Abstract

In five healthy mongrel female cats used, four cats (Cats 1-4) were experimentally inoculated with 100-123 larvae (L(3)) of Dirofilaria immitis. Cat 5 was an uninfected control. Only Cat 1 became microfilaremic on Day 201 after inoculation and the diurnal changes in the microfilaria population were monitored every 2 h for 24 h on Day 237 when a sufficient number of microfilaria were detected in the circulation. The maximum number of microfilaria in the blood (1,350/ml) occurred at 9:00 p.m. and then gradually decreased to the minimum of 300/ml at 7:00 a.m., indicating that the number of microfilaria shows a nocturnal sub-periodic pattern of diurnal rhythm even in peripheral blood of cats as an abnormal host. On postmortem examination, 10 live adult worms (three males and seven females) in Cat 1 and one live adult worm (one male) in Cat 2 were detected.

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