Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice: Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice : Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone. / Bollen, Lise S.; Fox, M. T.; Stodulski, G.; Hau, J.

In: Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, Vol. 23, No. 1, 1996, p. 1-6.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bollen, LS, Fox, MT, Stodulski, G & Hau, J 1996, 'Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice: Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone', Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 1-6.

APA

Bollen, L. S., Fox, M. T., Stodulski, G., & Hau, J. (1996). Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice: Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone. Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, 23(1), 1-6.

Vancouver

Bollen LS, Fox MT, Stodulski G, Hau J. Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice: Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone. Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science. 1996;23(1):1-6.

Author

Bollen, Lise S. ; Fox, M. T. ; Stodulski, G. ; Hau, J. / Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice : Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone. In: Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science. 1996 ; Vol. 23, No. 1. pp. 1-6.

Bibtex

@article{a70871bff05346c6b6af67cdea74d13b,
title = "Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice: Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone",
abstract = "The effect of experimental infection with the intestinal trematode, Echinostoma caproni, on feed intake, liveweight and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 (PAMP-1) and corticosterone was investigated in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice. Twenty-five metacercariae were given by oral gavage on day 0 of which 19.6 % were recovered at post mortem on day 46 in the BALB/c mice and 22.0 % in the Swiss T. O. mice. Oral praziquantel treatment (50 mg/kg) on day 39 reduced the recovery of flukes from previously-infected mice by 85.4% and 100% in BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice, respectively. The food consumption in the infected Swiss T.O. mice was significantly increased compared to the infected-treated and the controls. In the BALB/c mice the food intake in the infected and infected-treated animals was significantly increased compared with the controls. The liveweight gain during the experiment in the BALB/c control mice was significantly higher than in the infected-treated groups. In the Swiss T.O. mice the infected animals gained more weight than the controls and the infected-treated animals. E. caproni was associated with a significant reduction in PAMP-1 concentrations in both strains of mice, even in animals from which the majority of flukes had been removed by praziquantel-treatment. There was no significant correlation between the magnitude of the parasite burden and serum PAMP-1 values. Corticosterone values were unaffected by either mouse strain, E. caproni infection or anthelmintic treatment. These results suggest that the previously reported adverse effect of. E. caproni on early pregnancy in mice may be caused by parasite-induced effects occurring prior to fertilisation.",
author = "Bollen, {Lise S.} and Fox, {M. T.} and G. Stodulski and J. Hau",
year = "1996",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "1--6",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science",
issn = "0901-3393",
publisher = "R R Consult",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Echinostoma caproni infection in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice

T2 - Effect on feed intake, liveweight, and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 and corticosterone

AU - Bollen, Lise S.

AU - Fox, M. T.

AU - Stodulski, G.

AU - Hau, J.

PY - 1996

Y1 - 1996

N2 - The effect of experimental infection with the intestinal trematode, Echinostoma caproni, on feed intake, liveweight and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 (PAMP-1) and corticosterone was investigated in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice. Twenty-five metacercariae were given by oral gavage on day 0 of which 19.6 % were recovered at post mortem on day 46 in the BALB/c mice and 22.0 % in the Swiss T. O. mice. Oral praziquantel treatment (50 mg/kg) on day 39 reduced the recovery of flukes from previously-infected mice by 85.4% and 100% in BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice, respectively. The food consumption in the infected Swiss T.O. mice was significantly increased compared to the infected-treated and the controls. In the BALB/c mice the food intake in the infected and infected-treated animals was significantly increased compared with the controls. The liveweight gain during the experiment in the BALB/c control mice was significantly higher than in the infected-treated groups. In the Swiss T.O. mice the infected animals gained more weight than the controls and the infected-treated animals. E. caproni was associated with a significant reduction in PAMP-1 concentrations in both strains of mice, even in animals from which the majority of flukes had been removed by praziquantel-treatment. There was no significant correlation between the magnitude of the parasite burden and serum PAMP-1 values. Corticosterone values were unaffected by either mouse strain, E. caproni infection or anthelmintic treatment. These results suggest that the previously reported adverse effect of. E. caproni on early pregnancy in mice may be caused by parasite-induced effects occurring prior to fertilisation.

AB - The effect of experimental infection with the intestinal trematode, Echinostoma caproni, on feed intake, liveweight and serum pregnancy-associated murine protein-1 (PAMP-1) and corticosterone was investigated in non-pregnant female BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice. Twenty-five metacercariae were given by oral gavage on day 0 of which 19.6 % were recovered at post mortem on day 46 in the BALB/c mice and 22.0 % in the Swiss T. O. mice. Oral praziquantel treatment (50 mg/kg) on day 39 reduced the recovery of flukes from previously-infected mice by 85.4% and 100% in BALB/c and Swiss T.O. mice, respectively. The food consumption in the infected Swiss T.O. mice was significantly increased compared to the infected-treated and the controls. In the BALB/c mice the food intake in the infected and infected-treated animals was significantly increased compared with the controls. The liveweight gain during the experiment in the BALB/c control mice was significantly higher than in the infected-treated groups. In the Swiss T.O. mice the infected animals gained more weight than the controls and the infected-treated animals. E. caproni was associated with a significant reduction in PAMP-1 concentrations in both strains of mice, even in animals from which the majority of flukes had been removed by praziquantel-treatment. There was no significant correlation between the magnitude of the parasite burden and serum PAMP-1 values. Corticosterone values were unaffected by either mouse strain, E. caproni infection or anthelmintic treatment. These results suggest that the previously reported adverse effect of. E. caproni on early pregnancy in mice may be caused by parasite-induced effects occurring prior to fertilisation.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=3242870577&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:3242870577

VL - 23

SP - 1

EP - 6

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science

SN - 0901-3393

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 369375328