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The role of complement in hydatid disease: In vitro studies
Authors:AI Kassis  CE Tanner
Institution:Institute of Parasitology, McGill University, Macdonald College, Province of Quebec, H0A 1C0, Canada
Abstract:Kassis A. I. and Tanner C. E. 1976. The role of complement in hydatid disease: in vitro studies. International Journal for Parasitology6: 25–35. Fresh sera from normal humans, guinea pigs, sheep, cotton rats, B10.D2/n Sn mice or infected cotton rats lyse viable protoscoleces of Echinococcus granulosus and E. multilocularis in vitro. This protoscolecidal activity can be abolished by heating at 56°C, EDTA or incubating with cobra venom factor, suggesting that complement proteins participate in this lytic process. Crude unfiltered hydatid fluid, as well as complement-lysed dead protoscoleces, are anticomplementary in vitro and, as such, probably protect viable protoscoleces in vivo against the action of complement. This anticomplementary activity was found to be associated with the calcareous corpuscles. A hypothesis is presented which relates these in vitro findings to the development of the parasite in vivo. It is suggested that the use of formalin during surgery to kill the parasite should be replaced by fresh serum.
Keywords:protoscoleces  hydatid fluid  calcareous corpuscles  complement proteins  peritoneal exudate cells  peritoneal fluid  cobra venom factor  formalin
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