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Featured researches published by David A. Dean.


Parasitology | 1984

The migration and survival of gamma-irradiated Schistosoma mansoni larvae and the duration of host-parasite contact in relation to the induction of resistance in mice.

Beverly L. Mangold; David A. Dean

The migration in mice of 20, 50 and 90 krad. 60Co-irradiated Schistosoma mansoni larvae, biosynthetically radio-isotope labelled with [75Se]-selenomethionine, was evaluated by autoradiography of compressed tissues and compared to the migration of non-irradiated 75Se-labelled larvae. The migration of 20 krad.-irradiated schistosomula between skin and lungs was slightly delayed but otherwise paralleled the migration of normal, non-irradiated schistosomula during the first 8 days following exposure. By day 8 over 90% of both non-irradiated and 20 krad.-irradiated organisms were located in the lungs. In contrast to non-irradiated organisms, however, only a small proportion of 20 krad. organisms migrated to the liver. The delay in migration between skin and lungs was more pronounced with 50 krad.-irradiated schistosomula. Nevertheless, 45-93% of 50 krad.-irradiated organisms migrated to the lungs by 8 days post-exposure. Over 90% of the 50 krad. larvae detected in the mouse on day 21 were in the lungs; no more than an occasional 50 krad.-irradiated organism was ever detected in the liver. In three experiments, over 85% of the 90 krad.-irradiated organisms were retained in the skin; in a fourth experiment about half of the 90 krad.-irradiated organisms migrated as far as the lungs. As with 50 krad. organisms, only an occasional 90 krad. organism was ever detected in the liver. Removal of the skin exposure site within the first 4 days of immunization with either 50 or 90 krad.-irradiated cercariae completely blocked the induction of resistance. Removal between the 4th and 6th days gave variable results. Mice had to be in contact with the irradiated larvae for a minimum of 8-11 days to stimulate a level of resistance comparable to that of mice whose immunization site was not removed.


Parasitology | 1983

Schistosoma mansoni: temporal distribution of radioselenium-labelled schistosomula in lungs of mice during the first two weeks of infection

Jay R. Georgi; David A. Dean; Beverly L. Mangold

The number of schistosomula in lungs was determined by compressed organ autoradiography at intervals up to 14 days after exposure of mice to 75Se-labelled cercariae by tail immersion. Probit analysis of compressed lung autoradiogram focus counts, expressed as percentages of initial infection level, yielded estimates of the average time of arrival, peak accumulation in the lungs and average time of departure of schistosomula: 4.5 +/- 0.87, 6.3 +/- 0.45 and 11 +/- 0.58 days, respectively. At peak accumulation 92 +/- 3.5% of the initial number of schistosomula were found in the lungs. It thus appears that little or no significant attrition of schistosomula occurred in the skin and, instead, that most of the 50-70% of penetrant cercariae that fail to reach adulthood are lost somewhere between the pulmonary and hepatic phases of development. Loss of 75Se label from schistosomula during the first 14 days was exponential, with an average half-life of 4.5 +/- 0.81 days. However, the high sensitivity of autoradiography tended to compensate for this rather rapid rate of label loss. It was pointed out that autoradiographic detection of schistosomula as discrete loci of radioactivity can also be expected to overcome the problem posed by the accumulation in such tissues as liver and kidney of 75Se label that has become separated from larvae.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1983

Autoradiographic analysis of Schistosoma mansoni migration from skin to lungs in naive mice: evidence that most attrition occurs after the skin phase.

Beverly L. Mangold; David A. Dean


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1981

Relationship between Acquired Resistance, Portal Hypertension, and Lung Granulomas in Ten Strains of Mice Infected with Schistosoma Mansoni*

David A. Dean; Maria A. Bukowski; Allen W. Cheever


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1992

Evidence That Both Normal and Immune Elimination of Schistosoma mansoni Take Place at the Lung Stage of Migration Prior to Parasite Death

David A. Dean; Beverly L. Mangold


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1981

Attempts to transfer the resistance of Schistosoma mansoni-infected and irradiated cercaria-immunized mice by means of parabiosis.

David A. Dean; Maria A. Bukowski; Steven S. Clark


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1983

Differences in hepatic fibrosis in ICR, C3H, and C57BL/6 mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni

Allen W. Cheever; Michael A. Dunn; David A. Dean; Rodeney H. Duvall


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1984

Autoradiographic analysis of resistance to reinfection with Schistosoma mansoni in mice. Evidence that the liver is a major site of worm elimination.

David A. Dean; Beverly L. Mangold


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1981

Resistance induced by normal and irradiated Schistosoma mansoni: ability of various worm stages to serve as inducers and targets in mice

David A. Dean; Cioli D; Bukowski Ma


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1992

Combined microautoradiographic and histopathologic analysis of the fate of challenge Schistosoma mansoni schistosomula in mice immunized with irradiated cercariae

Olakunle O. Kassim; David A. Dean; Beverly L. Mangold; Franz von Lichtenberg

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Michael A. Dunn

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Rodeney H. Duvall

National Institutes of Health

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Donato Cioli

National Research Council

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