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    The effect of vaccinating S. mansoni-infected BALB/c mice either before or after treatment

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    Date
    2006
    Author
    Yole, D. S
    Obanda, V. O
    Kithome, K
    Ochanda, H
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In Schistosoma mansoni endemic areas, there are people with ongoing S. mansoni infection, others have been infected and treated while others have never been infected. What would happen if these different groups of people were vaccinated against S. mansoni? BALB / c mice were divided into five groups: Infected-Treated-Vaccinated; Infected-Vaccinated-Treated; Vaccinated-Treated Control; Challenge Control and Untreated Challenge Control. Vaccination (500 20krad irradiated S. mansoni cercariae), Treatment (praziquantel), Infection and Challenge (150 S. mansoni cercariae) were carried out at specified times. Proliferation assay, Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, gross pathology, histopathology and perfusion were performed. High protection levels were obtained in mice treated after vaccination: Vaccinated-Treated control, 96.5 %; Infected-Vaccinated-Treated, 68.9 %; and Infected-Treated-Vaccinated, 41 %. A good correlation was obtained between proliferative responses and protective levels, implying cellular involvement in protection. Although all protected animals had high IgG levels, there was no strong correlation between the two. Specificity rather than amounts of IgG, seem more important in protection. Praziquantel seemed to boost protective immunity when administered after vaccination. Granuloma development and modulation in the two test groups was similar. It seems better to vaccinate infected patients before treatment, the ideal situation being vaccinating people who have not encountered S. mansoni.
    URI
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17348744
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/28911
    Citation
    Afr J Health Sci. 2006 Jan-Jun;13(1-2):55-68.
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    • Faculty of Science & Technology (FST) [4284]

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