scholarly journals LOCAL PASSIVE IMMUNITY IN THE SKIN OF RABBITS TO INFECTION WITH (1) A FILTERABLE VIRUS, AND (2) HEMOLYTIC STREPTOCOCCI

1925 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas M. Rivers ◽  
William S. Tillett

Small areas of skin infiltrated with immune serum proved refractory to the injurious action of a filterable rabbit virus inoculated 24 to 48 hours later. Infiltrations of normal serum did not appreciably protect the skin against the virus. The local protection afforded by the infiltrations of immune serum appears to constitute an example of local passive immunity. Small areas of skin infiltrated with either normal serum or meat infusion broth proved more refractory than normal skin to infection with hemolytic streptococci inoculated 24 hours later. The refractory state induced in the tissues was non-specific in character. A greater amount of local protection against hemolytic streptococci was afforded by infiltrations with a homologous immune serum than by infiltrations with normal serum. The difference in the amount of protection afforded by immune serum over that induced by normal serum may be thought of as representative of the degree of local passive immunity conferred.

1904 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. F. Bashford

By means of the graphic records given on Plates II–VI and VIII the following facts have been illustrated.Immunity to Erythrocytes.Normal rabbit's serum is relatively innocuous for bullock's erythrocytes. The serum of an immunised rabbit acquires the power to dissolve bullock's erythrocytes.Besides acquiring the power to dissolve bullock's erythrocytes, an immune serum may also acquire power to clump them, and it has been shown that the phenomena of haemolysis and of agglutination are independent.The powers acquired by the immune serum can be artificially modified. The serum may be deprived of its powers by heat. Serum cautiously so deprived of its haemolytic power can have it restored by the addition of normal serum. The haemolytic power of the un-heated serum is augmented if normal serum be superadded.It has been shown that an immune serum only differs from a normal serum by its containing antitoxic bodies which are endowed with powers of specific reaction with the bullock's erythrocytes.The mechanism by which erythrocytes are laked by an immune serum has been analysed, and it has been shown that the solution of the erythrocytes is effected through the intervention of an anti-erythrocytic body called forth by immunisation. The erythrocytes which have been subjected to the action of this product of immunity give indication of their reaction with it if they are subsequently or concomitantly placed under the influence of normal serum. The erythrocytes and normal serum together, therefore, form a combined indicator of the presence of the anti-eiythrocytic body. The part played by normal serum has nothing to do with the acquisition of immunity.The only conclusion drawn from the above observations is that in the production of immunity to erythrocytes the serum of the immunised animal acquires certain powers which are concomitant with, but are not necessarily the cause of the immunity. This special case of immunity to erythrocytes is therefore probably parallel to induced immunity to those bacterial toxines for which antitoxines are known to exist.The course and progressive augmentation of artificial immunity to erythrocytes has also been illustrated, and it has been shown that erythrocytes saturated with anti-erythrocytic body retain the power to augment the immunity of an already immune animal.The serum of an animal actively immunised has power to confer passive immunity upon other animals, and the course of this passive immunity differs in the two cases when it is induced in the same species and in a species alien to that providing the immune serum.The experiments with bullock's erythrocytes have been repeated in parallel observations with ricin in order to permit of the observations on haemolysis being utilised in drawing conclusions on the behaviour of bacterial toxines.By adjusting the conditions of experiment in such a way that the minimal lethal dose for an animal was also the minimal agglutinating dose in test-tube experiments, it has been possible to give graphic records showing the parallelism between the processes when erythrocytes or living animals are used as indicators of the presence of free ricin. In this way it has been possible to illustrate the determination of the minimal lethal and minimal agglutinating doses of ricin and that quantity of antitoxine (antiricin) which is necessary to abolish the corresponding actions in the animal and in the test-tube, and to show that the mixture of toxine and antitoxine which is physiologically neutral in vitro is also physiologically neutral in vivo within the limitations imposed by the preliminary determinations.The consequences of conferring passive immunity upon the guinea-pig by means of active immune serum of the rabbit have also been illustrated, and it has been shown that the alien antiricin serum leads to the production of agencies directed against itself.Ricin neutralised by antiricin retains its power to produce immunity when injected into the species of animal which has yielded the antiricin.In connection with the conference of immunity to erythrocytes and to ricin, the nature of the difference between normal and immune sera has been studied. Attention has been directed to the possession by normal sera of properties which simulate those possessed in more marked degree by the immune sera. In the case of haemolysis, it has not been possible to clearly demonstrate that the actions manifested by the normal and immune sera are distinct, although the weight of evidence is in favour of this view. In the case of ricin, however, it has been possible to demonstrate that the immune serum possesses properties which are quite distinct from those possessed by normal serum, and that the latter does not interfere with the action of ricin because of the natural presence of a trace of antiricin. In the case of immunity to ricin, the antitoxine is certainly something which has been super-added to the serum in consequence of the process of immunisation.The facts ascertained in regard to artificial immunity to erythrocytes and to ricin completely agree. Only in oue point is it impossible to be quite sure that the phenomena are identical, viz., in the simulation by normal serum of the powers characteristic of the immune serum; for the demonstration that the two are distinct has been possible for ricin, but open to doubt in the case of erythrocytes. My investigations have been extended to diphtheria and tetanus toxines and to cobra venom, kindly placed at my disposal by Sir Thomas R. Fraser. They have however been interrupted, but so far as they go they support fully the observations made on ricin and erythrocytes.


