Abstract

Abstract. Histopathological studies on natural and experimental infections of nineteen microsporidian species from fishes distinguished two types of tissue reactions.The first type is characteristic of infections with xenoma‐inducing microsporidian species and comprises three successive stages: a weakly reactive stage, a productive stage with the formation of granulomas and a stage of granuloma involution. Following the first stage, tissue reactions are directed towards the isolation of the parasite and result in its complete elimination and host tissue repair. The extent of pathological changes probably depends on the number of parasite cells which initiated the infection.The second type is represented by Pleistophora species infecting muscles or oocytes. Host tissue reaction is surprisingly slight during the schizogony and sporogony and does not tend to isolate the invaded muscle fibres. A slight lymphocytic infiltration of myosepta indicates the first stage of tissue reaction. The tissue reaction only reaches the productive stage when mature spores completely fill the contents of the infected muscle fibre. A thick wall of fibroblasts may be formed to demarcate the parasite mass as soon as it undergoes necrotic changes. The extent of pathological changes probably depends on the ability of early developmental stages of the parasite to spread the infection within the host.In both types of tissue reaction, the spores are destroyed by complete digestion within host phagocytic cells.

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