# Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) Fascioloidosis: From Liver Pathology to Regeneration

**Authors:** Dean Konjević, Nikolina Škvorc, Miljenko Bujanić, Jan Čurlík, Anđelko Gašpar, Ivan-Conrado Šoštarić-Zuckermann, Andrea Gudan Kurilj

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life16030502 · Life · 2026-03-19

## TL;DR

This study examines liver pathology and regeneration in red deer infected with Fascioloides magna and evaluates treatment effects.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates liver regeneration potential in red deer following Fascioloides magna infection and treatment.

## Key findings

- Treatment with Albix® 10 reduced pseudocysts and fluke presence in red deer livers.
- Liver nodules showed fibrous tissue and disorganized hepatocytes, indicating chronic damage.
- The study highlights liver regeneration in both acute and chronic injury contexts.

## Abstract

Fascioloidosis is a parasitic disease caused by allochthonous parasite Fascioloides magna. In Europe, three types of final hosts are recognised: definitive, aberrant, and dead end. Several countries have launched disease control programmes using medicated feed, with different drugs, to control F. magna infections. In this study, we used corn treated with Albix® 10 in a total dose of 60 mg/kg of body weight for five consecutive days (12 mg/kg per day). Following successful treatment, a destroyed pseudocyst with different amounts of degrading material and decaying flukes was detected. A total of 136 livers was examined. The average number of pseudocysts per positive liver was seven (min. 1–max. 45), while the average number of adult flukes was 14.17 (2–70). On average, 1.34 juvenile flukes in the migratory phase were detected per infected liver. The average number of pseudocysts was 7.07 per liver in total. Degrading pseudocysts were either absent or present to a maximum of 120 per liver, with an average of 7.99 per liver. Some livers had multifocal to confluent nodules bulging from the liver parenchyma, which were up to 7 cm in diameter. Histologically, these areas showed disruption, containing bands of fibrous connective tissue, dividing parenchyma into pseudolobules of varying size and shape. These septa contained dark brown to black pigment (iron porphyrin), along with remnants of elliptical, operculated, mainly empty trematode eggs. Nodules were surrounded with fibrous tissue and disorganised hyperplastic hepatocytes arranged in irregular trabeculae supported by fibrous bands occasionally containing blood vessels. This study shows the potential of liver regeneration in the case of acute and chronic liver injury, as well as in cases of fatty liver disease.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** fatty liver disease (MONDO:0004790)
- **Species:** Cervus elaphus (taxon 9860)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Pathology (MESH:D005598), pseudocyst (MESH:D010192), parasitic disease (MESH:D010272), acute and chronic liver injury (MESH:D065290), fatty liver disease (MESH:D005234)
- **Chemicals:** Albix  10 (-)
- **Species:** Cervus elaphus (red deer, species) [taxon 9860], Fascioloides magna (species) [taxon 394415]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028335/full.md

## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028335/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028335