Glover I D, Henry G M, Townsend N B, Coles G C
Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford House, Bristol, BS40 5DU, UK.
Parasitol Res. 2009 Aug;105(2):587-9. doi: 10.1007/s00436-009-1473-2. Epub 2009 May 29.
The Stomacher is very widely used in food and medical research for extracting tissues. To determine whether nematode larvae were disrupted by the Stomacher, L3 larvae of Haemonchus contortus were homogenised for up to 40 min at full power but no larval disruption occurred. Therefore, tissue from the mucosa and submucosa of the caecum of horses collected from a licenced abattoir was treated to determine whether inhibited cyathostomin larvae could be extracted. The optimum time on full power for a 10-g sample was 20 min, and in three out of five caecal samples from different horses, significantly more larvae were recovered than with 6 h pepsin HCl digestion. It is concluded that the Stomacher provides a simple fast method of extracting inhibited nematode larvae from gastrointestinal tissues in the horse that could replace digestion with pepsin HCl.