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. 2011 Aug 25;180(3-4):287-91.
doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2011.03.020. Epub 2011 Mar 21.

Toxocara cati larvae persist and retain high infectivity in muscles of experimentally infected chickens

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Toxocara cati larvae persist and retain high infectivity in muscles of experimentally infected chickens

Kensuke Taira et al. Vet Parasitol. .

Abstract

The distribution of Toxocara cati larvae in the organs of chickens (n=31), experimentally inoculated with 3000 embryonated eggs, was examined 1, 2, 3, 7, 29, 86 and 175-176 days post-infection (dpi), and the infectivity of recovered larvae was evaluated by bioassay in mice. The duodenum, liver, lungs, heart, brain, pectoral muscles (white meat), and hindlimb muscles (red meat) of the chickens were HCl-pepsin digested for larval recovery. Larvae were recovered from all chickens [mean=220.4 ± 114.9 (SD)], and although no decrease of total larval recovery was observed over time, predilection sites changed: liver (92.6% of larval recovery) at 1 dpi; lungs (77.3%) and liver (20.9%) at 2 dpi; lungs (80.8%), muscles (9.4%), and liver (8.5%) at 3 dpi; muscles (52.0%) and lungs (45.6%) at 7 dpi, whereafter most larvae were recovered from muscles: 29 dpi (99.5%), 86 dpi (99.3%) and 175-176 dpi (99.6%). In the bioassay, 52.9% of larvae from 175 to 176 days old infections in chickens established in mice, which demonstrates that T. cati larvae retain infective in the muscles of chickens for half a year. These results highlight the zoonotic potential of poultry meat as a causative agent of human toxocarosis.

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