MICROBIC VIRULENCE AND HOST SUSCEPTIBILITY IN PARATYPHOID-ENTERITIDIS INFECTION OF WHITE MICE
Open Access
- 1 February 1926
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 43 (2) , 143-159
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.43.2.143
Abstract
Epidemics of mouse typhoid set up among the Rockefeller Institute strain of mice were studied over a period of 6 months. During this time the relationship of cage number of mouse typhoid bacilli to mortality, total population, and survival time was determined. A single virulence titration of the epidemic strain was made, and at the end of the experiment all survivors were examined for evidence of infection. The following conclusions may be drawn for the data here presented. 1. The available dosage of mouse typhoid bacilli varied directly with the mortality (plus a time constant of 6 to 8 days) and inversely with the survival time. 2. The virulence of the epidemic strain appeared to be practically the same as that of the original stock culture. 3. About 53.5 per cent of the survivors of one epidemic and 68 per cent of those in the other showed, at the end of the experiment, no signs of infection; the others had either specific blood agglutinins, or living bacteria in their heart's blood, spleen, feces, or gall bladder. 4. During the course of the epidemic, the original infecting strain (mouse typhoid Type II—Bacillus pestis caviæ) was almost entirely replaced by an antigenically dissimilar strain (mouse typhoid Type I—Bacillus enteritidis), probably introduced through the inadvertent inclusion of fecal carriers among the normal mice added as contacts.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- MICROBIC VIRULENCE AND HOST SUSCEPTIBILITY IN PARATYPHOID-ENTERITIDIS INFECTION OF WHITE MICEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1925
- MICROBIC VIRULENCE AND HOST SUSCEPTIBILITY IN PARATYPHOID-ENTERITIDIS INFECTION OF WHITE MICEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1924
- THE VIRULENCE OF AN EPIDEMIC STRAIN OF BACILLUS PESTIS CAVIÆThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1923
- CONTRIBUTION TO THE MANNER OF SPREAD OF MOUSE TYPHOID INFECTIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1923