Malinee T. AnantaphrutiMunehiro OkamotoTippayarat YoonuanSurapol SaguankiatTeera KusolsukMegumi SatoMarcello O. SatoYasuhito SakoJitra WaikagulAkira ItoMahidol UniversityAsahikawa Medical UniversityTottori University2018-09-242018-09-242010-09-01Parasitology International. Vol.59, No.3 (2010), 326-330138357692-s2.0-77955326461https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/29197A community-based field survey on taeniasis and cysticercosis was performed in two villages in Thong Pha Phum District, Kanchanaburi Province, central Thailand, where 3 Taenia species, T. solium, T. saginata and T. asiatica, are sympatrically occurring. Four (0.6%) out of 667 stool samples were egg-positive for Taenia sp. by Kato-Katz technique. Three out of those four persons and other three persons who were Taenia egg-negative but having a recent (<1 year) history of discharging worms in stool were treated with niclosamide. One Taenia egg-positive woman was not treated because of severe ascites. After treatment, three persons expelled long strobilae with scolices and two persons expelled strobilae without scolex. One Taenia egg-positive person did not expel any worms post-treatment. Among 5 persons, four expelled a single worm, whereas one expelled multiple worms, may be 6 worms but not confirmed by detection of scolices. One scolex was armed with hooklets, whereas 2 others did not. Multiplex PCR of 10 expelled proglottids (including 6 estimated worms from one patient) revealed that one sample was T. solium, one T. saginata, and 8 T. asiatica. A total of 159 residents agreed to receive a serological test for cysticercosis. By ELISA using partially purified glycoprotein antigen, 9 cases, 5 and 4 from villages A and B respectively, were found to be sero-positive. The five and an additional sample on the border line from village A were evaluated using confirmative immunoblot using recombinant chimeric antigen. Among the six samples, four including the border line sample were confirmed to be cysticercosis by immunoblotting. One of the 4 persons had neurological symptoms with nodular lesions in the brain by computed tomography. These 4 confirmed or suspected cysticercosis cases were free of T. solium worms, but two of them including confirmed NCC case had a past (>1 year) history of expelling proglottids in the stool. © 2010.Mahidol UniversityImmunology and MicrobiologyMedicineMolecular and serological survey on taeniasis and cysticercosis in Kanchanaburi Province, ThailandArticleSCOPUS10.1016/j.parint.2010.03.007