GASTROINTESTINAL AND DISSEMINATED CANDIDIASIS - AN EXPERIMENTAL-MODEL IN THE IMMUNOSUPPRESSED RAT
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 105 (3) , 138-143
Abstract
An experimental model of invasive gastrointestinal (GI) candidiasis was studied in immunosuppressed rats. Normal rats were susceptible to disseminated candidiasis by intravascular inoculation LD50, 1.6 .times. 106 blastospores). Cyclophosphamide-induced leukopenia decreased the LD50 to 1.2 .times. 104 blastospores. Feeding Candida albicans to rats resulted in low-grade GI colonization of normal rats. The intensity of colonization was increased by treatment with cyclophosphamide and broad-spectrum antibiotics. Only in animals fed Candida and treated with antibiotics and cyclophosphamide did invasive GI lesions develop. Hematogenous dissemination occurred in only about 10% of such rats. The addition of cortisone acetate to the treatment regimen increased the frequency of hematogenous dissemination to about 25%. Thus, disseminated candidiasis after invasive GI disease can be produced in the rat after exposure to the same predisposing factors as immunosuppressed human patients in whom the disease develops.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative Relationships Between Circulating Leukocytes and Infection in Patients with Acute LeukemiaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1966
- THE EFFECTS OF CORTISONE ON EXPERIMENTAL FUNGUS INFECTIONS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1960