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Département de Biométrie Médicale de l'Université de Tübingen

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Influenza
Maladies émergentes
Variole
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Poliomyélite
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Onchocercose
  Introduction
  Infection
       Summary
       Acquisition
       Immuno-suppression
       Taux d'infection
  Onchocercome
       Summary
       Formation
       Palpation
       Prevalence
       Données
  Larves infectieuses
  Microfilaires
       Summary
       Reproduction
  Diagnostique
       Summary
       Palpation
  Regulation
       Summary
       Biologie
       Données
       Eradicabilité
  Cycle de transmission
  Glossary
Filarioses
Leishmaniose
Haemophilus
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Impressum

The process of infection with filariae

Blackfly taking a bloodmeal
Blackfly taking a bloodmeal

(Source: WHO/TDR/image 9603540)
From a modeling view, filaria infections are characterized by three properties:
  • Property 1: It is a chronic infection in which some parasites per year manage to establish in the human host.
  • Property 2: The infection rate is low compared to the transmission potential. Thus, the host resistance efficiently controls the majority of the infection, but it is not fully protective.
  • Property 3: At higher transmission potentials, the infection rate does not increase further, it seems to be limited.
All three properties can easily be demonstrated in villages where the average parasite burden does not profoundly differ despite an annual transmission potential (ATP) which differs by magnitudes (see Infection rate).

The parasite burden which develops only slowly over age, however, raises the question: Why is the human host somehow better protected against infection during the first years of life? We try to explain this by the following model: The human host is effectively, but not fully, protected against infection with the parasite (arrows 1 and 2 in the figure below). If an infectious larvae (L3) manages to establish successfully in a host, then, immunosuppressive processes are initiated by adult worms and/or by microfilaria, facilitating future infections. As the parasite acquisition rate increases slowly along with the developing parasite burden in a host, his or her parasite burden increases only slowly over age, explaining the patterns found in the age-intensity profiles .
Figure 1
Figure: Model of parasite acquisition in filarial infections, which occur density-dependently due to parasite-induced immunosuppression. ATP Annual Transmission Potential of infectious larvae (L3). L4: Intermediate larval stage. W: Adult, female parasite. Mf: Microfilariae. I: Protective immunity against L3. Arrow 1: Immune-stimulation by a developing L3/L4. Inhibition 2: Protective immunity can suppress the development of L3. Inhibition 3: Adult parasites and/or microfilariae suppress immunity. (Source: Duerr et al., 2003)
Related pages: Parasite acquisition, High infection rates at low transmission potentials.

Further reading: Duerr HP, Dietz K, Schulz-Key H, et al., 2003. Density-dependent parasite establishment suggests infection-associated immunosuppression as an important mechanism for parasite density regulation in onchocerciasis. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 97: 242-250. Abstract at PubMed

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Responsable de cette page: Dr. H.-P. Duerr
Webmaster: Prof. Dr. M. Eichner (dernière modification de cette page: 13 juli 2009)
Collaborateur: Prof. K. Dietz, Institut für Medizinische Biometrie (IMB), Tübingen
Dr. M. Eichner
Autres partenaires pour ce projet: Prof. H. Schulz-Key, Institute for Tropical Medicine, University of Tübingen, Germany
Soutenu financièrement par: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, DI 308/12-1)
Traduit en français par: Claire Le Roux, Université de Valenciennes et du Hainaut Cambraisis (UVHC), Institut des Sciences et Techniques (ISTV), France
Avertissement: L'Université Eberhard Karl de Tübingen, le Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Tübingen, le Département de Biométrie Médicale (IMB), ainsi que les auteurs de cette page déclinent toute responsabilité pour le contenu des pages auxquelles cette page renvoie

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