1998
DOI: 10.1080/00034983.1998.11813332
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Human gnathostomiasis caused by Gnathostoma doloresi, with particular reference to the parasitological investigation of the causative agent

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Other morphological features present in the larva could not be studied well since the parasite dispatched in normal saline and received for identification 7 days after recovery from the eye was found to be degenerated. The morphological features on the head bulb and body cuticle were found to be consistent with those of G. doloresi (Nawa et al, 1989, Akahane et al, 1998, Imai and Hasegawa, 2001) [26,29,30] and the parasite was tentatively identified as the third stage larva of G. doloresi. [29,31] .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…Other morphological features present in the larva could not be studied well since the parasite dispatched in normal saline and received for identification 7 days after recovery from the eye was found to be degenerated. The morphological features on the head bulb and body cuticle were found to be consistent with those of G. doloresi (Nawa et al, 1989, Akahane et al, 1998, Imai and Hasegawa, 2001) [26,29,30] and the parasite was tentatively identified as the third stage larva of G. doloresi. [29,31] .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…The morphological features on the head bulb and body cuticle were found to be consistent with those of G. doloresi (Nawa et al, 1989, Akahane et al, 1998, Imai and Hasegawa, 2001) [26,29,30] and the parasite was tentatively identified as the third stage larva of G. doloresi. [29,31] . The larva of G. doloresi of the present investigation differed from G. spinigerum (Akahane et al, 1994; Baruah et al, 2011) [25,32] and G. hispidum (Akahane et al, 1982; Cho et al, 2007) [24,27] by the presence of lowest number of hooklets on the head [33,26,29,30] .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…The species most frequently found in humans and most widely distributed around the world is G. spinigerum; G. binucleatum is found in the Americas [1]. Sporadic cases caused by G. doloresi, G. hispidum, and G. nipponicum have been documented in Asia [20][21][22][23].…”
Section: Gnathostoma Spp and Their Life Cyclesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When a Gnathostoma larva is observed in tissue sections, the shape of head-bulb hooks (if sectioned), and more importantly, the morphology of intestinal epithelium (the number and morphology of intestinal cells and the number of nuclei in each intestinal cell) are useful for differentiation of species [6]. Larvae of G. hispidum can be differentiated from those of G. spinigerum in that the former has 19-35 spherical intestinal cells and usually 1 large nucleus in the center of each cell, whereas the latter has 21-29 columnar or cylindrical intestinal cells and 3-7 small scattered nuclei in each cell [6,11,12]. In our specimens, about 30 (27-31) intestinal cells, each with a large nucleus in the center, were recognized and was compatible to the descriptions of G. hispidum.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%