Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of
Date of this Version
1-1983
Abstract
The host response to the nematodes Heligmosomoides hudsoni (Cameron, 1937) and H. johnsoni Rausch and Rausch, 1973 (Heligmosomidae) was investigated in their natural hosts, varying lemmings, Dicrostonyx spp., and heather voles, Phenucomys intermedius Merriam (Rodentia: Arvicolidae), respectively. The nematodes occupy the cecum of the host, where they coil tightly around the long cecal villi. In individual animaIs, the comparatively few villi occupied became much enlarged, exhibiting severe hyperplasia of the mucosa and other microscopic changes, as described. The mechanism of pathogenesis involved three factors: strangulation of the villi, pressure atrophy, and chronic irritation by the crests of the synlophe. In lemmings, the presence of abundant plasma cells in affected villi indicated that H. hudsoni evokes a strong immune response. The distribution and zoogeography of the nematodes and their hosts are discussed.
Comments
Published in the Proceedings of the Helminthological Society of Washington (January 1983) 50(1): 25-35. Copyright 1983, the Helminthological Society of Washington. Used by permission.