Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add filters








Type of study
Language
Year range
1.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 105(4): 440-444, July 2010. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-554809

ABSTRACT

In vertebrate animals, pleural and peritoneal cavities are repositories of milky spots (MS), which constitute an organised coelom-associated lymphomyeloid tissue that is intensively activated by Schistosoma mansoni infection. This study compared the reactive patterns of peritoneal MS to pleural MS and concluded from histological analysis that they represent independent responsive compartments. Whole omentum, lungs and the entire mediastinum of 54 S. mansoni-infected mice were studied morphologically. The omental MS of infected animals were highly activated, modulating from myeloid-lymphocytic (60 days of infection) to lymphomyeloid (90 days of infection) and lymphocytic or lymphoplasmacytic (160 days of infection) types. The non-lymphoid component predominated in the acute phase of infection and was expressed by monocytopoietic, eosinopoietic and neutropoietic foci, with isolated megakaryocytes and small foci of late normoblasts and mast cells. Nevertheless, pleural or thoracic MS of infected mice were monotonous, consisting of small and medium lymphocytes with few mast and plasma cells and no myeloid component. Our data indicate that compartmentalisation of the MS response is dependent on the lymphatic vascularisation of each coelomic cavity, limiting the effects or consequences of any stimulating or aggressive agents, as is the case with S. mansoni infection.


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Mice , Lymphoid Tissue/pathology , Omentum/pathology , Pleura/pathology , Schistosomiasis mansoni/pathology , Lymphoid Tissue , Microscopy, Confocal , Omentum , Pleura
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 93(supl.1): 13-23, Oct. 1998. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-218638

ABSTRACT

Calomys callosus Rengger, 1830 (Rodentia: Cricetidae) is a mouse-like South American wild rodent, which is permissive to Schistosoma mansoni infection. In this paper we studied the effect of schistosomal infection in C. callosus mesenteric and omental milky spots (MS), subsidiary foci of coelom-associated lymphomyeloid tissue (CALT), during the acute, transitional (acute to chronic), and chronic phases of the infection. MS were morphologically analyzed by historical methods, using brightfield and confocal laser scanning microscopies. The MS of infected animals were mainly of lymphomyelocytic (42 to 90 days) and lymphoplasmacytic (160 days of infection) types and showed frequent presence of lymphoid follicles with germinal centers, plasmacytogenesis and plasmacytosis, mastocytosis, megakaryopoiesis, erythropoiesis and less pronounced eosinopoiesis. These results indicate that MS are a preferencial site of germinal-center-dependent and independent plasmacytogenesis, and a bone narrow-like organ, committed with various cellular lineages. The consequence of a C. callosus MS reactivity for schistosomal infection is still unknown and is under investigation.


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Arvicolinae/parasitology , Lymphoid Tissue/parasitology , Omentum/parasitology , Rodentia/parasitology , Schistosomiasis mansoni/veterinary , Signs and Symptoms , Microscopy, Confocal
3.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 92(supl.2): 19-32, Dec. 1997. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-202011

ABSTRACT

Schistosomes, ancestors and recent species, have pervaded many hosts and several phylogenetic levels of immunity, causing an evolutionary pressure to eosinophil lineage expression and response. Schistosoma mansoni adult worms have capitalized on the apparent adversity of living within the mesenteric veins, using the dispersion of eggs and antigens to other tissues besides intestines to set a systemic activation of several haematopoietic lineages, specilly eosinophils and monocytes/macrophages. This activation occurs in bone marrow, spleen, liver, lymph nodes, omental and mesenteric milky spots (activation of the old or primordial and recent or new lymphomyeloid tissue), increasing and making easy the migration of eosinophils, monocytes and other cells to the intestinal periovular granulomas. The exudative perigranulomatous stage of the periovular reaction, which present hystolitic characteristics, is then exploited by the parasites, to release the eggs into the intestinal lumen. The authors hypothesize here that eosinophils, which have a long phylogenic story, could participate in the parasite-host co-evolution, specially with S. mansoni, operating together with monocytes/macrophages, upon parasite transmission.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Eosinophils/parasitology , Schistosoma mansoni/immunology , Phylogeny , Host-Parasite Interactions/immunology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL