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EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.

A series of rabbits was subcutaneously injected with three measured doses of killed cultures of two strains of Bacterium pneumosintes derived from the nasopharyngeal secretions of influenza patients. These rabbits were subsequently tested for the development of serum antibodies and for the presence...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Olitsky, Peter K., Gates, Frederick L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1922
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2128393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19868702
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author Olitsky, Peter K.
Gates, Frederick L.
author_facet Olitsky, Peter K.
Gates, Frederick L.
author_sort Olitsky, Peter K.
collection PubMed
description A series of rabbits was subcutaneously injected with three measured doses of killed cultures of two strains of Bacterium pneumosintes derived from the nasopharyngeal secretions of influenza patients. These rabbits were subsequently tested for the development of serum antibodies and for the presence of an induced immunity to the living organisms, with the following results. The serum of eleven of fifteen rabbits, tested from 10 to 27 days after the final subcutaneous injection, specifically agglutinated Bacterium pneumosintes, whereas normal rabbit serum did not. Nineteen vaccinated rabbits were subjected to protection experiments. Two of them were unaffected by an intratracheal injection of Bacterium pneumosintes, contained in the lung tissues of previously infected animals, in a dose which typically affected the control rabbits. Fifteen of the other seventeen proved to be completely resistant when tested by intratracheal injections of Bacterium pneumosintes cultures that produced typical infections in the controls. Ten of these fifteen rabbits were injected intravenously with living cultures of pneumococcus, Streptococcus hamolyticus, or Bacillus pfeifferi in doses which were non-infective under normal conditions, but infective, as experience has shown, in the presence of a primary lesion caused by Bacterium pneumosintes. In none of these animals did infection develop. The two remaining rabbits of the seventeen were not protected against Bacterium pneumosintes by the vaccination, and they further developed a secondary pulmonary infection with Bacillus pfeifferi after its intravenous injection. Control rabbits similarly injected intratracheally with Bacterium pneumosintes, and then intravenously with the pneumococcus, streptococcus, or Bacillus pfeifferi in doses that had proved non-infective for normal rabbits, uniformly developed a secondary infection with these organisms. The mildness of the local reactions and the absence of general signs, following vaccination with Bacterium pneumosintes, indicate that similar injections would be well tolerated in man. There is no evidence that the subcutaneous injection of large doses of the heat-killed organisms reduces the resistance of the animal body to infections with other bacteria. In single rabbit experiments the resistance to intravenously injected pneumococci, streptococci, or Bacillus pfeifferi has been found unreduced immediately after vaccination with Bacterium pneumosintes.
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spelling pubmed-21283932008-04-18 EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES. Olitsky, Peter K. Gates, Frederick L. J Exp Med Article A series of rabbits was subcutaneously injected with three measured doses of killed cultures of two strains of Bacterium pneumosintes derived from the nasopharyngeal secretions of influenza patients. These rabbits were subsequently tested for the development of serum antibodies and for the presence of an induced immunity to the living organisms, with the following results. The serum of eleven of fifteen rabbits, tested from 10 to 27 days after the final subcutaneous injection, specifically agglutinated Bacterium pneumosintes, whereas normal rabbit serum did not. Nineteen vaccinated rabbits were subjected to protection experiments. Two of them were unaffected by an intratracheal injection of Bacterium pneumosintes, contained in the lung tissues of previously infected animals, in a dose which typically affected the control rabbits. Fifteen of the other seventeen proved to be completely resistant when tested by intratracheal injections of Bacterium pneumosintes cultures that produced typical infections in the controls. Ten of these fifteen rabbits were injected intravenously with living cultures of pneumococcus, Streptococcus hamolyticus, or Bacillus pfeifferi in doses which were non-infective under normal conditions, but infective, as experience has shown, in the presence of a primary lesion caused by Bacterium pneumosintes. In none of these animals did infection develop. The two remaining rabbits of the seventeen were not protected against Bacterium pneumosintes by the vaccination, and they further developed a secondary pulmonary infection with Bacillus pfeifferi after its intravenous injection. Control rabbits similarly injected intratracheally with Bacterium pneumosintes, and then intravenously with the pneumococcus, streptococcus, or Bacillus pfeifferi in doses that had proved non-infective for normal rabbits, uniformly developed a secondary infection with these organisms. The mildness of the local reactions and the absence of general signs, following vaccination with Bacterium pneumosintes, indicate that similar injections would be well tolerated in man. There is no evidence that the subcutaneous injection of large doses of the heat-killed organisms reduces the resistance of the animal body to infections with other bacteria. In single rabbit experiments the resistance to intravenously injected pneumococci, streptococci, or Bacillus pfeifferi has been found unreduced immediately after vaccination with Bacterium pneumosintes. The Rockefeller University Press 1922-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2128393/ /pubmed/19868702 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1922, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Olitsky, Peter K.
Gates, Frederick L.
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title_full EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title_fullStr EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title_full_unstemmed EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title_short EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE NASOPHARYNGEAL SECRETIONS FROM INFLUENZA PATIENTS : X. THE IMMUNIZING EFFECTS IN RABBITS OF SUBCUTANEOUS INJECTIONS OF KILLED CULTURES OF BACTERIUM PNEUMOSINTES.
title_sort experimental studies of the nasopharyngeal secretions from influenza patients : x. the immunizing effects in rabbits of subcutaneous injections of killed cultures of bacterium pneumosintes.
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2128393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19868702
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