Skip Navigation
Skip to contents
Results by Year

View Wide

Filter

ARTICLE TYPE

more+
SELECT FILTER
 
Close

PUBLICATION DATE

449 results
Display

Thelazia Callipaeda Infestation with Tarsal Ectropion

Lee YJ, Kim SE, Kim JH, Paik JS, Yang SW

PURPOSE: To report a case of Thelazia callipaeda infestation with tarsal ectropion. CASE SUMMARY: A 79-year-old man presented with epiphora and a sensation of a foreign body in his right eye...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Primary hydatid cyst of the pterygomandibular region: an unusual cyst, location and case report

Chiramel S, Gopinath A, VP S, Sayd S

Hydatid disease is a zoonotic infection in humans. The disease is endemic in some parts of the world, including Africa, Australia, and Asia, where cattle grazing is common; the disease...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Partial Characterization of Two Cathepsin D Family Aspartic Peptidases of Clonorchis sinensis

Kang JM, Yoo WG, Lê HG, Thái TL, Hong SJ, Sohn WM, Na BK

Cathepsin D (CatD, EC 3.4.23.5) is a member belonging to the subfamily of aspartic endopeptidases, which are classified into the MEROPS clan AA, family A1. Helminth parasites express a large...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Pinworm Infection at Salmon Ruins and Aztec Ruins: Relation to Pueblo III Regional Violence

Reinhard K, Camacho M

The study of coprolites has been a theme of archaeology in the American Southwest. A feature of archaeoparasitology on the Colorado Plateau is the ubiquity of pinworm infection. As a...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Confusing a Pollen Grain with a Parasite Egg: an Appraisal of “Paleoparasitological Evidence of Pinworm (Enterobius Vermicularis) Infection in a Female Adolescent Residing in Ancient Tehran”

Camacho M, Reinhard K

There is often the risk of confusing pollen grains with helminth eggs from archaeological sites. Thousands to millions of pollen grains can be recovered from archaeological burial sediments that represent...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Paleoparasitology of Merovingian Corpses Buried in Stone Sarcophagi in the Saint-Martin-au-Val Church (Chartres, France)

Dufour B, Portat E, Bazin B, Le Bailly

Paleoparasitological analysis was carried on 4 Merovingian skeletons, dated from the late-5th to the late-9th centuries, and recovered in the church of Saint-Martin-au-Val in Chartres (Center region, France). The corpses...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Comparison of Helminth Infection among the Native Populations of the Arctic and Subarctic Areas in Western Siberia Throughout History: Parasitological Researches on Contemporary and the Archaeological Resources

Slepchenko SM, Bugmyrin S, Kozlov AI, Vershubskaya GG, Shin DH

The aim of this parasitological study is examining contemporary (the late 20th century) specimens of the arctic or subarctic areas in Western Siberia and comparing them with the information acquired...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Differential Change in the Prevalence of the Ascaris, Trichuris and Clonorchis infection Among Past East Asian Populations

Zhan X, Yeh HY, Shin DH, Chai JY, Seo M, Mitchell P

As we learn more about parasites in ancient civilizations, data becomes available that can be used to see how infection may change over time. The aim of this study is...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Discovery of Eurytrema Eggs in Sediment from a Colonial Period Latrine in Taiwan

Yeh HY, Cheng CJ, Huang C, Zhan X, Wong WK, Mitchell P

In this study we take a closer look at the diseases that afflicted Japanese police officers who were stationed in a remote mountainous region of Taiwan from 1921 to 1944....
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Application of Autofluorescence for Confocal Microscopy to Aid in Archaeoparasitological Analyses

Morrow JJ, Elowsky C

Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) was used to examine archaeoparasitological specimens from coprolites associated with La Cueva de los Muertos Chiquitos (CMC) located near present-day Durango, Mexico. The eggs for...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Intestinal Parasites in an Ottoman Period Latrine from Acre (Israel) Dating to the Early 1800s CE

Eskew WH, Ledger ML, Lloyd A, Pyles G, Gosker J, Mitchell P

The aim of this study is to determine the species of parasites that affected the inhabitants of the city of Acre on the coast of the eastern Mediterranean during the...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Archaeoparasitological Analysis of Samples from the Cultural Layer of Nadym Gorodok dated Back to the 14th-Late 18th Centuries

Slepchenko SM, Kardash OV, Slavinsky , Ivanov SN, Sergeyevna RD, Tsybankov , Shin DH

An archaeoparasitological analysis of the soil samples from Nadym Gorodok site of Western Siberia has been carried out in this study. The archaeological site was dated as the 13 to...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Preface for Special Section on Archaeoparasitology: A Global Perspective on Ancient Parasites and Current Research Projects

Chai JY, Seo M, Reinhard K, Shin DH

No abstract available.
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Parasite Infiltration and Apoptosis in Spleen upon Toxoplasma gondii Infection

Lee SH, Chu KB, Quan FS

Toxoplasma gondii infection induces parasite infiltration and apoptosis in the spleen. However, dose-dependent parasite infiltration, apoptosis, body weight alternations and survival in mice remain largely unknown. In this study, mice...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Molecular Detection and Subtyping of Blastocystis in Korean Pigs

Paik S, Jung BY, Lee H, Hwang MH, Han JE, Rhee MH, Kim TH, Kwon OD, Kwak D

Blastocystis is one of the most commonly detected genera of protozoan parasites in the human intestines as well as the intestines of many other species such as pigs in several...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Phytopythium and Pythium Species (Oomycota) Isolated from Freshwater Environments of Korea

Nam B, Choi YJ

Oomycetes are widely distributed in various environments, including desert and polar regions. Depending upon different habits and hosts, they have evolved with both saprophytic and pathogenic nutritional modes. Freshwater ecosystem...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Tracking acute phase protein response during acute and chronic Toxoplasma gondii infection

Atmaca HT, Gazyagci A, Terzi OS, Dincel GC, Sumer T

Toxoplasmosis is a disease caused by the protozoan Toxoplasma gondii, which occurs worldwide in mammals and birds. Brain is the primary target organ because Toxoplasma gondii is a ubiquitous intracellular...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Echinochasmus caninus n. comb. (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae) Infection in Eleven Riparian People in Khammouane Province, Lao PDR

Chai JY, Chang T, Jung BK, Shin H, Sohn WM, Eom KS, Yong TS, Min DY, Phammasack B, Insisiengmay B, Rim HJ

Adult specimens of Echinochasmus caninus n. comb. (Verma, 1935) (Trematoda: Echinostomatidae) (syn. Episthmium caninum Yamaguti, 1958) were recovered from 11 riparian people who resided along the Mekong River in Khammouane...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Low Levels of Polymorphisms and Negative Selection in Plasmodum knowlesi Merozoite Surface Protein 8 in Malaysian Isolates

Ahmed MA, Kang HJ, Quan FS

Human infections due to the monkey malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi is increasingly being reported from most Southeast Asian countries specifically Malaysia. The parasite causes severe and fatal malaria thus there...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close
Kudoa ogawai (Myxosporea: Kudoidae) Infection in Cultured Olive Flounder Paralichthys olivaceus

Shin SP, Jin CN, Sohn HC, Lee J

Since Kudoa septempuntata was identified as a causative agent of food poisoning associated with raw olive flounder Paralichthys olivaceus, interest and concern regarding the parasite have increased. However, there have...
CITED
export Copy
Close
SHARE
Twitter Facebook
Close

Go to Top

Copyright © 2023 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr