THE COMPARATIVE SUSCEPTIBILITY OF FETAL AND POSTNATAL GUINEA PIGS TO THE VIRUS OF EPIDEMIC INFLUENZA
Open Access
- 1 December 1940
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 72 (6) , 623-634
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.72.6.623
Abstract
Experiments were carried out to determine the relative susceptibility of guinea pigs at different ages to the virus of epidemic influenza. From a correlation of these studies on the mature fetus, the newborn, and the adult animal, with previously reported findings on the immature fetus, we draw two conclusions: first, that there is a gradually increasing resistance to infection with this virus during intrauterine development, with but little change thereafter; and second, that at the time of birth there is a sudden loss of infectibility by routes other than the intranasal. These results illustrate then the benefits which may accrue if one projects into the period of antenatal life studies dealing with the age factor in relation to susceptibility to infection. It is implied that data collected from observations of the postnatal animal alone are of necessity incomplete and may be misleading.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- PROPAGATION OF THE VIRUS OF HUMAN INFLUENZA IN THE GUINEA PIG FETUSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1938
- Direct bacteriological experimentation on the living mammalian fetus1936
- THE INFECTION OF MICE WITH SWINE INFLUENZA VIRUSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1935
- TRANSMISSION OF INFLUENZA BY A FILTERABLE VIRUSScience, 1934