WMJ (Warmadewa Medical Journal)
Vol 9 No 2 (2024): November 2024

Histopathological Study of Wistar Rat Liver Infected with Schistosoma japonicum

David Pakaya (Department of Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Tadulako, Palu, Indonesia 2 Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Tadulako, Palu)
Varel Bramantio Gagola (Tadulako University)
Christin Rony Nayoan (Tadulako University)
Junjun Fitriani (Tadulako University)
Vera Diana Towidjojo (Tadulako University)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Nov 2024

Abstract

Schistosoma, including Schistosoma japonicum (S. japonicum), can live with an intermediate host, such as rats, and infect mammals, such as humans and rats. We can use a rat model to understand the pathophysiology of Schistosoma. The aim of this study is to describe the histopathological changes of Wistar rat liver infected with S. japonicum. This is a quasi-experimental study that employs a descriptive qualitative approach. The samples were 8-week-old male Wistar rats with an average weight of 250 to 350 g. The whole sample was made up of 16 rats that were given S. japonicum cercaria intraperitoneally. The rats were then split into 4 groups: the control group (C) ended on day 0, the T1 group ended on day 14, the T2 group ended on day 42, and the T3 group ended on day 60. We necropsied the liver, examined it histopathologically using hematoxylin eosin staining, and conducted a qualitative analysis. In the control group, we observed normal liver structure; in the T1 group, we observed hepatocyte degeneration, dilatation of liver sinusoids, and accumulation of inflammatory cells; in the T2 group, we observed similar conditions to the T1 group, including hepatocyte apoptosis; in the T3 group, we observed hepatocyte degeneration, hepatocyte necrosis, infiltration of inflammatory cells (PMNs), and thickening of connective tissue. In conclusion, there was gradual liver damage over the period of time in animal models, and the worst is in chronic conditions, which are dominated by fibrotic tissue, but no granulomas have been found.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

warmadewa_medical_journal

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology

Description

WMJ (Warmadewa Medical Journal) is the Journal of Medicine & Health, contains scientific articles (Original/ Research Articles, Review Articles, Case Reports) by academic community of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Warmadewa University, other Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences ...