نتایج جستجو برای: giardia lambelia

تعداد نتایج: 4022  

Journal: :Preventive veterinary medicine 2014
Ahmed S Mohamed Michael Levine Joseph W Camp Elisabeth Lund Jonathan S Yoder Larry T Glickman George E Moore

Giardia protozoa have been suspected to be of zoonotic transmission, including transmission from companion animals such as pet dogs to humans. Patterns of infection have been previously described for dogs and humans, but such investigations have used different time periods and locations for these two species. Our objective was to describe and compare the overall trend and seasonality of Giardia...

Journal: :Journal of water and health 2012
Michele I Van Dyke Corinne S L Ong Natalie A Prystajecky Judith L Isaac-Renton Peter M Huck

Cryptosporidium and Giardia were characterized in a watershed in southern Ontario, Canada, over a 2½ year period. River samples were collected every two weeks, primarily near a municipal drinking water treatment plant intake. Cryptosporidium and Giardia were frequently detected with an overall occurrence rate of 88 and 97%, respectively. Giardia concentrations were higher than Cryptosporidium, ...

Journal: :Glycobiology 2010
Sanghamitra Mitra Jike Cui Phillips W Robbins John Samuelson

Giardia lamblia, which is an important parasitic cause of diarrhea, uses activated forms of glucose to make glycogen and activated forms of mannose to make glycophosphosphoinositol anchors. A necessary step for glucose activation is isomerization of glucose-6-phosphate to glucose-1-phosphate by a phosphoglucomutase (PGM). Similarly, a phosphomannomutase (PMM) converts mannose-6-phosphate to man...

Journal: :Veterinary parasitology 2010
R C A Thompson A Smith A J Lymbery S Averis K D Morris A F Wayne

Giardia has been found in numerous species of mammalian wildlife but very little information is available on the species and strains/genotypes that occur naturally in mammals in the wild. Recently, a novel genotype of Giardia was described in Western Australia, in the Southern brown bandicoot, or quenda (Isoodon obesulus). In order to determine the host range, distribution and prevalence of thi...

Journal: :Current Biology 2005
C.William Birky

The protist Giardia has long been considered strictly asexual. Now genes specific for meiotic recombination have been found in the Giardia genome, but their consequences for genetics, epidemiology and evolution remain unknown.

Journal: :The Journal of parasitology 1997
R M Hopkins B P Meloni D M Groth J D Wetherall J A Reynoldson R C Thompson

A polymerase chain reaction-based method for genotyping Giardia duodenalis isolates using a polymorphic region near the 5' end of the small subunit ribosomal (SSU) RNA gene is described. Analysis was performed using Giardia cysts purified directly from feces. Isolates were collected from humans and dogs living in isolated Aboriginal communities where Giardia infections are highly endemic. This ...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2003
Matthias Marti Attila Regös Yajie Li Elisabeth M Schraner Peter Wild Norbert Müller Lea G Knopf Adrian B Hehl

The protozoan parasite Giardia intestinalis belongs to one of the earliest diverged eukaryotic lineages. This is also reflected in a simple intracellular organization, as Giardia lacks common subcellular compartments such as mitochondria, peroxisomes, and apparently also a Golgi apparatus. During encystation, developmentally regulated formation of large secretory compartments containing cyst wa...

2015
R. Reynoso-Robles M. Ponce-Macotela L. E. Rosas-López A. Ramos-Morales M. N. Martínez–Gordillo A. González-Maciel

Giardiasis is a neglected parasitic disease that affects primarily children, in whom it delays physical and mental development. The pathophysiology of giardiasis in not well understood, and most reports have identified Giardia intestinalis trophozoites only in the lumen and on the brush border of the small intestine. We identified Giardia trophozoites within the epithelium of the small intestin...

2009
Stephanie Dawn Janeczko

Giardia duodenalis is an intestinal protozoal parasite capable of causing both clinical and subclinical disease in a broad range of species, including humans and cats. The parasite has a ubiquitous distribution and infection occurs worldwide in nearly all mammals. Giardia infection in cats may not be associated with any clinical signs, but affected cats most commonly exhibit acute small bowel d...

Journal: :Journal of wildlife diseases 2014
Jennifer N Hogan Woutrina A Miller Michael R Cranfield Jan Ramer James Hassell Jean Bosco Noheri Patricia A Conrad Kirsten V K Gilardi

Mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) are critically endangered primates surviving in two isolated populations in protected areas within the Virunga Massif of Rwanda, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in Uganda. Mountain gorillas face intense ecologic pressures due to their proximity to humans. Human communities outside the national parks...

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