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1.
Comparison of parasitological and serological diagnosis of trichinosis in swine was carried out on 36 pigs given 15,400 infective larvae each by gavage. Circulating eosinophil levels were determined and sera were examined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for anti-Trichinella antibodies. Two pigs were killed per day from days 15 to 29 postinfection. Muscle was examined by pepsin-digestion and comparable tissue was fed to a rat. Eosinophil counts increased at about day 6 and reached peak levels about day 25 postinfection and returned to approximate preinfection levels about two months postinfection in those pigs still in the study. Infective larvae were recovered from all pigs killed at greater than or equal to 18 days postinfection. Using the criterion of 5 x mean optical density readings of negative sera as positive, seroconversion occurred between days 19 and 26 postinfection. Use of a lower criterion of 3 x mean optical density readings of negative sera resulted in only three of 30 pigs killed greater than or equal to 18 days postinfection seroconverting less than or equal to 18 days postinfection, when infective larvae were first recovered in the musculature. In pigs, even in those heavily infected, there is a lag between the period that trichinae in musculature become infective and development of antibodies as detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay which results in false negative reactions in many animals. This study demonstrated that the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using an excretory-secretory antigen should not be used to certify pork or pork products free of infective Trichinella larvae or safe for human consumption.  相似文献   

2.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay examination of sera from pigs vaccinated with T. spiralis nativa infective larvae and/or challenged with T. spiralis spiralis larvae using a T. spiralis spiralis excretory-secretory antigen showed a significant cross-reaction between the two species of Trichinella. Eight of 12 pigs vaccinated with a high dose of T. spiralis nativa reacted positively 28 days postvaccination while the remaining four pigs had high but negative ELISA optical density readings. Five of six pigs challenged with the homologous species reacted positively 28 days postchallenge but the sixth pig remained negative despite having a muscle infection of 5.6 larvae/g of musculature.  相似文献   

3.
Experimental trichinosis in sheep.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Trichinella spiralis spiralis infections were established in sheep by administering infective larvae via gavage or feeding infected musculature. Trichinella spiralis nativa infective larvae had a low infectivity for sheep although light infections may be established in some animals with large infective doses. For the most part, sheep were averse to ingesting musculature mixed in a grain ration unless it was camouflaged with molasses. The heaviest infections usually occurred in the masseter muscle. The fact that sheep are averse to ingesting muscle tissue may reduce the likelihood of trichinosis. Anti-Trichinella antibodies to both T: spiralis spiralis and T. spiralis nativa were produced as demonstrated by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Seroconversion occurred in several sheep challenged with T. spiralis nativa even though larvae were not recovered from the musculature by pepsin-digestion.  相似文献   

4.
Enzyme immunoassays using the triple antibody enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with both Trichinella spiralis spiralis and T. spiralis nativa excretory-secretory (ES) antigens and a commercial Trichinella spiralis enzyme immunoassay test kit were carried out on sera from pigs that were infected with light, moderate and high doses of infective T. spiralis spiralis and T. spiralis nativa respectively. Seroconversion occurred in all pigs given infective Trichinella larvae although no trichinae were recovered from pigs given T. spiralis nativa larvae and examined between days 92 and 99 postinfection by pepsin digestion. Anti-Trichinella antibodies were detected in pigs infected with T. spiralis spiralis and T. spiralis nativa by ELISA using either the homologous or heterologous ES antigen. The commercial Trichinella spiralis enzyme immunoassay test kit also detected anti-Trichinella antibodies in both the T. spiralis spiralis and T. spiralis nativa infected pigs. The commercial test kit did not appear to be as sensitive as the triple antibody ELISA since it usually took two to three days longer for seroconversion to be detected by the former procedure. Finally seroconversion occurred more rapidly in swine infected with T. spiralis spiralis than with pigs receiving comparable doses of T. spiralis nativa.  相似文献   

5.
After an outbreak of human trichinosis in Louisiana involving 45 cases and 1 death in 1979 and 1980, a survey of pigs killed in 21 selected small slaughterhouses in southwestern Louisiana was conducted from November 1980 to September 1981. The sera from 1,225 pigs were examined for trichinella antibodies using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA); 1,223 diaphragms were subjected to peptic digestion and examined for the presence of Trichinella spiralis larvae. One diaphragm (0.08%) was found to contain T spiralis (26 larvae/g of muscle) and 4 of the slaughterhouse sera were positive (0.33% seroprevalence). Pigs in 52 herds throughout the state were also tested for ELISA antibodies. The ELISA-positive pigs were not found among the 267 pigs tested from the 52 herds.  相似文献   

