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Acariosis, Animals

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Encyclopedia of Parasitology
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Several mites infest animals and cause significant dermatologic diseases. These may be occasional parasites e.g., harvest mites (Trombicula) or obligatory parasites like Sarcoptes and Demodex genera. Mites may be free-living on the surface of the skin (Cheyletiella, Chorioptes ), superficial burrowers ( Sarcoptes ) or may penetrate more deeply (Demodex). The parasitic mites of the families Sarcoptidae and Psoroptidae, known as “mange mites,” generally give rise to well-defined dermatoses. The lesions are the result of mechanical damage to the skin and probably also of hypersensitivity reactions to toxic secretions (Pathology, Fig. 30).

Sarcoptes scabiei ( Sarcoptic Mange ) occurs commonly in pigs, dogs and cattle; and more rarely in horses, sheep, goats and cats. The so-called feline scabies is caused by Notoedres cati . The several varieties of Sarcoptes scabieimay represent strains of the same mite which have become more adapted to particular hosts. The mites burrow into the skin....

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© 2016 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg

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(2016). Acariosis, Animals. In: Mehlhorn, H. (eds) Encyclopedia of Parasitology. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43978-4_30

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