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Trichinella spiralis was implicated in the two outbreaks reported by Croatia and Romania that involved three and five cases, respectively, all of which needed hospitalization. The outbreaks in ...
Product samples were taken, and the Santa Fe Food Safety Agency (Assal) laboratory reported a positive sample for Trichinella spiralis. Assal recommended that people not consume products from raw ...
Eating raw or undercooked pork infected with the parasitic worms, Trichinella spiralis, can lead to trichinosis. The good news is that the risks of infection are lower than they have been in the past.
Trichinella spiralis, which provide potential targets for new drugs to fight the illness. The research is published online Feb. 20 in Nature Genetics. While trichinosis is no longer a problem in ...
Among all the different species, Trichinella spiralis is implicated in a majority of human infections and subsequent deaths around the world. The minimum infective dose for humans is 70-150 ...
Scientists from Lancaster University in the UK have discovered that immune responses originally found to prevent fungal infections are also important in eliminating Trichinella spiralis ...
There you'll find a nasty little parasitic worm called Trichinella spiralis. It lives in pigs but also in bears, horses, foxes and other furry animals. If one were to eat the raw flesh of one of ...
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