id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-279764-vcrbzzhu Lello, Joanne Predicting the effects of parasite co-infection across species boundaries 2018-03-14 .txt text/plain 6527 287 42 We show that, as predicted, in co-infections, the blood-feeding nematode Haemonchus contortus suppresses aspects of the sheep immune response, thereby facilitating the establishment and/or survival of the nematode Trichostrongylus colubriformis; and that the T. We show that, as predicted, in co-infections, the blood-feeding nematode Haemonchus contortus suppresses aspects of the sheep immune response, thereby facilitating the establishment and/or survival of the nematode Trichostrongylus colubriformis; and that the T. This meta-analysis demonstrated that macroparasite-microparasite co-infection would normally result in increased numbers of microparasites owing to helminth-induced impairment of the anti-microparasite immune response, but that such effects would be moderated where resource competition was also present. colubriformis (comparing them to sheep mono-infected with each species, and with uninfected controls), by measuring nematode intensity and the host immune response. contortus infection, we analysed both the number of arrested L4-stage larvae in the host tissues along with adult worms (see the electronic supplementary material, S3 for mean and s.d. of raw counts through time). ./cache/cord-279764-vcrbzzhu.txt ./txt/cord-279764-vcrbzzhu.txt