1940 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reginald D. Manwell ◽  
Frederick Goldstein

The effect of therapy with immune serum has been studied in thirty-two cases of Plasmodium circumflexum infection, all of them produced by blood inoculation. Eighteen of these cases never showed parasites, and seven others developed infections which were definitely milder than those of the controls. The therapeutic serum was in all cases obtained from chronic cases which had previously been superinfected to raise the immune titre. It seems justifiable to conclude that: 1. Passive immunity can be conferred in avian malaria, at least when caused by Plasmodium circumflexum just as it can be in certain types of monkey malaria, and perhaps in human malaria as well. 2. Whatever the nature of the protective substances present in the serum of chronic cases may be, they are present in very low concentration. Their concentration can be raised by superinfection, however. These substances may be strain-specific or species-specific, but the results of these experiments do not give any clear-cut answer to this question. 3. Serum therapy previous to infection seems to be more effective than when given afterward. 4. The administration of normal serum or even of physiological saline in a dosage comparable to that employed with the immune serum used in these experiments produced similar macroscopic changes in the size of the spleen. 5. Agglutination of cells parasitized by Plasmodium circumflexurn when mixed with immune serum was observed.


2000 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mauro Pires Moraes ◽  
Rudi Weiblen ◽  
Marlon Cesar Rebelatto ◽  
Adriana Moraes da Silva

Serum samples from 87 calves from a dairy herd in Southern Brazil were collected to determine the levels of passive transfer and its relationship to morbidity and mean daily weight gain (MDG). Serum immunoglobulin (Ig) levels were measured by the zinc sulfate turbidity test at 24 hours of age in the calves. The average serum Ig level was 11.40g/l. Fourteen out of 87 calves (16.1%) showed serum Ig levels one standard deviation below the mean (4.59g/l) and were considered as having failure of passive immunity transfer (FPT). The occurrence of diarrhea from birth to weaning was higher in the FPT group (100%) than the normal group (90.7%) but the difference was not significant. The occurrence of signs of respiratory disease was similar in both groups (35.7% for FPT and 36.9% for the normal group). The mean daily gain from birth to 13-16 months of age in the FPT group was significantly (P>0.05) lower than in the group with normal serum Ig levels. The difference in MDG from birth to weaning between the groups was not significant. These results demonstrate the importance of passive immunity in cattle, and also provide regional parameters for the evaluation of FPT in cattle.


Active immunity to Brucella abortus was induced in adult female rabbits. They were mated a week after the last injection of antigen and were killed and the yolk-sac contents of the embryos tested for agglutinins 8½ days after copulation. Specific agglutinins were found to be present in the yolk-sac contents in all cases. The titre varied significantly from embryo to embryo in the same litter, and was in some as high as that in the maternal serum at the time of killing. Passive immunity to Br. abortus was imparted to female rabbits 7 to 9 days pregnant by intravenous injection of immune serum of high titre. The rabbits were killed and the yolk-sac fluid of the embryos tested for agglutinins 10 to 17 hr. after injection. Specific agglutinins were present in most of the embryos from five of the six rabbits injected before 8 days post-coitum. All the embryos in the sixth rabbit were regressing. Specific agglutinins were not found in any of the embryos from two rabbits injected after 9 days post-coitum, by which time the yolk-sac fluid has ceased to increase in volume. Positive results were obtained both when rabbit and bovine immune sera were used. Active immunity to Br. abortus was induced in pregnant rabbits by injections beginning after the 15th day post-coitum. The serum of the newborn young, removed from their immune mothers before they had suckled, was tested and specific agglutinins were found to be present with a titre corresponding to that of the maternal serum. It was concluded that agglutinins, whether actively or passively acquired, pass freely from the maternal circulation into the yolk-sacs of 7- and 8-day rabbit embryos. This constitutes a delicate test of the passage of protein without alteration through the yolk-sac wall. The yolk-sac wall does not appear to be selective, since it is at least as permeable to foreign proteins as it is to those of maternal origin. Agglutinins pass from the maternal circulation into the embryo after the disappearance of the bilaminar wall of the yolk-sac also, either by way of the yolk-sac splanchnopleur or the allantochorionic placenta or both. The bearing of these results on current theories of placental permeability are discussed.


