Lovis Léonore, Grandjean Mélanie, Overney Laurence, Seewald Wolfgang, Sager Heinz
Elanco Animal Health, Switzerland.
Elanco Animal Health, Switzerland.
Vet Parasitol. 2017 Aug 30;243:235-241. doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.010. Epub 2017 Jul 14.
Periodicity, the cyclical rise and fall in microfilaria (mff) numbers in the peripheral blood over time, is observed in many filarial infections. It is correlated with the necessity for these larval stages to be ingested by the blood feeding vector before they can be transmitted to a new vertebrate host. Microfilariae of the dog heartworm Dirofilaria immitis have been described to show periodicity, but the circadian pattern does not seem to be consistent. Most publications describe the lowest mff-concentrations in the peripheral blood in the early morning, while the highest counts occurred either in the afternoon, in the late evening or shortly after midnight. Sixteen dogs were experimentally infected with D. immitis isolates originating from Italy (one isolate, 14 dogs), and the USA (two isolates, one dog each). The dogs were housed indoors with a natural light source (windows) and heating that prevented temperature-drops below 20°C during winter. When patency was reached, blood samples were collected at weekly and monthly intervals over a period of up to 3 years, and at given hours of the day (morning, noon, evening) for the duration of one year in order to determine seasonal, as well as daily variations of microfilaremia. Despite the fact that the dogs were kept indoors, there was an apparent seasonality of the D. immitis-microfilaremia, with peaks in summer and 5-49-times lower counts in winter. This difference was statistically significant and the ratio remained constant over the years, regardless of the fact that the mff-counts increased from the first to the second year of patency. Since the temperature was kept constantly in a range between 20 to 26°C (with some single outliners in both directions) the climatic conditions may not explain this observation. Therefore, day length may be the most obvious reason for the seasonality in the given study set-up. Interestingly, the Italian D. immitis-isolate lost seasonality after three passages of experimental infections in dogs. The circadian cycle of mff in the peripheral blood varied considerably between dogs and season. There was no consistent or apparent pattern, which led to the conclusion that many individual factors seem to influence the appearance of mff in the peripheral blood, even, or especially, under standardized environmental conditions.
周期性现象,即外周血中微丝蚴(mff)数量随时间呈周期性的上升和下降,在许多丝虫感染中都有观察到。这与这些幼虫阶段必须被吸血媒介摄取后才能传播到新的脊椎动物宿主的必要性相关。犬心丝虫恶丝虫的微丝蚴已被描述为具有周期性,但昼夜模式似乎并不一致。大多数出版物描述外周血中微丝蚴浓度在清晨最低,而最高计数出现在下午、深夜或午夜过后不久。16只犬被实验性感染源自意大利的恶丝虫分离株(一个分离株,14只犬)以及源自美国的分离株(两个分离株,各1只犬)。这些犬饲养在室内,有自然光源(窗户)和供暖设备,冬季可防止温度降至20°C以下。当出现虫血症时,在长达3年的时间里每隔一周和一个月采集血样,并在一年的特定时间(早晨、中午、晚上)采集血样,以确定微丝蚴血症的季节性以及每日变化。尽管这些犬饲养在室内,但恶丝虫微丝蚴血症仍存在明显的季节性变化,夏季出现高峰,冬季计数低5至49倍。这种差异具有统计学意义且多年来该比例保持恒定,尽管微丝蚴计数从虫血症出现后的第一年到第二年有所增加。由于温度一直保持在20至26°C之间(在两个方向上都有一些个别异常值),气候条件可能无法解释这一观察结果。因此,在给定的研究设置中日照时长可能是季节性变化最明显的原因。有趣的是,意大利恶丝虫分离株在犬体内经过三次实验性感染传代后失去了季节性变化。外周血中微丝蚴的昼夜循环在犬之间以及不同季节有很大差异。没有一致或明显的模式可循,并由此得出结论,即使在标准化环境条件下,许多个体因素似乎也会影响外周血中微丝蚴的出现,甚至尤其是这样。