Abstract
Erythrocyte labeling by random and cohort techniques was used to study erythrocyte survival in normal chickens and chickens infected with Plasmodium gallinaceum. Occurrence of erythrocyte destruction during the prepatent period was apparent in infected chickens by both techniques. Treatment with the antimalarials chloroquine and quinacrine not only cleared the circulation of parasites promptly but brought about an equally prompt cessation of disease-related erythrocyte destruction. Plasmodium gallinaceum infection caused a transitory decrease in blood volume at the time of rapid decrease in packed cell volume. The blood volume returned to preinfection values before the packed cell volume returned to normal. Parasitized erythrocytes were present in capillaries of the spleen, liver, and bone marrow during the entire prepatent period of the infection, thus providing a reasonable explanation for erythrocyte destruction observed in the absence of parasitemia during the prepatent period.
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