scholarly journals THE RÓLE OF STREPTOCOCCI IN EXPERIMENTAL POLIOMYELITIS OF THE MONKEY

1928 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 431-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Perrin H. Long ◽  
Peter K. Olitsky ◽  
Fred W. Stewart

It is the opinion of Bull, that the streptococci recovered from poliomyelitic tissues, while having no etiological or pathological relationship to the virus of poliomyelitis, occur as secondary invaders in the disease. Smillie and Amoss indicated that the bacteria may be agonal invaders. The results of the experiments reported in this paper point to another source of the streptococci. They occur as contaminants which are introduced into the cultures during the process of grinding tissues. The source of the streptococcus may therefore be the air of the place in which the cultures are made. We have come to this conclusion because first, the tissues of which cultures yielded streptococci were derived from a number of monkeys with experimental poliomyelitis still in a vigorous state. Secondly, when the tissues were ground bacteria were noted much more frequently in their cultures than in those in which fragments of the same brains were used. Thirdly, microorganisms occurred more often in cultures made in the routine laboratory than in a special room where asepsis was carried to the extreme of a major surgical operation on man. Fourthly, streptococci were obtained from the air of the places where cultures were made. Finally, there is no correlation between the cultures of two portions of the same brain. The streptococci occurred in some cultures in pure growth and in others admixed with other ordinary species of bacteria. The latter were often found, in turn, in pure culture and what applies to streptococci, as mentioned in the preceding paragraph, applies equally to the staphylococci, diphtheroids, spore-bearing rods, and other miscellaneous, familiar microorganisms. We could not determine that there exists any etiological relation of the streptococci to poliomyelitis. The fermentation reactions of the microorganisms obtained from the air, from non-poliomyelitic and poliomyelitic monkey brains indicate that bacteria from any of these sources are markedly different. So also with the serological reactions of agglutination and precipitation. Furthermore no agglutination was observed when the serum of monkeys convalescent from experimental poliomyelitis was mixed with any of the streptococci recovered or those received directly or indirectly from Rosenow. Moreover, the intracerebral injection with cultures, irrespective of their source, induced in rabbits a purulent type of meningoencephalitis, often associated with streptococcic septicemia. This result is at marked variance with any known effects of the true filtrable virus of poliomyelitis in man and in the monkey.

2015 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-104
Author(s):  
D Nasanjargal ◽  
M Otgonzaya ◽  
R Chinzorig ◽  
M Byambasuren

Fusarium type of fungi forms whitish or bright color and grows really fast. Fusarium subglutinans f. sp. pini (F. circinatum Nirenbery & O’Donnell), F. Oxysporum f. sp. Psidii and F. solani are widely distributed plant entomopathogenic fungi. This fungus usually gives a signs of yellowing, drying and shedding when causing disease.Main aim of our study is to identify Fusarium spp fungi based on disease symptoms such as yellowing, drying and shedding of the needles then define isolated pure culture of fungi and formulate control method. [4,6,7]In this study atotal of sixty-nine samples including larch, pine and spruce were collected from 8 locations out of 127 pieces collected from 13 locations are used. According to standard methodology, when isolating mixed and pure culture samples were placed on wet Petri dish in incubator at 26°C for 7 days until the fungus growth appearedalso average mycelia growth and conidia have observed.This Fusariumspecie typically gives whitish tinged grayish-violent color in colony center on PDA. Observing culture mycelia growth and conidia, genus name has identified using “Identification of Mitosporic Fungi” by Dr. Katsuhiko Ando. When formulating control method against fungi, bioproduct of Bacillus subtilis 26D strain, made in Russian as well as plant originated bioproduct called 1.5 % Matrine & Osthole Asmade in China have been experimented against entomopathogenic fungi Fusarium sppareused. Based on the study results Fusarium type of fungi is detected from samples taken from Bogdiin am, Jigjid and Taivan mountain. Hence bioproduct of Bacillus subtilis 26D strain inhibited fungal growth whereas can be possible biocontrol for Fusarium spp whereas plant originated bioproduct 1.5% Matrine & Osthole AS made in P.R.C cannot inhibit the growth of this fungi.Forest morbidity is not well researched in Mongolia. Based on our research forest regions near Ulaanbaatar city have higher morbidity rate. Disease symptoms of conifers have shown yellowing, drying and even shedding of the needles.A total of sixty-nine samples including larch, pine and spruce were collected from 8 locations near Ulaanbaatar city. Samples were placed on wet plates in incubator at 26°C for 7 days until the fungus growth appeared. Fresh fungal growth from the plated samples then transferred onto PDA. Fusarium species typically have average mycelia growth, aerial mycelium and gives whitish tinged grayish-violent color in colony center on PDA.Mongolian Journal of Agricultural Sciences Vol.13(2) 2014: 101-104


