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Ancylostoma duodenale: maintenance through six generations in helminth-native pups.
Authors:G A Schad
Institution:Department of Pathobiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 U.S.A.
Abstract:An Indian strain of Ancylostoma duodenale with a known propensity for arrested development in man was passaged serially in 2-month-old, helminth-naive, male beagles. The sixth passage was initiated about 500 days after laboratory maintenance began. Experimental animals were infected by stomach tube with 1500 larvae each. These infections became patent in 22–31 days. In a line passaged in dogs without the use of a corticosteroid (prednisolone), adaptation, as judged by fecal egg count, increased through the first three generations and then declined sharply. This line appears destined for extinction. In another line passaged in prednisolone-treated pups, the strain's original viability is being maintained. Infections were long lived, frequently surviving for 90 days or more. Maximum egg output in terms of eggs per gram of feces (EPG) was highly variable between generations and between individuals within generations, but commonly exceeded 1500 EPG. In pups necropsied between 44 and 55 days, harboring fifth- and sixth-generation infections, adult worm burdens ranged from 47–146 and 34–128 in the nonprednisolone and prednisolone lines, respectively. Arrested larvae have been found in the same pups and apparently contribute to a turnover in the population of adult worms. Although A. duodenale has yet to be fully adapted to dogs in the sense that indefinite survival without prednisolone is assured, the present system yields a variety of life history stages in quantities suitable for many experimental purposes. Thus it provides a utilitarian laboratory model for the investigation of one of man's major hookworms.
Keywords:Hookworm  Nematode  parasitic  Dog  maintenance  adaptation  Prednisolone
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