Table 1.
The experimental models of nematode infections.
Helminth | Infection stage | Natural Route of infection | Route of Experimental inoculation | Characteristics of Infection | Model for infection in human (infection route) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nippostrongylus brasiliensis | L3 larvae | Skin penetration | i.d., s.c. | Naturally penetrate the skin and migrate to the lungs. Parasites then migrate to the gut to lay eggs. Short-lived infection | Ascaris lumbricoides (Oral ingestion) |
Hookworms; | |||||
Strongyloides venezuelensis | L3 larvae | Skin penetration | s.c. | Necator americanus (Oral ingestion), | |
Strongyloides ratti | Ancylostoma duodenale (Oral ingestion or skin penetration) | ||||
Strongyloides stercolaris (Skin penetration) | |||||
Heligmosomoides polygyrus | L3 larvae | Oral ingestion | p.o. | Chronic infection from ingestion of larvae | |
Trichinella spiralis | L1 larvae | Oral ingestion | p.o. | Food-borne (infective juvenile), zoonotic parasite | Trichinella spiralis (Oral ingestion) |
Trichuris muris | Eggs | Oral ingestion | p.o. | Ingestion of infectious eggs that hatch in the cecum and colon | Trichuris trichiura (Oral ingestion) |
Litomosoides sigmodontis | L3 larvae | mite | s.c., mite | Chronic infection | Human filarial diseases; |
Brugia pahangi | L3 larvae | mosquito | s.c. | Adult worms inhabit the pleural cavity | Brugia malayi, Brugia timori, |
Wuchereria bancrofti | |||||
Onchocerca volvulus, | |||||
Loa loa |