Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical (Aug 2000)

Hepatic pathology in Capillaria hepatica infected mice

  • Bruna Magalhães Gotardo,
  • Rodrigo Guimarães Andrade,
  • Zilton A. Andrade

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 4
pp. 341 – 346

Abstract

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Septal fibrosis of the liver regularly develops in rats infected with Capillaria hepatica. To find out whether such fibrosis also occurs in mice, 20 animals were submitted to infection with either 100 or 300 embryonated eggs and histologically examined after several periods of time, from 30 to 110 days afterwards. Results showed that mice developed acute, severe, diffuse and focal hepatic lesions that were soon modulated to focal areas of fibrosis containing eggs and worm remnants, despite the fact that a few worms remained alive, at least up to 110 days after inoculation. Areas of perisinusoidal fibrosis appeared in the proximity and around focal parasitic lesions, but clear-cut septal fibrosis was not observed. Why septal fibrosis forms in rats, but not in mice during C. hepatica infection, only further studies can clarify. Mice seem to show better host/parasite relationship than rats in regard to C. hepatica infection.

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