EXPERIMENTAL MENINGOCOCCUS INFECTION OF THE CHICK EMBRYO
Open Access
- 1 November 1939
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 70 (5) , 485-498
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.70.5.485
Abstract
1. A strain of meningococci obtained directly from the spinal fluid of a patient has been propagated in serial passage in 10 to 12 day old chick embryos without change in its essential characteristics. 2. The chick embryo is susceptible to infection with the meningococcus, and, depending on its stage of development, reacts to the infection with more or less specific lesions. 3. In chick embryos of 15 days incubation, following the utilization of definite portals of entry, such as the nasopharynx, or by inoculation of the amniotic fluid or by inoculation of the body wall, the meningococcus is localized in specific areas, namely in the cranial sinuses, the lungs or meninges, or in all of these areas. 4. The lesions of the meningococcus infection in man, a septicemia, sinusitis, pneumonia and meningitis can be reproduced in the chick embryo by choosing embryos at the proper state of development and utilizing the various portals of entry experimentally available.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Encephalitis and meningitis in the chick embryo following inoculation of the chorio-allantoic membrane in with H influenzae1937
- Infection of chick embryos with H pertussis reproducing pulmonary lesions of whooping cough1937
- The problem of infection as presented by bacterial invasion of the chorio-allantoic membrane of chick embryos1937
- Experimental Meningococcal Infection in MiceScience, 1933