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Viability loss and ultrastructural changes on protoscolices of human hydatid cysts induced by retinoic acid

Research Authors

Doaa Abdelhafeez Yones*



Enas Abdelhameed Mahmoud






Ragaa Ali Othman






Mohamed Korany






Tarek Hassan El-Metwally
Research Department
Research Journal
J. Parasitol. Vector Biol.
Research Member
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Vol.6(12),
Research Website
www.academicjournals.org/journal/.
Research Year
2014
Research_Pages
pp. 189-197
Research Abstract

Surgical removal of intact hydatid cyst is the most effective treatment for hydatid disease. Recurrence of hydatid cyst is mainly due to dissemination of protoscolices (PSCs) rich fluid during the surgical operation. Therefore, preoperative instillation of a scolicidal agent into the cyst is a common practice with adverse side effects of the used drugs. All-trans retinoic acid (atRA) is the physiological mediator of most of the functions of vitamin A, particularly as a cellular differentiation and apoptosis regulating factor. We hypothesized that instillation of atRA could provide an alternative safe scolicidal approach. We tested the scolicidal effects and ultrastructural changes imposed by atRA on human hydatid cyst PSCs in vitro. Freshly isolated hydatid cyst PSCs were subjected to atRA (at 16.7, 1.67, 0.167 µM and 16.7 nM/L). Changes in protoscolices viability (0.1% eosin exclusion) and morphology (scanning and transmission electron microscopy; SEM and TEM) were investigated. Dose-dependent PSCs death within few minutes to 7 days of exposure to atRA was observed. SEM demonstrated ultrastructural damages including rosteller disorganization, loss of hooks and distortion of hooks morphology. TEM revealed loss of the integrity of the internal tissues of PSCs, an increased vacuolization, formation of large lipid droplets in the distal cytoplasm and aberrant, rounded abnormally large sized mitochondria. atRA is a promising alternative to the available synthetic and chemical scolicidal agents. However, in vivo scolicidal activities of atRA and the possible side effects necessitate further studies