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The immune response of wild rainbow trout, <i>Salmo gairdneri</i> Richardson, to naturally acquired plerocercoid infections of <i>Diphyllobothrium dendriticum</i> (Nitzsch, 1824) and <i>D. ditremum</i> (Creplin, 1825)
82
Citations
31
References
1989
Year
Rainbow TroutParasitic DiseasePlerocercoid InfectionsHelminthologyPathogenesisImmunologyWild Rainbow TroutCollagenous Connective TissueHost Inflammatory ResponseFish ImmunologyAquatic OrganismHost ResistanceMedicineParasitology
Natural infections of rainbow trout with two species of Diphyllobothrium result in a host inflammatory response encapsulating the plerocercoid. The encapsulating cyst, observed by light and electron microscopy, comprises leucocytes, fibroblasts and collagenous connective tissue and is infiltrated with a blood vascular network. An indirect immunofluorescence technique and enzyme‐linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA) have shown that specific antibodies are elicited by the fish host to these Diphyllobothrium spp. These antibodies have been semi‐quantitatively measured by ELISA and correlated with worm burdens in individual fish.
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