6.
During susceptibility studies of non-specific hosts, three merino sheep were infected with 3000, 5000 or 7000 Trichinella spiralis larvae by gavage. Clinical, physiological and serological parameters were assessed during the experiment. On the 152nd day p.i., animals were necropsied and, using artificial digestion methods, numbers of Trichinella larvae in muscle tissues were determined. The most infected parts were masseters with 3122 larvae g-1 muscle, 5526 larvae g-1 muscle and 4058 larvae g-1 muscle and diaphragms with 2778 larvae g-1 muscle, 2725 larvae g-1 muscle and 2320 larvae g-1 muscle, for the 3000, 5000 and 7000 infection levels, respectively. A positive correlation between infective rate and circulating antibodies was observed using ELISA and latex agglutination (LA) test methods. Trichinella larvae from sheep applied by gavage to ICR mice developed to the muscle stage. No significant changes were found in the clinical and physiological parameters of infected animals. Our results confirm the high susceptibility of merino sheep to T. spiralis infection.  相似文献   

7.
The horse is considered an aberrant host for the nematode parasite Trichinella spiralis, and many aspects of the biology and epidemiology of Trichinella infection in the horse are poorly understood. It has been reported that experimentally-infected horses produce a transient serological response to infection and that muscle larvae are cleared more rapidly than in parasite-adapted hosts such as the pig and humans. However, limited numbers of animals have been studied, and both the longevity of larvae in horse musculature and the immune response to Trichinella larvae remain unclear. In this study, we infected 35 horses with 1000, 5000, or 10,000 T. spiralis muscle larvae and followed the course of infection for 1 year, assessing larval burdens in selected muscles, the condition and infectivity of recovered larvae, and the serological response of infected horses. The results demonstrated that T. spiralis establishes infection in horses in a dose dependent manner. Anti-Trichinella IgG antibodies peaked between weeks 6-10 post-inoculation. Viable, infective larvae persisted in horse musculature for the duration of the study (12 months), and exhibited no apparent reduction in muscle burdens over this period. Encapsulated larvae showed no obvious signs of degeneration in histological sections. Larval capsules were surrounded by infiltrates consisting of mature plasma cells and eosinophils. Macrophages were notably absent. Given the lack of a detectable serological response by 26 weeks p.i. and the persistence of infective muscle larvae for at least 1 year, parasite recovery methods are currently the only suitable detection assays for both meat inspection and epidemiological studies of Trichinella infection in the horse.  相似文献   

8.
A field evaluation of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for swine trichinosis was done with sera obtained from 5 herds experiencing ongoing transmission of Trichinella spiralis. Epizootiologic studies conducted on these herds offered an opportunity to evaluate the accuracy of an ELISA, using larval T spiralis excretory-secretory antigens. Sera from 162 infected pigs and 143 serum samples from noninfected pigs originating from the same farms were tested. The infection status of the pigs was determined by digestion of diaphragm or tongue muscle samples. Two criteria were established to classify the ELISA optical density (OD) readings: Criterion I stated that an OD greater than or equal to 5 times the mean OD of several normal swine sera pools was positive; criterion II stated that a OD greater than or equal to 4 times the normal sera values was positive. The results obtained did not reveal obvious serologic variations among infected herds located in the 4 states involved. Overall, the test detected 93% (criterion I) and 96% (criterion II) of infected pigs. The majority of false-negative sera was from hogs that had less than 5 larvae/g of muscle; 1 hog had 73.8 larvae/g of diaphragm muscle. The false-positive rates were 8% for criterion I and 9% for criterion II. The actual rate for these false-positive samples may have been overestimated, because generally, only small tissue samples (0.4 to 10 g) were digested; larger sample sizes might have altered the results. The relevance of this qualification is that these pigs originated from herds with prevalence rates greater than 50%. Other factors that may account for occasional false-positive sera or false-negative sera in the swine trichinosis ELISA are discussed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The latex agglutination (LA) test, using muscle-juice samples of pigs experimentally infected with Trichinella spiralis and slaughtered 95 days post-infection (p.i.), gave visible results in 3 min; even in a pig receiving an infection dose as low as 10 larvae. The test appeared reliable and easy to perform without the need for special equipment or sample treatments which are necessary for ante-mortem diagnostic methods. The muscle-juice sample could be obtained by compressing the muscle pieces with the fingers at any time post-mortem and was used undiluted. The results of the LA test using serum or muscle-juice samples correlated with those of the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Positive results in the LA test and ELISA appeared 27 days p.i. with the use of sera from the pigs infected with greater than or equal to 600 larvae and 56 days p.i. with the serum of a pig infected with 10 larvae. The complement-fixing antibodies were detected in the sera using complement ELISA 86 days p.i. This assay was negative when muscle-juice samples were used.  相似文献   

