Abstract

The kinetics of changes in the eotaxin concentration in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of BALB/c mice after infection with Angiostrongylus cantonensis and the correlation between the concentration of eotaxin and worm recovery were investigated. The mean concentration of eotaxin in serum of infected mice gradually increased from 46.3+/-6.5 pg/ml at week 0 to 104.9+/-44.8 pg/ml at week 3 after infection, while the mean eotaxin level in the CSF of infected mice rapidly increased from 18.7+/-2.1 pg/ml to 193.2+/-23.6 pg/ml 1 week after infection and then increased further to 507.8+/-167.9 pg/ml at week 3. The concentrations of eotaxin in the CSF of infected mice each week after infection were all significantly higher than those in serum ( P<0.0001). In parallel with the increase in eotaxin in the CSF, infected mice showed gradual increases in CSF eosinophilia and a reduction in intracranial worm recovery. The concentration of eotaxin in CSF was higher in infected mice with more worms in the brain, except when the number of worms in the brain was >30. In addition, when the worm counts in the brains of infected mice were <30, eotaxin concentrations in the CSF were positively correlated with worm counts in the brain ( P<0.001). Thus, the release of eotaxin in the CSF of mice infected with A. cantonensis observed in this study was time dependent and worm-load dependent, and in parallel with the increase in eotaxin in the CSF, and gradual decreases in worm counts in the brains of infected mice.

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