1966 ◽  
Vol 64 (0) ◽  
pp. 61-77
Author(s):  
Eitel Duarte

In the second part of this paper we nalysed the correlation between the clinical pathological alterations and the sum of the types of columnar cells of 300 histological sections of cervix. Fifty histological sections of normal cervix of sexually mature women were selected and considered as normal in pattern. The specific counts of the columnar cells which line the endocervical mucosa and those of the glands of 50 normal cervices were compared with other similar counts made in 50 histological sections of cervices of old women and emphasized the differences. Comparisons were made also between 50 normal cervices and 50 sections of cervices with chronic inflammation, 50 cervices with epidermoid metaplasia and 50 cervices with myoma of the corpus. Counts were made from 50 cervices of patients who on the occasion of the surgical operation were in the proliferative phase of the menstrual cycle; these were compared with the counts of 50 cervices of uteri in the luteal phase. Finally, the numerical frequency of the following data encountered in the 300 cervices was recorded: 1. aspects of the ectocervical epithelium; 2. number of Nabothian cysts; 3. number of cervical glands; 5. number of deliveries and 6. aspect of the material within the cervical canal.


1968 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Borch

1.1. — In this paper we shall consider some of the decisions which have to be made in the normal course of business in an insurance company. We shall see that the “right” decisions can be found only when the problems are analysed in their proper dynamic context.As examples of the decision problems which we shall study, we can mention the following:(i) What premium rates should be quoted on the insurance contracts, which the company offers to the public?(ii) How much should the company spend to promote the sale of its policies?(iii) When should the company refuse to underwrite a proposed insurance contract?(iv) How shall the company reinsure its portfolio of insurance contracts?(v) What reserve funds should an insurance company keep?(vi) How shall the company's funds be invested?Any actuary will be familiar with such problems, and he will probably feel that these problems cannot be satisfactorily solved with the methods offered by the classical actuarial theory.1.2. — In some earlier papers [I] and [2] it has been argued that such problems can best be solved in the frame work of utility theory. As an illustration we shall take Problem (iii) in the preceding paragraph, and consider an insurance company in the following situation:(i) The company has a capital S.(ii) The company holds a portfolio of insurance contracts which will lead to a total payment of x to settle claims. F1(x) is the distribution of the variate x.


Author(s):  
Marie V. Lebour

[The stages in the development of Calanus finmarchicus described and figured by Miss Lebour in the present paper were taken from culture jars given into my charge by Mr. L. R. Crawshay, when he left the Laboratory to undertake military duties in connection with the war. In one jar at that time the first copepodid stage, from eggs laid in the jar, had just been reached, and the technical details for the successful rearing of the animals had been mastered. The experiments had been conducted with great care, and all possible precautions had been taken to prevent contamination. Subsequently the experiments were repeated up to a certain point by myself and some additional stages obtained to complete the series.The cultures were made in 2-litre glass beakers, containing “outside” sea-water filtered through a Berkefeld filter. In order to secure an even temperature the beakers stood in the circulating water of the Laboratory tanks, and a pure culture of the diatom Nitzschia closterium was used as food.—E. J. Allen.]


1972 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 92-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Harland ◽  
J. S. Orr ◽  
J. R. Richards

Radiothyroxine turnover measurements were made in 10 male patients before and after relatively minor surgery. Thyroxine secretion rate rose significantly from 110±15 μg. per day (mean±SD) pre-operatively to 137±33 soon after surgery, although plasma protein bound iodine concentrations remained unaltered. Plasma activity, following a dose of radiothroxine given prior to surgery, diminished at a single exponential rate, which continued through surgery. A second dose of radiothyroxine, differently labelled and given post-operatively also disappeared exponentially, but in every case the slope was steeper than for the pre-operative dose. The daily fractional disappearance rate rose significantly from 0.11±60.029 pre-operatively to 0.163±0.028 post-operatively.


1966 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 118-119
Author(s):  
Th. Schmidt-Kaler

I should like to give you a very condensed progress report on some spectrophotometric measurements of objective-prism spectra made in collaboration with H. Leicher at Bonn. The procedure used is almost completely automatic. The measurements are made with the help of a semi-automatic fully digitized registering microphotometer constructed by Hög-Hamburg. The reductions are carried out with the aid of a number of interconnected programmes written for the computer IBM 7090, beginning with the output of the photometer in the form of punched cards and ending with the printing-out of the final two-dimensional classifications.


Author(s):  
J. Temple Black ◽  
William G. Boldosser

Ultramicrotomy produces plastic deformation in the surfaces of microtomed TEM specimens which can not generally be observed unless special preparations are made. In this study, a typical biological composite of tissue (infundibular thoracic attachment) infiltrated in the normal manner with an embedding epoxy resin (Epon 812 in a 60/40 mixture) was microtomed with glass and diamond knives, both with 45 degree body angle. Sectioning was done in Portor Blum Mt-2 and Mt-1 microtomes. Sections were collected on formvar coated grids so that both the top side and the bottom side of the sections could be examined. Sections were then placed in a vacuum evaporator and self-shadowed with carbon. