in four villages of northern Togo. The 7824 microfilariae that emerged were examined by staining for the presence of acid phosphatase. Four distinct patterns of enzyme staining were observed, and descriptions of the stained microfilariae are given. The study confirms the view that a number of biological strains or variants of Onchocerca volvulus coexist in West Africa, and suggestions are made for further research that could result in the practical application of these observations in onchocerciasis control programmes.
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PMID:Preliminary studies on the histochemical differentiation of strains of Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae in Togo. 30 58

A pilot study on onchocerciasis and sowda was carried out in the south-western region of the Yemen Arab Republic. Of 61 persons examined in eight villages 35 (= 57%) were found positive for microfilariae by the skin-snip method, 13 had typical manifestations of sowda, 17 had other onchocercal-suggestive skin lesions and five had subcutaneous nodules. A single larva of Simulium damnosum s.I. was collected in Wadi Barakani. Numerous larvae and pupae of S. ruficorne and S. hargreavesi were taken in fast-flowing streams in four localities. The examination of microfilariae and adult worms by scanning electron microscopy as well as the histochemical staining of microfilariae for the demonstration of acid phosphatase activity confirmed that the concerned filaria belongs to the species Onchocerca volvulus. No morphological differences could be detected between the smaller number of the examined worms from the Yemen and the extensive parasite material from Liberia, West Africa.
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PMID:Some observations on onchocerciasis including sowda in the Yemen Arab Republic. 44 97

The staining patterns of acid phosphatase activity of the various larval stages of Onchocerca volvulus from experimentally infected Simulium damnosum s.l. have been described. The enzyme activity was localized in the anal vesicle/pore area of the first-stage larva, in the anal vesicle and intestine of the secong-stage larva and all over the body in the third-stage larva. Early third-stage larvae could be differentiated from late third-stage infective larvae by the presence of pronounced enzyme activity in the rectum area of the former. There were no detectable differences in the staining patterns between the forest and Sudan-savanna strains of O. volvulus developing in S. damnosum.
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PMID:Acid phosphatase activity in the larval stages of Onchocerca volvulus developing in the vector Simulium damnosum. 72 48

Laboratory reared nulliparous female flies of six temperate species of Simuliidae were examined for their susceptibility to infection with Onchocerca ochengi by intrathoracic injection of cryopreserved skin microfilariae obtained from cattle in Mali. Three species (S. equinum, S. ornatum and S. erythrocephalum) supported development to the infective stage, one species (S. variegatum) allowed partial development and the remaining two species (S. reptans and S. aureum) were insusceptible to infection. The most suitable surrogate vectors were S. equinum and S. ornatum which had survival rates of 44% and 49%, proportions of microfilariae developing to third stage larvae of 6.4% and 3%, and infection rates with infective larvae of 13.5% and 14% respectively. O. volvulus infective larvae, produced by intrathoracic microfilarial injection in S. ornatum, were 586-760 microns (mean 687 microns) long and were significantly shorter (p less than 0.02) than the O. ochengi infective larvae (645-880 microns, mean 756 microns). No constant differences in the posterior or anterior morphology, or in the acid phosphatase staining patterns between O. ochengi and O. volvulus, were seen. These results raise the possibility that the presence of O. ochengi in a population of infective larvae from vector flies in endemic onchocerciasis zones might be identifiable on the basis of their length alone.
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PMID:The development of Onchocerca ochengi in surrogate temperate Simuliidae, with a note on the infective larva. 261 36

Immunocytochemical and histochemical properties of macrophages present in the subcutaneous chronic inflammatory responses surrounding adult Onchocerca volvulus (nodules) in human tissues were examined. Macrophages with strong non-specific esterase (NSE) and acid phosphatase (AcPase) activities but weak adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity and HLA-DR expression (NSE+++, AcPase+++, ATPase-/+, HLA-DR-/+) were present in the centre of nodules. Many of the cells adhering to the surface of worms were NSE+++, AcPase+++, ATPase-, HLA-DR+++. The inner zone of the fibrous capsule of nodules contained macrophages with the profile NSE+++, AcPase-, ATPase-/+, HLA-DR-/+. A fourth type, NSE+++, AcPase-/+, ATPase-/+, HLA-DR+++, was located in the outer zone of the capsule, frequently within perivascular accumulations of macrophages, lymphocytes and plasma cells. Active fibroblasts were identified at the inner edge of the fibrous capsule by alkaline phosphatase staining. A feature of all nodules examined was the presence of lipid-filled macrophages, demonstrated by Oil Red O stain; these cells were usually situated in zones adjacent to the centre of nodules, and were of the NSE++, AcPase++, ATPase-/+, HLA-DR-/+ type. Lipid accumulation was not found to be related to the clinical status of the patients studied. The origin and functional significance of this lipid is unknown.
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PMID:A histocytochemical study of the macrophages present in tissue responses to adult Onchocerca volvulus. 344 Jul 61

