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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 31(2), 1995, pp. 233-237
© Wildlife Disease Association  1995
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Histopathologic features of naturally occurring hepatozoonosis in wild martens (Martes melampus) in Japan

T Yanai, A Tomita, T Masegi, K Ishikawa, T Iwasaki, K Yamazoe, and K Ueda


ABSTRACT

Nodular lesions containing Hepatozoon sp. schizonts or merozoite-gametocytes were found in the tissues of 67 (96%) of 70 wild-caught martens (Martes melampus) examined in Gifu, Japan, 1991 and 1992. The heart was the most commonly parasitized organ (96%), followed by the perirenal adipose tissue (36%); the diaphragm, mesentery, tongue, omentum and perisplenic adipose tissue generally had a prevalence of 10 to 15%. In the heart, two types of nodular lesions were differentiated based on developmental stages: nodules containing schizonts and nodules consisting of an accumulation of phagocytes containing merozoites or gamonts. Under electron microscopy, mature schizonts contained membrane-bound merozoites with a single nucleus and small scattered electron-dense cytoplasmic granules in the schizont nodules; the merozoites and gamonts were engulfed in a phagosome-like vacuole of phagocytes with the nucleus compressed to one side due to the parasite in the merozoite-gamont nodule.





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Copyright © 1995 by the Wildlife Disease Association.