Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2009
The ultrastructural changes in the encysted phase of Trichinella larvae, during and after treatment of the rat with mebendazole, were studied.
The earliest modifications in the infected area concerned the immediate larval environment (matrix). These degenerative changes in the matrix were seen before any alteration could be observed in the larvae.
Subsequently, oedematous swelling, intracellular vacuolization and loss of glycogen were noted in the larval cells.
Together with the progressive involution of the larvae and their matrix, inflammatory and immunocompetent cells invade the infected area and penetrate the altered capsule. Calcification of the larvae and massive infiltration of mononuclear phagocytes with subsequent elimination of the calcified remnants were the prominent features in the first weeks after treatment. The infected areas were completely cleared from larval and matrix residues 50 days after the end of treatment and a nearly normalized tissue was seen from day 111 after treatment.