The nature of the lymphoid infiltrate in nodules of Onchocerca volvulus was assessed using monoclonal antibodies to lymphoid cell surface markers. Although B cells were generally absent, T cells were present, but in variable amounts. The ratio of T4+ (helper phenotype) to T8+ (suppressor-cytotoxic phenotype) was usually in the normal peripheral blood range of about 3, although ratios ranging from 1 to 10 were seen in selected areas of the onchocercoma. The possibility of immunosuppression through dominance of T4+, Leu-8+ cells (suppressor-inducer phenotype) within the T4+ population was also excluded. The T cells did not tend to concentrate in close proximity to the parasite, and there was no general bias in favour of the T suppressor cell phenotype (T8) within the infiltrate. Macrophages and dendritic cells were consistently observed and consisted of three defined cell types in approximately equal proportions: normal, unactivated macrophages (HLA-DR-, acid phosphatase positive), activated macrophages (HLA-DR+, acid phosphatase positive) and cells of dendritic morphology (HLA-DR+, acid phosphatase negative). These results are discussed in relation to immune suppression in filariasis.
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PMID:Human macrophages and T-lymphocyte subsets infiltrating nodules of Onchocerca volvulus. 390 94

The azo-dye method for the histochemical demonstration of acid phosphatase activity was used to differentiate filarial larvae within and outside th area of the Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP) in natural infections of female S. damnosum s.l. caught in West Africa. The histochemical patterns of 1263 larvae (all stages) dissected from 556 positive files caught at 35 catching sites during the period of reinvasion in 1978 and 1979 were determined and compared with those of O. volvulus known from experimental infections. In Mali, Ivory Coast and Upper Volta, about 16% of 3rd-stage larvae in 17.3% of invading female S. damnosum s.l. (savanna cytospecies) could be separated from those of O. volvulus-like larvae, on account of their different enzyme staining patterns. The percentage of larvae enzymatically distinguishable from O. volvulus and the flies carrying them showed a distinct geographical distribution; the highest percentages (36.4/38.4) were found in the north-west (Mali) and the lowest percentages (4.4/8.2%) were found in the interior (east-central) of the Programme area (Upper Volta). By contrast, all larvae found in S. damnosum s.l. females caught in Ghana and in Togo were morphologically as well as enzymatically similar to those of O. volvulus. Third-stage larvae of the enzymatically distinguishable "species" were found to be somewhat longer than those of O. volvulus-like larvae. Morphologically, the larvae concerned probably belong to the genus Onchocerca, but their specific identity and vertebrate host remain unknown.
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PMID:Histochemical differentiation of filarial larvae found in Simulium damnosum s.l. in West Africa. 617 76

Histochemical staining methods for acid phosphatase were used to study the differences among microfilariae of various West African strains of Onchocerca volvulus in both forest and Sudan-savanna onchocerciasis zones. The results have shown statistically significant differences in the staining patterns of microfilarial populations in the two zones. In the rain-forest areas, where onchocerciasis is transmitted by Simulium yahense, S. sanctipauli, S. soubrense and S. squamosum, there were no significant differences of microfilarial staining patterns in patients, by age and sex, between the three Simulium-Onchocerca complexes studied. There was a close relationship between the "strain differences", as revealed morphoenzymatically, and the clinical picture of the disease in both the forest and the Sudan-savanna zones. The present findings are in favour of the hypothesis that there are intrinsic differences in the strains of the parasite occurring in the two areas. The application of the histochemical means of parasite characterization appears to be a useful tool in differentiating strains of O. volvulus and could contribute towards a better understanding of the epidemiology of human onchocerciasis in different bioclimatic zones where the disease is endemic.
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PMID:Histochemical enzyme variation in Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae from rain-forest and Sudan-savanna areas of the Onchocerciasis Control Programme in West Africa. 618 10

The patterns of acid phosphatase in strains of Onchocerca volvulus s.l. which parasitize an Amerindian population (Yanomami) in Venezuela's Upper Orinoco Basin were examined by using the naphthol AS-TR phosphate method. The study sample consisted of 40 Yanomami inhabiting a savannah area at 950 m above sea level and 21 Yanomami residents of a tropical rainforest area at an altitude of 250 m. Stained intrauterine microfilariae, still within the egg case, exhibited a diffuse distribution of the enzyme in the early stages of embryonic development and a negative reaction at a more developed stage. Four of the five enzyme staining patterns described by Omar (1978) were found in the 3157 microfilariae examined from skin snips. Their distribution was: Type I--17.2%, Type III--0.5%, Type IV--75.6% and Type V--6.6%. No examples of Type II were observed. The results indicate that acid phosphatase patterns of the Upper Orinoco Onchocerca strain most resemble those of strains from Guatemala and Yemen, and are different from the African strains found in Upper Volta and Liberia. The relative frequency of acid phosphatase patterns was modified by cryopreservation of microfilariae.
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PMID:Acid phosphatase patterns in microfilariae of Onchocerca volvulus s.l. from the Upper Orinoco Basin, Venezuela. 687 4


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