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The Effects of Splenectomy on Pattern of Nitric Oxide Induction and Pathogenesis of Rodent Malaria Caused by Plasmodium berghei Infection

Authors :
Sara Soleimani Jevinani
Hossein Nahrevanian
Mahdi Delavari
Mohsen Arbabi
Hossein Hooshyar
Ahmad Reza Esmaeili Rastaghi
Fatemeh Ghasemi
Source :
International Journal of Medical Laboratory.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Knowledge E, 2019.

Abstract

Background and Aims: The aim of this study is to clarify nitric oxide (NO)-production by spleen and the importance of spleen in malaria infection in murine model. Materials and Methods: Thirty outbred NMRI female mice were divided into four groups, Group I: No intervention (Healthy control), Group II: With splenectomy (Healthy test), Group III: No intervention, Inoculation of contaminated blood (Infected control), Group IV: With splenectomy, inoculation of contaminated blood (Infected test). The Parasitemia was counted every other day through Giemsa stain examination of animal blood. The parasitemia and survival rates, hepatosplenomegaly and body weight were recorded. After terminal anesthesia, plasma and liver/spleen suspensions were assessed by the Griess micro assay for measurement of NO-levels. Results: At the end of the experiment (on day 16), the parasitemia was 26.99±0.46 % among the group of non-splenectomized animals (Group III) compared with 31.25±0.72% among the group of splenectomized animals (Group IV). The average parasitemia among the groups at the end of the experiment was statistically significant (Group III, Group IV: p= 0.0002). Survival rate was statistically significant (p

Details

ISSN :
24233714 and 24233706
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Medical Laboratory
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5f6edab7dcb00eeb8eaefc0ba7f4eb77
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.18502/ijml.v6i1.505