Abstract
Onchocerciasis is a devastating skin and eye disease that afflicts about 21 million people, most of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa. Its control with the microfilaricidal drug ivermectin is limited, thus necessitating the development of preclinical animal models to aid in the discovery of a macrofilaricide. Previously, we found that Onchocerca ochengi (the closest relative of the human O. volvulus) worm masses survive better in hamsters than in gerbils. The aim of this study was to compare the survival of O. ochengi adult male worms and their susceptibility to flubendazole (FBZ, a macrofilaricide) in gerbils and hamsters. The animals were intraperitoneally implanted with O. ochengi male worms, treated with FBZ, and sacrificed 35days post-implantation. Unlike gerbils which had some worms moving freely in the peritoneum and some in newly formed nodules (neo-nodules), all the worms in the hamsters were found in neo-nodules. FBZ significantly decreased worm burden, motility, and viability in gerbils whereas it had no significant effect in hamsters. These results highlight a major difference in how O. ochengi adult male worms are sustained and affected by FBZ in gerbils compared to hamsters. Understanding the difference between these two models is important in the development of effective macrofilaricides for onchocerciasis.
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