Abstract

Naive and chronically infected CBA mice were challenged percutaneously with cercariae and biopsied at varying times thereafter to provide skin samples for light and electron microscopy. The epidermis and dermis doubled in thickness in both groups; this change occurred within 3 h in immune mice and by 48 h in controls. Immune skin showed a 5-fold increase in total thickness by 72 h. Primary reaction sites were characterised by neutrophil infiltrates but in immune mice, eosinophils replaced neutrophils by day 2. Granulocytic micro-abscesses formed in the epidermis in both naive and immune skin; they entrapped cast cercarial tails and schistosomula and were eventually sloughed from the skin surface. An early loss of challenge parasites may occur in this way. Not all penetrated schistosomula completed transformation by developing the double outer membrane and these may constitute additional casualties. Schistosomula in immune but not naive skin were invested by a surface coat; this is suggested to represent an antigen/antibody complex. Significant numbers of larvae in immune skins were associated with intact granulocytes or free eosinophil granules and dead, infiltrated parasites occurred in the dermis. Such individuals may account for the additional attrition recorded in immune mice. Mast cells became associated with granulocytes in both groups of animals; they degranulated by simple exocytosis in naive skin but compound exocytosis in immune skin.

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