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Protozoa and human disease
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ISBN: 9780815365006 0815365004 Year: 2011 Publisher: New York : Garland Science,

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Leishmaniasis : general aspects of a stigmatized disease
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ISBN: 1839680822 1839680814 Year: 2022 Publisher: London, England : IntechOpen,

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Handbuch der pathogenen Protozoen
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Year: 1912 Publisher: Leipzig : verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth,

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The pathogenic enteric protozoa : giardia, entamoeba, cryptosporidium, and cyclospora
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Year: 2004 Publisher: Boston, Massachusetts : Kluwer Academic Publishers,

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Giardia duodenalis (=G. lamblia), Entamoeba histolytica, Cryptosporidium parvum and Cyclospora cayetanensis are more than just a mouthful for most who might encounter them. These protozoan parasitic agents contribute significantly to the staggering caseload of diarrheal disease morbidity encountered in developing world nations. Compounding the issue of their mere presence is the fact that standard ova and parasite exams frequently do not detect these infections. Detectable stages may be shed intermittently or require specialized staining procedures. Added to this is the often large number of asymptomatic carriers who serve as reservoirs for infecting others. These parasites are also not strangers to more developed nations, having responsibility for both small and large-scale disease outbreaks. In such settings they may be even more difficult to detect simply because they are frequently overlooked in the grand scheme of disease causing possibilities. They share common features; all are Protozoa, all possess trophic stages that inhabit the gastrointestinal tract, all have the ability to produce disease and in some instances death, and all produce environmentally stable cysts or oocysts, which ensure their transmissibility. In other ways, these organisms are profoundly different. Giardia is a flagellate that inhabits the gut lumen in close association with enterocytes. Entamoeba is an amoeba that preferentially inhabits the mucosal region of the gut lumen, but which may, under certain circumstances, become invasive. Cryptosporidium and Cyclospora are obligate intracellular coccidians, each taking up a unique niche within their respective host enterocytes.


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The pathogenic enteric protozoa : giardia, entamoeba, cryptosporidium, and cyclospora
Authors: ---
Year: 2004 Publisher: Boston, Massachusetts : Kluwer Academic Publishers,

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Giardia duodenalis (=G. lamblia), Entamoeba histolytica, Cryptosporidium parvum and Cyclospora cayetanensis are more than just a mouthful for most who might encounter them. These protozoan parasitic agents contribute significantly to the staggering caseload of diarrheal disease morbidity encountered in developing world nations. Compounding the issue of their mere presence is the fact that standard ova and parasite exams frequently do not detect these infections. Detectable stages may be shed intermittently or require specialized staining procedures. Added to this is the often large number of asymptomatic carriers who serve as reservoirs for infecting others. These parasites are also not strangers to more developed nations, having responsibility for both small and large-scale disease outbreaks. In such settings they may be even more difficult to detect simply because they are frequently overlooked in the grand scheme of disease causing possibilities. They share common features; all are Protozoa, all possess trophic stages that inhabit the gastrointestinal tract, all have the ability to produce disease and in some instances death, and all produce environmentally stable cysts or oocysts, which ensure their transmissibility. In other ways, these organisms are profoundly different. Giardia is a flagellate that inhabits the gut lumen in close association with enterocytes. Entamoeba is an amoeba that preferentially inhabits the mucosal region of the gut lumen, but which may, under certain circumstances, become invasive. Cryptosporidium and Cyclospora are obligate intracellular coccidians, each taking up a unique niche within their respective host enterocytes.


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An atlas of protozoan parasites in animal tissues.
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Year: 1988 Publisher: Washington (D.C.) : US Department of agriculture. Agricultural research service,

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Life cycles of coccidia of domestic animals
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ISBN: 0839100663 Year: 1972 Publisher: Baltimore (Md.) : University park press,

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A short synopsis of human protozoology and helminthology.
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Year: 1960 Publisher: Edinburgh Livingstone

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Die protozoären Blutparasitosen der Haustiere in warmen Ländern : [von] Hussel [et al.].
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Year: 1966 Publisher: Leipzig Hirzel

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On a haematozoon inhabiting human blood : its relation to chyluria and other diseases
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Year: 1874 Publisher: Calcutta : Office of the Superintendent of Government Documents,

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