Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Publication year range
1.
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ; 86(2): 233-7, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1842414

ABSTRACT

The viability of Ascaris lumbricoides eggs passed in the feces was evaluated after treatment of patients with one of the anti-helminthic drugs (thiabendazole, levamisole, cambendazole, pyrantel pamoate, mebendazole or praziquantel). For each drug, a group of 5 children was selected and their feces collected 24 h before treatment and 24, 48 and 72 h after drug administration, except for mebendazole, with the feces being collected throughout the period of treatment. After sedimentation, the total amount of eggs from each collection was transferred to tissue culture flasks containing 10 ml H2SO4 0,1N, with the addition of 3 drops of a miconazole solution, and incubated at 28 degrees C, individually, for 80 days. The flasks were maintained open and the culture were oxygenated daily by manual agitation. On the 80th day of culture, 20-days-old albino mice were inoculated with 3,200 embryonated eggs, per os. Larvae were recovered from their lungs and hearts, on the 8th day after infection, according to Baerman's method (Morais, 1948). Thiabendazole showed 100.0% ovicidal capacity as early as 48 h after treatment. Inhibition of embryonal development was observed when thiabendazole was used. This drug also had an effect on the eggs infectivity when inoculated into normal mice. No significant effect on embryonal development was observed for the other drugs tested.


Subject(s)
Anthelmintics/therapeutic use , Ascariasis/drug therapy , Adolescent , Animals , Anthelmintics/pharmacology , Ascaris/drug effects , Ascaris/physiology , Child , Eggs , Humans , Mice , Parasite Egg Count
4.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 29(1): 50-3, 1980 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7352627

ABSTRACT

Two families, comprising 11 individuals in the toxemic form of schistosomiasis mansoni, infected in Belo Horizonte, Brazil were treated. Parasitological cure was obtained in 5 (45%) of the patients after a single oral dose of oxamniquine (Mansil), 20 mg/kg body weight. No significant side effects were observed. To evaluate the possibility of resistance to the drug, cercariae collected from Biomphalaria glabrata infected with micracidia from eggs obtained from three of the individuals not cured were studied. Mice infected with these three strains were cured after a single dose of examniquine. It is suggested that research be continued with other therapeutic schedules and perhaps other, more potent, drugs.


Subject(s)
Nitroquinolines/therapeutic use , Oxamniquine/therapeutic use , Schistosomiasis/drug therapy , Toxemia/drug therapy , Adolescent , Animals , Brazil , Child , Feces/parasitology , Female , Humans , Liver/parasitology , Male , Parasite Egg Count , Schistosoma mansoni , Schistosomiasis/genetics
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...