Human enteric infections with A. caninum are being diagnosed more frequently in northeastern Australia. Although infection may be subclinical, the chief symptom is abdominal pain, sometimes sudden and severe. The pathologic finding is focal or diffuse eosinophilic inflammation caused by a type 1 hypersensitivity response to secreted antigens. Infection by sexually immature worms is scant and nonpatent, indicating poor adaptation to the human host. Serologic testing assists in identification of occult infection. Advanced hygiene and sanitation afford little protection because the parasite reservoir is a large and growing pool of infected domestic pets.
Hereford cattle were immunized with membranes and soluble components extracted from the midgut of Boophilus microplus. Membrane vaccines protected cattle (91%) against challenge with 3 x 20,000 larval ticks administered at intervals of 7 days. Vaccines made from soluble antigens did not protect cattle. Antibody levels measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) related to the levels of protection induced by vaccination.
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