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1.
Am J Epidemiol ; 89(2): 489-502, Feb. 1969.
Artigo em Inglês | MedCarib | ID: med-9870

RESUMO

Virulences of VE virus strains from tropical regions of the North and South American continents were studied in adult Syrian hamsters, Swiss albino mice and cotton rats. Virulence profiles were based on frequency and time of illness and death following subcutaneous inoculation of small doses of virus as collected in nature or after only a few passages in laboratory hosts. Forty-one strains from Mexico, USA-Florida, Panama, Colombia, and Venezuela uniformity killed hamsters inoculated s.c. with 4-1000 PFU; incubation periods were usually 3-6 days, but some Panamanian and USA-Florida strains had incubation periods 1-2 days longer than strains from other countries. All of 37 strains from these countries regularly produced illness in adult mice, but killed only 71-82 percent; in adult cotton rats, signs of illness were not recognized, but death occurred in 18-30 percent. Variations in virulence profiles for mice and cotton rats among 28 Mexican strains were ogten as great as those seen among 9 strains from USA-Florida, Panama, Colombia and Venezuela. Virus strains from the Bush Bush areas of Trinidad, however, had distinctive virulence profiles. All 5 of these strains killed hamsters only after prolonged incubation periods of more than 5 days, and killed only 1 of 25 mice; neither of two strains killed cotton rats. Young and Johnson reported (Amer. J. Epid., 1969, 89 286-307) that these Trinidad strains should antigenically be classified as Mucambo rather than VE virus. The TC 83 attenuated strain of VE virus in a dose of 500 PFU given s.c. killed no hamsters, mice or cotton rats, but in some experiments employing larger doses, up to 20 percent hamsters became ill and 5-10 percent died without apparent relationship to dose. Plaque sizes and morophologies of 19 VE and 5 Trinidad Mucambo virus strains in primary chicken embryonic cell cultures did not correlate with virulence for hamsters, mice, cotton rats or man, nor with geographic, host or tissue source or year of collection. In sera of cotton rats and mice 3-4 weeks after s.c. inoculation, titers of VE virus HI antibody measured with hemagglutinin from a Mexican virus strain were similar for strains from Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela. However they were lower with USA-Florida and TC 83 virus strains and with Trinidad Mucambo virus strains, suggesting that these viruses differ antigenically from Mexican, Colombian and Venezuelan strains. Nevertheless the attenuated TC 83 vaccine virus protected adult mice against s.c. challenge by 28 Mexican and 8 other VE virus strains from USA-Florida, Panama, Colombia and Venezuela, suggesting that immunologically distinct types of VE virus based on cross-protection do not exist in these countries. (AU)


Assuntos
Embrião de Galinha , Cobaias , Cricetinae , Camundongos , Ratos , 21003 , Vírus da Encefalite , Haplorrinos , Anticorpos/análise , Cérebro , Colômbia , Vírus da Encefalite/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Vírus da Encefalite/imunologia , Vírus da Encefalite/isolamento & purificação , Vírus da Encefalite/patogenicidade , Florida , Coração , Testes de Inibição da Hemaglutinação , Injeções Subcutâneas , Rim , México , Especificidade da Espécie , Técnicas de Cultura , Trinidad e Tobago , Venezuela , Virulência , Cultura de Vírus
2.
Lancet ; 2(525): 1056-9, Nov. 1967.
Artigo em Inglês | MedCarib | ID: med-13156

RESUMO

In 1960 about 72,000 Guyanese schoolchildren, aged five to fifteen years, were divided into three similar groups, one of which acted as a control and was given tetanus toxoid, the second was given an acetone-killed typhoid vaccine, and the third a heat-killed-phenolised typhoid vaccine. Two subcutaneous doses of 0.5ml. of reconstituted vaccines were given five weeks apart. An additional 10,000 children received one dose only. The incidence of typhoid fever, diagnosed by the bacteriological isolation of Salmonella typhi, was followed for seven years after vaccination. In those given two doses, 146 cases of typhoid occurred in the control group and 16 and 49 in the acetone and heat-phenol typhoid vaccine groups, showing protection-rates of 88 percent and 65 percent , respectively. In those given one dose of vaccine the protection was somewhat greater, 22 cases occurring in the control group and 1 and 4 in the groups given acetone and heat-phenol vaccines, respectively. Protection showed little diminution until the fifth year after vaccination. (Summary)


Assuntos
Humanos , Pré-Escolar , Criança , Adolescente , Masculino , Feminino , Salmonella typhimurium/isolamento & purificação , Vacinas Tíficas-Paratíficas/administração & dosagem , Febre Tifoide/prevenção & controle , Acetona/farmacocinética , Guiana , Esquemas de Imunização , Injeções Subcutâneas , Fenóis/farmacocinética , Preservação Biológica , Febre Tifoide/diagnóstico
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