1974
DOI: 10.1017/s0022149x00022896
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Studies on filariasis. III.Dirofilaria immitis: emergence of infective larvae from the mouthparts ofAedes aegypti

Abstract: Infective larvae of Dirofilaria immitis commonly escaped from the tips of the Iabella and rarely from the mid-portion of the labium of Aedes aegypti as they engorged blood or just probed on mice. During the infective feed a small quantity of liquid, not more than 1 µI in volume, accumulated around the emerging larvae. Liquid was never seen when uninfected mosquitoes engorged on mice. This fluid is of insect origin and probably haemolymph that exuded from the lumina of the labella or labium during worm emergenc… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…In their respective sites of development, the parasites undergo two larval molts, ultimately developing into infectious third-stage larvae over a period of ∼2 wk. Larvae then migrate to the labial sheath of the mosquito proboscis, where heat and other factors encountered during blood feeding stimulate these transmission-stage larvae to emerge from the labellum, located at the extreme tip of the labium (4,5). Larvae are deposited on the skin in a drop of hemolymph and can enter the vertebrate host through the bite wound, completing the infection cycle (5).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their respective sites of development, the parasites undergo two larval molts, ultimately developing into infectious third-stage larvae over a period of ∼2 wk. Larvae then migrate to the labial sheath of the mosquito proboscis, where heat and other factors encountered during blood feeding stimulate these transmission-stage larvae to emerge from the labellum, located at the extreme tip of the labium (4,5). Larvae are deposited on the skin in a drop of hemolymph and can enter the vertebrate host through the bite wound, completing the infection cycle (5).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This fact can be compared with the similar apparent paradox concerning Culex pipiens fatigans and Wuchereria bancrofti in Rangoon, 62 where there were a large number of infected mosquitoes with a high biting rate, but few people actually became infected, with positive skin tests but without microfilariaemia. While waiting for molecular biology to throw further light on the problem, we can only suggest that the difference between the Old World human pulmonary cases and the Western hemisphere might be explained by two different hypotheses: (i) there are perhaps twin populations of D. immitis with different genotypes on the two sides of the Atlantic, with different infective capacity for man and dog; (ii) the infective capacity to humans of the parasite could be modified only in the Old World by some unidentified factor, possibly inherent to the vector, that affects the complex vector–parasite relationship, 63,64 decreasing the survival of the larvae.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infective third-stage larvae emerge most typically from the mosquito labellum but can also emerge from the labial sheath during blood feeding (Fig. 1) [5]. Larvae emerging from the mosquito are deposited on the skin in a drop of hemolymph where they can enter the skin through the bite site [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%