Immunological studies on the mechanism of resistance in experimental onchocerciasis

DO Akinboye

Abstract


Human onchocerciasis is a debilitating disease, which causes lymphatic obstruction and gives rise to genital elephantiasis. The microfilariae also cause severe itching, while invasion of the eyes by large numbers, and the reaction to their presence, lead to river blindness. This results in severe medical, social and economic problems (Stevenson 1987).The implications of the disease bring about the need to control onchocerciasis by  understanding the mechanism of the host’s resistance. The aim of this study was to investigate the possibility of using laboratory rodents as models for immunological studies of onchocerciasis. Living adult Onchocerca (O.) armillata and O. volvulus were surgically transplanted into the peritoneal cavities of rats, after initial immunizations or transplantations, in order to investigate the survival rates of the transplanted parasites. Steroid administration significantly improved the survival rate of implanted O. armillata in rats at 60 days (X2 = 3, df =1, P

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African Journal of Science and Technology.   ISSN: