The intestines of normal and resistant LAF mice were subjected to histologic study to determine the timing and mechanisms of resistance to reinfection by Heligmosomoides polygyrus. During reinfection third-stage larvae are less able to penetrate the intestinal wall.Larvae which are able to encyst develop at a slower rate and provoke an increase in nonspecific inflammation around their cysts. After emergence from intestinal cysts, preadults are rapidly lost, but at no time were injured or destroyed larvae or adults noted.Exsheathed larvae were injected via tail vein into control, sensitized and resistant BALB/c mice. The inflammatory response around entrapped larvae in the lung was measured at 1, 2, 4, and 8 days. A heightened inflammatory response, consisting primarily of polymorphonuclear cells with some round cells which peaked in size on day 2, was observed in both sensitized and resistant mice. A similar heightened inflammatory response was also observed in both AKR (non-resistant) BALB/c (resistant) mice vaccinated subcutaneously with exsheathed larvae.
Schistosomiasis japonica in capuchin msnkeys (Cebus apella) and schistosomiasis mansoni in baboons (Papio cyanocephalus and P. hamadryas) were completely arrested for 6 months in every infected primate receiving a single treatment with tubercidin (Tu), administered after prior absorption into 20% of their red cells. It is very likely that a single treatment with Tu sequestered in only 15% of the hosts' red cells would also be 100% effective for prolonged periods of time, but that with lower doses some relapses would be expected. Babbons with patent Schistosoma mansoni infections were rechallenged with S. mansoni cercariae 4 months after treatment with Tu. Although Tu eliminated almost all the sexually mature female worms from the primary infection but spared most of the males for continuing sojourn within their hosts, the baboons retained their full susceptibility to reinfection, as indicated by worm burdens and fecal egg excretion. However, the granulomatous reaction in the rechallenged Tu-treated baboons to new masses of eggs trapped in their livers appeared to be less intense than was seen in animals with primary infections.
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