Visceral Leishmaniasis in the Golden Hamster as a Model for Human Kala-azar.
Abstract
A major effort was made during the last year to acquire and establish experimental infections using a variety of Leishmania isolates. While some of these recent parasite acquisitions proved non-infective for hamsters, we have succeeded in establishing animal infections with two isolates of L. infantum (Greece and France), two isolates of L. chagasi (Brazil), one new isolate of L. donovani (Kenya), one isolate of unknown identity from natural infections of dogs in Oklahoma, one isolate from Honduras (presumably L. chagasi) and two strains of cutaneous origin from South America (L. mexicana mexicana and L. mexicana amazonensis). These acquisitions complement those strains previously established in our laboratory. The most interesting of these strains proved to be an isolate from a human case of visceral leishmaniasis in Honduras (Santos Herrera; WR116). When cultured promastigotes of this parasite were inoculated intracardially (IC) into hamsters, infected animals developed heavily parasitized, non-ulcerating cutaneous lesions on the nose, footpads and gentials. Only low numbers of visceral parasites were detected by impression smears of the spleen and bone marrow. Subsequent parasite inoculations into hamsters, using either amastigotes isolated from dermal lesions in hamsters or cultured promastigotes grown from splenic isolates, produced similar cutaneous infections. Since Santos Herrera exhibited such strong dermatropic tendencies, it was next inoculated intradermally (ID) into BALB/c mice.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 27, 1983
- Accession Number
- ADA172459
Entities
People
- Jay P. Farrell
Organizations
- University of Pennsylvania