Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
País/Região como assunto
Ano de publicação
Tipo de documento
País de afiliação
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Int J Paleopathol ; 25: 30-38, 2019 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30986655

RESUMO

This paper integrates our knowledge from traditional Chinese medical texts and archeological findings to discuss parasitic loads in early China. Many studies have documented that several different species of eukaryotic endoparasites were present in early human populations throughout China. Nevertheless, comprehensive paleoparasitological records from China are patchy, largely due to taphonomic and environmental factors. An examination of early Chinese medical texts allows us to fill in some of the gaps and counteract apparent biases in the current archeoparasitological records. By integrating the findings of paleoparasitology with historic textual sources, we show that parasites have been affecting the lives of humans in China since ancient times. We discuss the presence and prevalence of three groups of parasites in ancient China: roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides), Asian schistosoma (Schistosoma japonicum), and tapeworm (Taenia sp.). We also examine possible factors that favored the spread of these endoparasites among early humans. Therefore, this paper not only aims to reveal how humans have been affected by endoparasites, but also addresses how early medical knowledge developed to cope with the parasitic diseases.


Assuntos
Múmias/parasitologia , Parasitos/classificação , Doenças Parasitárias/epidemiologia , Terminologia como Assunto , Animais , Arqueologia , Ascaris lumbricoides/anatomia & histologia , Ascaris lumbricoides/classificação , China/epidemiologia , Feminino , História do Século XV , História do Século XVI , História do Século XVII , História Antiga , História Medieval , Humanos , Paleopatologia , Parasitos/anatomia & histologia , Doenças Parasitárias/parasitologia , Prevalência , Schistosoma japonicum/anatomia & histologia , Schistosoma japonicum/classificação , Taenia/anatomia & histologia , Taenia/classificação
2.
Nature ; 483(7388): 201-4, 2012 Feb 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22388812

RESUMO

Fleas are one of the major lineages of ectoparasitic insects and are now highly specialized for feeding on the blood of birds or mammals. This has isolated them among holometabolan insect orders, although they derive from the Antliophora (scorpionflies and true flies). Like most ectoparasitic lineages, their fossil record is meagre and confined to Cenozoic-era representatives of modern families, so that we lack evidence of the origins of fleas in the Mesozoic era. The origins of the first recognized Cretaceous stem-group flea, Tarwinia, remains highly controversial. Here we report fossils of the oldest definitive fleas--giant forms from the Middle Jurassic and Early Cretaceous periods of China. They exhibit many defining features of fleas but retain primitive traits such as non-jumping hindlegs. More importantly, all have stout and elongate sucking siphons for piercing the hides of their hosts, implying that these fleas may be rooted among the pollinating 'long siphonate' scorpionflies of the Mesozoic. Their special morphology suggests that their earliest hosts were hairy or feathered 'reptilians', and that they radiated to mammalian and bird hosts later in the Cenozoic.


Assuntos
Tamanho Corporal , Fósseis , Filogenia , Sifonápteros/anatomia & histologia , Sifonápteros/classificação , Animais , China , Dinossauros/parasitologia , História Antiga , Mamíferos/parasitologia , Parasitos/anatomia & histologia , Parasitos/classificação
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA