Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14539
Título: Development of Hepatozoon caimani (Carini, 1909) Pessôa, De Biasi & De Souza, 1972 in the Caiman Caiman c. crocodilus, the Frog Rana catesbeiana and the Mosquito Culex fatigans
Autor: Lainson, Ralph
Paperna, Ilan
Naiff, Roberto Daibes
Palavras-chave: Alligator
Animals Model
Animals Tissue
Controlled Study
Feeding
Frog
Gametocyte
Hepatozoon Caimani
Host Parasite Interaction
Intestines
Kidney
Leech
Life Cycle
Liver
Lizard
Lung
Microscopy
Mosquito
Nonhuman
Oocyte
Parasite
Parasite Development
Parasite Transmission
Parasitosis
Spleen
Sporogenesis
Stomach
Alligator
Animals
Animals Parasitosis
Apicomplexa
Blood Cell
Culex
Disease Transmission
Frogs And Toads
Growth, Development And Aging
Life Cycle
Parasitology
Alligator
Animalsia
Anura
Caiman
Caiman Crocodilus
Caiman Yacare
Hepatozoon
Hirudinida
Insecta
Leptodactylus
Leptodactylus Fuscus
Melanosuchus Niger
Neusticurus Bicarinatus
Rana Catesbeiana
Squamata
Alligators And Crocodiles
Animal
Anura
Apicomplexa
Culex
Hemocytes
Life Cycle Stages
Protozoan Infections, Animals
Data do documento: 2003
Revista: Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
É parte de: Volume 98, Número 1, Pags. 103-113
Abstract: The sporogony of Hepatozoon caimani has been studied, by light microscopy, in the mosquito Culex fatigans fed on specimens of the caiman Caiman c. crocodilus showing gametocytes in their peripheral blood. Sporonts iniciate development in the space between the epithelium of the insect gut and the elastic membrane covering the haemocoele surface of the stomach. Sporulating oocysts are clustered on the gut, still invested by the gut surface membrane. Fully mature oocysts were first seen 21 days after the blood-meal. No sporogonic stages were found in some unidentified leeches fed on an infected caiman, up to 30 days following the blood-meal. When mosquitoes containing mature oocysts were fed to frogs (Leptodactylus fuscus and Rana catesbeiana), cysts containing cystozoites developed in the internal organs, principally the liver. Feeding these frogs to farm-bred caimans resulted in the appearance of gametocytes in their peripheral blood at some time between 59 and 79 days later, and the development of tissue cysts in the liver, spleen, lungs and kidneys. Transmission of the parasite was also obtained by feeding young caimans with infected mosquitoes and it is suggested that both methods occur in nature. The finding of similar cysts containing cystozoites in the semi-aquatic lizard Neusticurus bicarinatus, experimentally fed with infected C. fatigans, suggests that other secondary hosts may be involved.
DOI: 10.1590/S0074-02762003000100014
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