Affiliation:
1. From the Laboratories of The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.
Abstract
The globoid bodies, or minute microörganisms, cultivated from the central nervous organs of human beings and monkeys that have succumbed to poliomyelitis, may be detected in the incubated brain tissues of infected monkeys in forms indicating post-mortem multiplication. Incubating the poliomyelitic tissues in kidney-ascitic fluid culture medium and then crushing them is a more certain method for obtaining cultures of the organism.
Identical bodies have been detected in blood films prepared on the twelfth day of the acute attack, from a paralyzed poliomyelitic monkey inoculated intraspinously.
The same organism has been cultivated from the blood of a monkey that had received intravenously a large dose of a Berkefeld filtrate of poliomyelitic virus.
No other microörganisms were detected either in the sections of the brain or in film preparations of the blood. These observations tend therefore to confirm the etiological relationship between the minute microörganism and epidemic poliomyelitis suggested by the successful cultivation and inoculation experiments reported by Flexner and Noguchi.
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
8 articles.
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1. CULTIVATION AND MICROSCOPY;Handbook of Filterable Viruses;2013
2. Literaturverzeichnis;Acta Medica Scandinavica;2009-04-24
3. The significance of coccal organisms in experimental poliomyelitis;The Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology;1929-07
4. SURVIVAL OF POLIOMYELITIC VIRUS IN THE BRAIN OF THE RABBIT;Journal of Experimental Medicine;1918-03-01
5. PROGRESS IN PEDIATRICS;American Journal of Diseases of Children;1917-08-01