10.
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed to detect Trichinella spiralis infections in dogs using rabbit anti-canine IgG-horseradish peroxidase prepared according to the improved periodate method and an antigen purified from T. spiralis larvae by Sephadex G-200 chromatography. Sixty-six canine sera were tested for trichinosis by the ELISA and it showed a detection rate which was significantly higher than that by trichinoscopy. This antigen of T. spiralis appeared not to cross-react with the sera of dogs infected with Ancylostoma caninum or Taenia spp. A comparison of ortho-phenylenediamine and 5-amino-2-hydroxybenzoic acid as substrates in the ELISA did not reveal a significant difference. Pieces of filter paper saturated with a defined quantity of whole blood can be substituted for serum as a source material for the test. The relationship between worm burden and the absorbance value in ELISA is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using excretory-secretory antigens was developed to study the dynamics of the IgG antibody response to varying levels of Trichinella spiralis infection in the guinea pig. Four groups of four Hartley guinea pigs each were infected with 1250, 250, 50 or 10 T. spiralis infective muscle larvae. They were bled every 15 days for 6 months and the IgG antibody response determined by ELISA. The time of seroconversion was dose dependent as the larger the dose, the earlier the response occurred. Significant differences in antibody response between the dose groups were evident at 30 days post-infection (P less than 0.05). Beyond 60 days post-infection, the response was similar in the four groups. The antibody response in the groups infected with 250 and 50 infective larvae was similar, but was significantly different from that of the high (1250) and low (10) dose groups from 30 days post-infection (P less than 0.01). Once seroconversion occurred, the antibody titer rose to the same level, irrespective of the initial dose. To compare the antibody response according to muscle larvae recovered, the guinea pigs were grouped into four categories: less than 10 larvae; 10-25 larvae, 50-80 larvae, greater than 100 larvae. A significant positive correlation (P less than 0.05) was observed at 60 days post-infection when these groups were compared.  相似文献   

12.
Pigs were inoculated with Trichinella spiralis excretory-secretory products derived from short-term in vitro maintenance of infective muscle larvae. Intraperitoneal administration of excretory-secretory products in Freund's complete adjuvant or aluminum hydroxide induced moderate, but variable, degrees of immunity to challenge exposure in a nondose-dependent manner; IM administration of products in Freund's incomplete adjuvant was less successful. Inoculated pigs harbored fewer adult worms, and the fecundity of female worms (numbers of newborn larvae shed in vitro) recovered after challenge exposure was significantly lower (alpha = 0.05) than the fecundity of females recovered from control pigs. The degree of resistance in inoculated pigs was directly related to serotiter against excretory-secretory antigens, as determined in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.  相似文献   