1917 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 675-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Dubin ◽  
Richard M. Pearce

Blood destruction due to a single injury, as by sodium oleate, or acting through a short period of time, as by toluylenediamine or hemolytic immune serum, is not characterized, in the absence of hemoglobinuria, by an increased elimination of iron in the urine. This holds, not only for the evanescent injury caused by sodium oleate, but also for the severe type caused by hemolytic immune serum, in which a progressive destruction of the blood may persist for 2 weeks or more with constant evidence of the disintegration of erythrocytes as shown by bile pigment in the urine. This finding is in accord with previous investigations of anemia in both man and animals. Likewise, no striking increase is evident, under such circumstances, in the percentage of iron excreted in the feces. The total amount of iron in the feces has been notably increased in two experiments with hemolytic serum, but as the percentage was not appreciably altered, the difference depends presumably on variations in the bulk of feces rather than upon increased elimination. This evidence of the power of the body to conserve the iron rephagocytosis is negligible, is to be fragmented one by one, while still circulating, to a fine, hemoglobin-containing dust. The cell fragments are rapidly removed from the blood, but their ultimate fate remains to be determined. The facts indicate that they are removed from the blood by the spleen, and under exceptional conditions, by the bone marrow.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 1055-1072 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S Fowler

Multiscale segregation measures have the potential to increase understanding of residential context and ultimately a wide range of social and spatial processes. By examining segregation at multiple scales, we have the opportunity to study it as more than the outcome of a single process or a measure describing a single contextual effect. Multiscale segregation encourages us to look for sorting processes and contextual effects operating at different scales and potentially even with different meanings. However, the complexity of multiscale measures introduces significant uncertainty about the role of underlying data and assumptions in producing observed outcomes, particularly at fine geographic scales. While traditional measures of segregation have been exposed to decades of scrutiny, multiscale measures are still relatively novel and less well understood. The theoretical contribution of this paper is to consider the implications of segregation as both an outcome and signifier of sorting processes at multiple scales. The empirical contribution is to consider how zoning and the degree of spatial association shape outcomes expressed as multiscale segregation measures. I examine the effects of different allocation strategies for measuring population at small scales by comparing four delineation methods. I find that the method chosen for allocating population to small areas matters, but that by the time observation units reach about 700 m2 most of the difference between methods has washed out. I also test the effect of changing the degree of assumed spatial association in generating multiscale segregation measures. I find that, as suggested by Reardon and O'Sullivan in their original exposition of their spatial segregation measure, this assumption has a relatively small effect on outcomes and is unlikely to shape substantive findings.


1992 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 505-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobuyuki Fujii ◽  
Shigeru Kozaki

AbstractThe authors tried a new measuring method for stresses in small areas of ceramics. This method is characterized by the following.1)Applicable to small areas.2)High sensitivity.3)Stress calculations by measuring the average Debye ring radius in view of spotty diffraction rings.4)The use of an imaging processor for (3).5)The use of an imaging plate (IP) for reducing the exposure time.We worked out a computer simulation about errors of the values measured by our method. The result showed a good approximation. With a test piece applied with a certain load, the difference between stresses measured by our method and those by a strain gauge was about 12 percent. We applied this method to the measurement of residual stresses which took place near the silicon nitride (Si3N4)/304 stainless steel brazing point interface. In the case of using an X-ray beam of 100 μm diameter, the exposure time was 90min with a high sensitive X-ray film and 3min with the imaging plate. In the case of an X-ray beam of 40 μm diameter, it was 120 to 190 min with the imaging plate.


1941 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Taylor

Following intranasal inoculation of influenza A virus (strain PR8) there is a rapid increase of the virus in the lungs which with large doses reaches a maximum within 24 hours. With smaller doses, although the proportional increase is greater, the maximum concentration is not reached until 48 hours following inoculation. If a lethal dose is administered, the ultimate concentration of the virus in the lungs is the same, irrespective of the size of the dose. If a sublethal dose is given, the titer of the virus in the lungs does not achieve the titer reached in mice receiving a lethal dose. Within 48 hours following inoculation of a sublethal dose the lungs of a mouse may contain at least 76,000 M.L.D., yet the mouse survives. The intranasal instillation of sterile fluid (distilled water, varying concentrations of NaCl, broth, or 10 per cent normal serum) into a mouse sublethally infected produces a sharp rise in the virus content of the lung usually followed by death within 3 to 8 days. If, however, the instillate consists of 10 per cent immune serum, there is no rise in the virus titer, and no apparent harm results from the instillation. The implications of these phenomena are discussed and an hypothesis presented to explain their occurrence.


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