Abstract

Histo-pathological analysis of the eyes, ears, skin and associated skeletal muscles of the back of 14 animals infected with a filarioid worm with dermal microfilariae, Cercopithifilaria johnstoni: seven Rattus fuscipes, of which four were naturally infected, two marsupials, Perameles nasuta and Isodon macrourus, and five R. norvegicus. This filarioid nematode induces skin and eye lesions in all the infected animals. These lesions are similar to those described earlier with other filarioid species with dermal microfilariae, such as Monanema martini and Onchocerca volvulus; the pathogeny is similar: microfilariae live inside the lymphatic vessels and their accidental exit gives rise to a localized inflammatory reaction leading to fibrosis. C. johnstoni is particularly interesting because it may be adapted to the laboratory rat, and because the ocular lesions are severe.

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