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  1. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › pmc › articlesTrichinella spiralis

    In 1835, Richard Owen (1804–1892) (Figure 1) and James Paget (1814–1899) (Figure 2) described a spiral worm (Trichina spiralis)‒lined sandy diaphragm of a cadaver. In 1895, Alcide Raillet (1852–1930) renamed it as Trichinella spiralis because Trichina was attributed to an insect in 1830.

    • Monika Mahajan
    • Emerg Infect Dis. 2021 Dec; 27(12): 3155.
    • 10.3201/eid2712.211230
    • 2021/12
  2. Entre los Entozooa su más notable descubrimiento fue el de Trichina spiralis (1835), el parásito que infecta los músculos humanos en la enfermedad ahora conocida como triquinosis (véase también el trabajo de Sir James Paget). Hizo estudios detallados de los braquiópodos y estableció una clasificación que es la que se ha mantenido.

  3. DISCOVERY OF TRICHINELLA SPIRALIS WILLIAM C. CAMPBELL In 1835 James (later Sir James) Paget found roundworms in human flesh. He was a first-year medical student at the time, and his discovery was largely eclipsed by the opportunistic intervention of Richard (later Sir Richard) Owen, who was ideally situated to exploit young Paget' s good fortune.

  4. Owen's & Paget's Story: The Discovery of. Trichinella spiralis. It was a dark and stormy night. In reality, it was a dark and dreary Monday morning, that February 2 in 1835 when young Jim Paget, a first year medical student at London Hospital Medical School, rushed into the autopsy room at St. Bartholomew's Hospital.

    • 1835 trichinella spiralis richard owen1
    • 1835 trichinella spiralis richard owen2
    • 1835 trichinella spiralis richard owen3
    • 1835 trichinella spiralis richard owen4
    • 1835 trichinella spiralis richard owen5
  5. Trichinella spiralis (Owen, 1835) Raillet, 1895 Aspectos morfológicos y biológicos en modelo experimental del ratón Visciarelli E, Randazzo V, Sgattoni S, Costamagna SR Cátedra de Parasitología Clínica, Departamento de Biología, Bioquímica y Farmacia, Universidad Nacional del Sur.

  6. In 1835, Richard Owen (1804–1892) and James Paget (1814–1899) described a spiral worm (Trichina spiralis)‒lined sandy diaphragm of a cadaver. In 1895, Alcide Raillet (1852–1930) renamed it as Trichinella spiralis because Trichina was attributed to an insect in 1830.

  7. Trichinella spiralis. Trichinella spiralis was first described by Richard Owen in 1835 in London, England (Owen, 1835). Trichinella spiralis has a cosmopolitan distribution and is most often associated with farm ecosystems.