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Journal ArticleDOI

Energetic relationships of Sarcoptes scabiei var. canis (Acari: Sarcoptidae) with the laboratory rabbit.

TLDR
The energy demand by the mites on a heavily parasitized host was insignificant relative to the metabolic rate of the host and Parasite energy demand was not responsible for the weight loss or reduced weight gains exhibited by the parasitized hosts.
Abstract
This study examines the energy relationship between the host and the ectoparasitic mite Sarcoptes scabiei var. canis. Parasitized rabbits during the first 14-wk, post-initial infestation gained weight at approximately the same rate, but they consumed more food and water than uninfested control rabbits. During weeks 17–42 after the initial infestation, infestation levels increased until 10–30% of the body area was heavily parasitized. During this time, infested rabbits steadily lost weight even though there was no marked difference in food consumption between infested and control rabbits. Oxygen consumption rates were 0.00206 and 0.00076 μl O2/h/mite for female and male mites, respectively, at 75% RH and 34°C. Based on these rates, mite density on the host, and the infested host body surface area, the energy demand by the mites on a heavily parasitized host was insignificant relative to the metabolic rate of the host. Parasite energy demand was not responsible for the weight loss or reduced weight gains exhibited by the parasitized hosts. All of the infested rabbits became free of mites within 2 wk after treatment with an acaricide and rapidly regained the lost weight.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Problems in Diagnosing Scabies, a Global Disease in Human and Animal Populations

TL;DR: Early identification of disease will enable selective treatment of those affected, reduce transmission and the requirement for mass treatment, limit the potential for escalating mite resistance, and provide another means of controlling scabies in populations in areas of endemicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology, Host Relations, and Epidemiology of Sarcoptes scabiei

TL;DR: Scabies continues to be an important parasitic disease of humans, and other mammals, and much more research is needed to understand fully the occurrence, transmission, and epidemiology of both human and animal scabies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mycobacterium avium in the Postgenomic Era

TL;DR: How postgenomic insights into the Mycobacterium avium complex have helped to clarify the relationships between MAC organisms are discussed, highlighting the distinction between environmental and pathogenic subsets of M. avium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Draft genome of the scabies mite

TL;DR: The identification of antigen-producing genes, candidate immune modulating proteins and pathways, and genes responsible for acaricide resistance offers opportunities for developing new methods for diagnosing, treating and preventing this disease.
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