13.
An ELISA using a Trichinella spiralis spiralis excretory-secretory antigen was evaluated as a procedure for the diagnosis of trichinosis in swine in Canada. Field and experimental trials were carried out using both indirect serological (ELISA) and direct parasitological (pepsin-digestion) methods concurrently on serum and musculature, respectively, from each animal. The ELISA is a sensitive and specific test for the detection of Trichinella antibodies in porcine sera when present. The development of Trichinella antibodies appears to be dependent on the magnitude of the infection established, age of the infection when the animal is tested and the immunocompetence or response to infection of individual animals. False negative reactions were recorded in both field and experimental trials. In the field study, five of the 1009 swine examined were parasitologically positive with light infections ranging from 0.01 to 0.046 larvae per gram (la/g) of musculature yet all were serologically negative. Experimentally it was shown that Trichinella antibodies develop slowly, at least two to three months postinfection, in pigs with very light infections. Even in pigs which developed infections of 33 to 55 la/g of musculature, seroconversion occurred greater than 23 and less than 30 days postinfection. The immunocompetence or response to infection of individual pigs was variable as illustrated by one pig inoculated with 3000 infective larvae which had consistently lower titers compared to others in the same group despite the establishment of a muscle infection of 8.5 la/g of musculature. One false positive reaction was recorded in the experimental trial in an animal which had received 100 larvae and seroconverted at about three months postinfection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Three experimental groups of six male raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) each were formed by placing one of three littermates from six litters into each group. One group was inoculated with pig-origin Trichinella spiralis, the second was inoculated with raccoon dog-origin T. nativa, and the third served as a control group. The infective dose was 1,000 larvae/kg of body weight. Every third week, biopsies from M. triceps brachii were taken, and serum samples were collected for up to 12 weeks postinfection. In the early phase of the infection, cysts of both parasites were elongated cylinders that later became more spherical. However, at the end of the experiment, the cysts of T. nativa were more rounded than those of T. spiralis (mean length/width = 2.5 versus 1.5 in T. spiralis versus T. nativa, respectively). Both species accumulated a collagen-rich capsule around the nurse cell, but the capsule was thicker in T. nativa. In both parasites, the total surface area of the sagittal section of the cyst was equal. Inflammation was more intense around T. nativa cysts. Specific antibodies were recognizable 2 weeks after infection by both enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and western blot. In western blots, serum from both T. nativa- and T. spiralis-infected animals recognized the same components, but reaction with the homologous antigen was stronger. The same pattern was also seen in the ELISA. Immunoreactive epitopes were localized only in internal organs and cuticula of larvae in muscle.  相似文献   

15.
Fifteen thousand three hundred and eighteen porcine sera from all regions of Canada were examined for the presence of anti-Trichinella antibodies using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with an excretory-secretory antigen. Four sera (0.026%) revealed the presence of anti-Trichinella antibodies, with titers (optical density readings) that fell in the low positive or high negative range on repeated examinations. One animal originated in British Columbia and three in Ontario. Serological examination of swine in the herds at time of traceback did not reveal further animals with anti-Trichinella antibodies.  相似文献   

16.
Over the years, the opinions of clinicians on the existence of the so-called chronic trichinellosis or late sequelae of infection have differed. However, the persistence of a humoral immune response against Trichinella in these late-stage patients has been confirmed using specific tests such as the competitive inhibition assay (CIA). We evaluated sera from late-stage trichinellosis patients (2--8 years from acute infection), for their reactivity against Trichinella spiralis antigens. The following tests were carried out: (i) indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA), performed on muscle sections from mice, 30 days following synchronous infection by intramuscular injection with T. spiralis newborn larvae (NBL); (ii) enzyme immunoassay, employing a synthetic beta-tyvelose antigen conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA-Ag); and (iii) western blot (WB) with both an "in house" kit and a commercial kit. The results of IFA obtained by confocal laser microscopy showed that sera reacted against both surface and internal structures of L(1) larvae but at varying levels. Employing the synthetic antigen, EIA showed that 50% of sera tested were positive for the presence of specific antibodies against beta-tyvelose. By WB, all sera were reactive with the 45 k Da glycoprotein (45 gp). These data suggest that reactivity against the beta-tyvelosylated 45 gp persists even in very late stages of human trichinellosis.  相似文献   

17.
A total of 1401 German and 226 Croatian pigs raised either indoors or outdoors were tested for Trichinella infection by direct and indirect detection methods. A 10 g sample of diaphragm were examined for muscle larvae by the artificial digestion method; the species was determined by multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR). For detection of anti-Trichinella IgG, serum samples diluted 1:100, and meat juice samples diluted 1:10, were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. All German pigs and those Croatian pigs raised indoors proved to be Trichinella-negative by all methods. Muscle larvae were detected in a total of eleven of the Croatian pigs, which were raised on small outdoor farms. For eight isolates, PCR results demonstrated that recovered larvae were Trichinella spiralis. Anti-Trichinella-IgG was detected in serum and meat juice of digestion positive animals when the worm burdens exceeded 0.38 larvae per gram of muscle. Positive results in Croatian pigs indicate a higher risk of infection for outdoor farming in areas where Trichinella is endemic. Results of direct and indirect detection were compared and are discussed with special regard to specificity and sensitivity of methods.  相似文献   

