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Concomitant infections, parasites and immune responses

Journal

PARASITOLOGY
Volume 122, Issue -, Pages S23-S38

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S003118200001698X

Keywords

concomitant infections; cytokines; protozoa; helminths; bacteria; viruses

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Concomitant infections are common in nature and often involve parasites. A number of examples of the interactions between protozoa and viruses, protozoa and bacteria, protozoa and other protozoa, protozoa and helminths, helminths and viruses, helminths and bacteria, and helminths and other helminths are described. In mixed infections the burden of one or both the infectious agents ma!, be increased, one or both may be suppressed or one ma! be increased and the other suppressed. It is now possible to explain man) of these interactions in terms of the effects parasites have on the immune system, particularly parasite-induced immunodepression, and the effects of cytokines controlling polarization to the Th, or Th-2 arms of the immune response. In addition, parasites may be affected, directly or indirectly, by cytokines and other immune effector molecules and parasites may themselves produce factors that affect the cells of the immune system. Parasites are, therefore, affected when they themselves, or other organisms, interact with the immune response and, in particular, the cytokine network. The importance of such interactions is discussed in relation to clinical disease and the development and use of vaccines.

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