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Visceral leishmaniasis

About: Visceral leishmaniasis is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7486 publications have been published within this topic receiving 184865 citations. The topic is also known as: Kala-Azar & viscus leishmaniasis.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results obtained confirm the existence of mixed infections in dogs in Rio de Janeiro and indicate the need to complement the investigation of seroreactive dogs using methods for the parasitological diagnosis and identification of Leishmania species.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review explores the different facets of novel therapeutic strategies for treatment of visceral leishmaniasis with a purpose to summarize all the possible treatment tactics, which will help scientists working in this arena to implement their research in a systematic manner.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ten Kenyan patients with visceral leishmaniasis, unresponsive to sodium stibogluconate at a dose of 16 to 20 mg Sb/kg/day given for 30 to 98 days, have been studied clinically and immunologically and compared with 57 antimony-responsive patients.
Abstract: Ten Kenyan patients with visceral leishmaniasis, unresponsive to sodium stibogluconate at a dose of 16 to 20 mg Sb/kg/day given for 30 to 98 days, have been studied clinically and immunologically and compared with 57 antimony-responsive patients. Pulmonary tuberculosis and previous treatment with antimonial drugs were the only factors which were more common in unresponsive patients. The degree of immunosuppression and rate of recovery of immunoreactivity did not differ between antimony-responsive and -unresponsive patients. Only one patient had never been treated before (primary unresponsiveness). In the other nine patients secondary unresponsiveness occurred after one or more treatment courses, suggesting that the parasite developed resistance to antimony. Antimony-unresponsiveness in visceral leishmaniasis is a serious problem numerically, clinically and economically. A plea is made that the initial treatment of visceral leishmaniasis should be adequate in dose and duration.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that PKDL develops as a result of an influx of immunocompetent cells into skin, which harbours parasites, and the inflammatory response to the parasites is complex.
Abstract: In Sudan, post kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) caused by Leishmania donovani develops in half of the patients treated for visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar). In most patients lesions heal spontaneously, but in others symptoms are severe and persist for years. This study examined the immunological response in lesions of PKDL patients by immunohistochemistry and compared the findings with results obtained using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). In all lesions, parasites or parasite antigen were present and provoked the formation of an inflammatory infiltrate consisting of a mixture of macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. In patients who had high interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) responses to Leishmania antigen in vitro, compact epithelioid granulomas were formed. The inflammatory cells were mainly CD3(+) and interleukin-10 (IL10) was the most prominent cytokine in the lesions. However, IFNgamma was found in all and IL4 in most lesions, in varying amounts. PBMCs from all patients responded to Leishmania antigen by IFNgamma production or proliferation. The results indicate that PKDL develops as a result of an influx of immunocompetent cells into skin, which harbours parasites. The inflammatory response to the parasites is complex. It involves several cell types and cytokines, of which some are antagonistic. It is conceivable that the balance between these cytokines determines the outcome of the disease.

73 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The histologic response was consistent with early destruction of parasites in PMN's, and survival and replication of L. donovani in macrophages, and cutaneous infection with the parasite was eventually controlled locally, coincident with granuloma formation.
Abstract: The extracellular promastigote stage of Leishmania donovani is inoculated by a phlebotomine sandfly into the skin of a susceptible host, after which visceral dissemination and clinical disease may ensue. Using a hamster model we examined the histopathology of early infection with L. donovani after intradermal inoculation of cultured promastigotes. The initial response was a mixed polymorphonuclear (PMN)-mononuclear phagocyte infiltrate, noted between 1 and 24 hr after inoculation, which became primarily mononuclear by 48 hr. Parasites were initially found intracellularly in both PMN's and mononuclear phagocytes, but by 48 hr they had assumed amastigote-like morphology and were found exclusively in macrophages. The number of parasites per infected macrophage increased during the first week after inoculation, suggesting that intracellular replication of the organism was taking place. This was followed by the formation of granulomas between 4 and 6 wk. By 8 wk intracellular parasites were largely gone. The histologic response was consistent with early destruction of parasites in PMN's, and survival and replication of L. donovani in macrophages. Cutaneous infection with the parasite was eventually controlled locally, coincident with granuloma formation. Despite these local responses, the organism was able to disseminate and eventually produce typical visceral leishmaniasis.

73 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023192
2022442
2021269
2020285
2019286
2018253