18.
We assessed a serological method for detecting Trichinella infection in horses, specifically, an ELISA using three antigens to detect anti-Trichinella IgG (i.e. a synthetic tyvelose glycan-BSA (stg-BSA) antigen, an excretory/secretory (ES) antigen, and a crude worm extract (CWE) antigen). Serum samples were collected from 2502 horses (433 live horses from Romania and 2069 horses slaughtered in Italy and originating from Italy, Poland, Romania, and Serbia). Serum samples were also taken from horses experimentally infected with different doses of T. spiralis and T. murrelli larvae, as controls. The cut-off value of ELISA was determined on serum samples from 330 horses from Trichinella-free regions of Italy, which were also examined by artificial digestion of preferential-muscle samples. In the experimentally infected horses, the stg-BSA and ES antigens were less sensitive than the CWE antigen. Trichinella spiralis showed a higher immunogenicity than T. murrelli, and the IgG immunoresponse was dose-dependent. The kinetics of anti-Trichinella IgG were similar among all experimentally infected horses. No circulating antibodies were detected 4-5 months after experimental infection, although these horses still harbored infective larvae. Depending on the antigen used, for 4-7 of the 330 horses from Trichinella-free areas, the optical density (OD) of the serum sample was higher than the cut-off value, yet these samples were negative when subjected to Western Blot. Similar results were obtained for the 1739 horses slaughtered in Italy (originating from Italy, Poland, Romania, and Serbia) and the 433 live Romanian horses. Of the 4 horses with muscle larvae, only one was positive by ELISA and Western Blot. Because the anti-Trichinella IgG remain circulating for only a short period of time, whereas the larvae remain infective for longer periods, serology cannot be used for either diagnosing Trichinella infection in horses or estimating the prevalence of infection. Artificial digestion of at least 5 g of preferential-muscle tissue continues to be the method of choice at the slaughterhouse for preventing equine-borne trichinellosis in humans.  相似文献   

19.
Inoculation of swine with a sylvatic isolate of Trichinella spiralis, designated T s nativa, resulted in low numbers of muscle larvae, compared with muscle larvae accumulation in swine inoculated with a pig type of T s spiralis. Despite low infectivity of T s nativa for swine, primary inoculation resulted in high levels of immunity against challenge infection with T s spiralis. This immunity was expressed in accelerated expulsion of challenge adults from the intestine and reduced numbers of muscle larvae. Pigs inoculated with T s nativa developed cellular and humoral responses similar to those in pigs inoculated with T s spiralis. However, in immunoblots, sera from pigs inoculated with T s nativa recognized additional proteins in muscle larvae excretory-secretory (ES) products, compared with sera from pigs inoculated with T s spiralis. Active immunization of pigs with ES products from T s nativa resulted in numerically higher, but not significantly different levels of immunity, compared with pigs immunized with ES from T s spiralis. The highest levels of immunity were obtained in pigs immunized with a T s spiralis newborn larval extract. The combination of ES products and newborn larval extract did not result in additive levels of immunity. These results indicate that the major immune effector response to Trichinella sp in pigs is against the newborn larvae, regardless of the genetic type of Trichinella sp.  相似文献   

20.
A competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of swine trichinosis has been developed using a biotinylated monoclonal antibody and an avidin-enzyme conjugate. The assay is based on competitive binding between swine serum antibodies and a monoclonal antibody specific for an antigenic determinant present on proteins from Trichinella spiralis excretory-secretory products with molecular weights of 45,000, 49,000, and 53,000. The competitive ELISA reliably detected pigs infected experimentally with T. spiralis and eliminated false-positive reactions in pigs infected with other swine nematodes, particularly Trichurus suis. When the competitive ELISA and an indirect ELISA using affinity-isolated antigen were compared using serum from pigs with naturally-acquired infections of T. spiralis, both tests were highly effective in detecting infected animals.  相似文献   

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