Abstract |
After in vitro hycanthone treatment followed by a 20-hour incubation in drug-free medium, Schistosoma mansoni were still resistant to labeling by a fluorescent analog of acetylcholine. S. japonicum, in contrast with the hycanthone sensitive species, showed prompt reversal of the blocking effects of hycanthone on fluorescent labeling. This finding suggests that differences in the reversibility of hycanthone may correlate with the usefulness of the drug in the therapy of schistosome infections by different species of parasites. Scanning electron microscopy has been used to demonstrate that hycanthone treatment causes degeneration of the integument of S. mansoni, but not S. japonicum, over a period of few days after in vivo exposure to hycanthone. The mechanism by which hycanthone causes this effect is not known.
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Authors | G R Hillman, W B Gibler, J B Anderson |
Journal | The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
(Am J Trop Med Hyg)
Vol. 26
Issue 2
Pg. 238-42
(Mar 1977)
ISSN: 0002-9637 [Print] United States |
PMID | 848646
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
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Chemical References |
- Dansyl Compounds
- Thioxanthenes
- Hycanthone
- Acetylcholine
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Topics |
- Acetylcholine
(analogs & derivatives)
- Animals
- Dansyl Compounds
- Drug Antagonism
- Drug Resistance
- Hycanthone
(therapeutic use)
- Male
- Mice
- Schistosoma mansoni
(drug effects)
- Schistosomiasis
(drug therapy)
- Skin
(pathology)
- Species Specificity
- Thioxanthenes
(therapeutic use)
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