Iniciar sesión
Registrarse
Restablecer contraseña
Publicar y Distribuir
Soluciones de Publicación
Soluciones de Distribución
Temas
Arquitectura y diseño
Artes
Ciencias Sociales
Ciencias de la Información y Bibliotecas, Estudios del Libro
Ciencias de la vida
Ciencias de los materiales
Deporte y tiempo libre
Estudios clásicos y del Cercano Oriente antiguo
Estudios culturales
Estudios judíos
Farmacia
Filosofía
Física
Geociencias
Historia
Informática
Ingeniería
Interés general
Ley
Lingüística y semiótica
Literatura
Matemáticas
Medicina
Música
Negocios y Economía
Química
Química industrial
Teología y religión
Publicaciones
Revistas
Libros
Actas
Editoriales
Blog
Contacto
Buscar
EUR
USD
GBP
Español
English
Deutsch
Polski
Español
Français
Italiano
Carrito
Home
Revistas
Helminthologia
Volumen 58 (2021): Edición 4 (December 2021)
Acceso abierto
Severe pulmonary fascioloidosis in a wild Mouflon (
Ovis musimon
) - a case report
C. Stiles
C. Stiles
,
M. Bujanić
M. Bujanić
,
F. Martinković
F. Martinković
,
I.-C. Šoštarić Zuckermann
I.-C. Šoštarić Zuckermann
y
D. Konjević
D. Konjević
| 25 dic 2021
Helminthologia
Volumen 58 (2021): Edición 4 (December 2021)
Acerca de este artículo
Artículo anterior
Artículo siguiente
Resumen
Artículo
Figuras y tablas
Referencias
Autores
Artículos en este número
Vista previa
PDF
Cite
Compartir
Article Category:
Case report
Publicado en línea:
25 dic 2021
Páginas:
394 - 399
Recibido:
07 abr 2021
Aceptado:
06 sept 2020
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/helm-2021-0036
Palabras clave
mouflon
,
fascioloidosis
,
unsuccessful migration
,
pathology
,
aberrant host
© 2021 C. Stiles, M. Bujanić, F. Martinković, I.-C. Šoštarić Zuckermann, D. Konjević, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Fig. 1
Part of the mouflon liver. Note fibrin deposits and black stained traces (iron-porphyrin).
Fig. 2
Lungs, dorsal surface. Caudal lung lobes are longitudinally cut to reveal migratory channels of the F. magna fluke. The migratory channels are characterized by elongated haemorrhagic and necrotic areas (evident on both sides) and with occasional cavitations (right lobe, left side of the figure). The left cranial lung lobe has one round haemorrhagic focus with central rupture of pleura and likely presents an exit point of fluke’s lung migratory pathway.
Fig. 3
Juvenile fluke removed from the mouflon lungs.
Fig. 4
Lung, a segment of the migratory tract (channel) of F. magna. There is a mixture of fibrin, extravasated erythrocytes, and necrotic debris within the centre of the migratory tract (most of the lower half of the figure). Surrounding the centre (upper half of the figure) there is an elaborate immature fibrous tissue entrapping a few smaller and collapsed airways, and infiltrated by moderate numbers of lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages, and fewer neutrophils and eosinophils. Note numerous dark brown iron porphyrin pigment granules within the cytoplasm of the macrophages. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, 40X total magnification.
Fig. 5
Lung, a segment of one smaller migratory tract (channel) of F. magna. Adjacent to lumen filled with erythrocytes there is a narrow layer of degenerated and necrotic inflammatory cells which is further bounded with an immature fibrous tissue of similar composition as described in figure 2. Note one medium-sized bronchiole and several collapsed and distorted airways which are filled with cellular and karyorrhectic debris and extravasated erythrocytes (left half of the figure). Hematoxylin and eosin stain, 100X total magnification.