Zagazig University Digital Repository
Home
Thesis & Publications
All Contents
Publications
Thesis
Graduation Projects
Research Area
Research Area Reports
Search by Research Area
Universities Thesis
ACADEMIC Links
ACADEMIC RESEARCH
Zagazig University Authors
Africa Research Statistics
Google Scholar
Research Gate
Researcher ID
CrossRef
Study Of A Novel Therapeutic Approach Of The Lung Stage Schistosomiasis
Faculty
Pharmacy
Year:
2012
Type of Publication:
Theses
Pages:
200
Authors:
Sameh Saber Eid Mohammed
BibID
11766425
Keywords :
Schistosomiasis
Abstract:
The females produce hundreds [African species] (Fitzsimmons et al. 2012; Protasio et al. 2012) to thousands [oriental species] of eggs per day, each ovum contains a ciliated miracidium larva, which secretes proteolytic enzymes that help the eggs to migrate into the lumen of the bladder [Schistosoma haematobium] or the intestine [other species].The eggs are excreted in the urine or faeces and can stay viable for up to 7 days. On contact with water, the egg releases the miracidium, which searches for the intermediate host, freshwater snails, guided by light and chemical stimuli. After penetrating the snail, the miracidiae multiply asexually into multicellular sporocysts and later into cercarial larvae with embryonic suckers and a characteristic bifurcated tail (Bruno Gryseels et al. 2006; Protasio et al. 2012).The cercariae start leaving the snail 4–6 weeks after infection and spin around in the water for up to 72 hours seeking the skin of a suitable definitive host. Cercarial shedding is provoked by light and occurs mainly during daytime. One snail, infected by one miracidium, can shed thousands of cercariae every day for months.On finding a host, the cercariae penetrate the skin, migrate in the blood via the lungs to the liver, and transform into young worms or schistosomulae, these mature in 4–6 weeks in the portal vein, mate, and migrate to their peri-vesicular or mesenteric destination where the cycle starts again (Bloch 1980; Mansour et al. 1986; Bruno Gryseels et al. 2006).The lifespan of an adult schistosome averages 3–5 years but can be as long as 30 years (Bas c et al. 2010).
PDF
جامعة المنصورة
جامعة الاسكندرية
جامعة القاهرة
جامعة سوهاج
جامعة الفيوم
جامعة بنها
جامعة دمياط
جامعة بورسعيد
جامعة حلوان
جامعة السويس
شراقوة
جامعة المنيا
جامعة دمنهور
جامعة المنوفية
جامعة أسوان
جامعة جنوب الوادى
جامعة قناة السويس
جامعة عين شمس
جامعة أسيوط
جامعة كفر الشيخ
جامعة السادات
جامعة طنطا
جامعة بنى سويف