Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical (Jun 1992)

Human immune responses during schistosomiasis mansoni

  • Giovanni Gazzinelli,
  • Daniel G. Colley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0037-86821992000200006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 125 – 134

Abstract

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Studies of immune responses as they occur in patients with schistosomiasis appear to progress relative to corrent technological advances, and to advance despite the understandable inability to pursue in vivo manipulations in this host/parasite system. Emphasis is most often placed on making immunological comparisons between such patient groups as reinfected/non-reinfected, intestinals/hepatosplenic, high/low intensities of infection, infected/uninfected within endemic areas, and those born of infected/uninfected mothers. Based on these types of comparisons, reasonable conjectures can be made regarding the immunological occurrences during this chronic exposure condition. Some consideration is now being given to the immune mechanisms of some of the observations made, and while some of these must then be carried back to experimental models for further manipulation-based analysis, new technological developments continue to assist in the field/bench ability to ask questions that might assist our understanding to a point where this knowledge can be applied to shaping developmental approaches to vaccine development and the goal of alleviating morbidity.

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