PATHOGENESIS OF STREET RABIES VIRUS IN RATS
- 1 January 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 38 (1) , 119-+
Abstract
Investigations were maae on the spread of street rabies virus after its inoculation into the left hind foot-pads of rats. The virus isolate used was selected because disease was produced after 2 to 3 weeks of incubation. The presence of rabies virus in the central nervous system was first detected in the lumbar segment of the spinal cord on the 6th day after inoculation, yet a minimal amount of virus was detected in the pooled sciatic nerves from the inoculated side at 96 hr. Before this time, virus could not be detected in any organ except in the foot-pad immediately after inoculation. Removal of the sciatic nerve or of its fasciculus prior to foot-pad inoculation was a complete saving procedure in all animals, thus giving evidence for the neural spread of the infection; neither the perineural structures nor the axons appeared to be involved.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental rabies. Studies of cellular vulnerability and pathogenesis using fluorescent antibody staining.1965
- STUDIES ON PATHOGENESIS OF FIXED RABIES VIRUS IN RATS1965
- PATHOGENESIS OF RABIES1963
- Fluorescent Antibody Staining of Street and Fixed Rabies Virus AntigensExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1958
- [Phenomenon of the eclipse in the rabies virus and the effect of immune serums on extraneural viruses].1957
- Tissue Factors in Antirabies Immunity of Experimental AnimalsPublic Health Reports®, 1941