Abstract

A circulating antigen assay to detect acute schistosomiasis mansoni in experimentally infected mice has been developed. The competitive-inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay uses rabbit serum prepared against purified cercarial antigen. The assay detects a 100-worm infection as early as 1 week after exposure; circulating antigen levels in mouse serum exceeded 0·1 μg/ml. Preliminary characterisation of the cercarial antigen shows that it is a hydrophobic polypeptide of approximate molecular weight 41 000. A rapid and accurate diagnosis of acute schistosomiasis in travellers would facilitate appropriate chemotherapy before the onset of pathology. A circulating antigen assay would also be valuable for seroepidemiological studies in areas where the disease is endemic.

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