Experimental leishmaniasis in humans: review.

P C Melby
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引用次数: 60

Abstract

Experimental infection of humans with Leishmania parasites has contributed significantly to the understanding of the etiology, transmission, and pathogenesis of leishmaniasis and the immunity associated with it. Leishmania organisms recovered from human and animal tissue, insect vectors, and in vitro cultures have all produced cutaneous or visceral leishmaniasis in human subjects who were voluntarily inoculated with them. Volunteers bitten by infected Phlebotomine sandflies also developed cutaneous or visceral disease. In these experiments, it appeared that the parasite must undergo certain developmental changes within the sandfly for it to become infective and that the parasites in sandflies were far more efficient in causing full-blown infection than were cultured Leishmania organisms. The clinical manifestations of these experimental infections did not differ from infections that were acquired naturally. Natural or experimental infections appeared to confer resistance to subsequent leishmanial infection. This immunity was best documented to be a species-specific phenomenon; however, a small number of studies have demonstrated cross protection between some Leishmania species. In this review article, data from human experimental infections are summarized and discussed in light of recent advances in the field.

人类实验利什曼病:综述。
人类感染利什曼原虫的实验对了解利什曼病的病因、传播和发病机制以及与之相关的免疫有重大贡献。从人类和动物组织、昆虫媒介和体外培养中回收的利什曼原虫都在自愿接种它们的人类受试者中产生皮肤或内脏利什曼病。被感染白蛉叮咬的志愿者也出现了皮肤或内脏疾病。在这些实验中,寄生虫似乎必须在白蛉体内经历某些发育变化才能具有传染性,而且白蛉体内的寄生虫在引起全面感染方面比培养的利什曼原虫要有效得多。这些实验感染的临床表现与自然获得性感染没有区别。自然或实验感染似乎赋予对随后的利什曼感染的抵抗力。这种免疫是一种物种特有的现象。然而,少数研究表明某些利什曼原虫物种之间存在交叉保护。在这篇综述文章中,总结了人类实验感染的数据,并根据该领域的最新进展进行了讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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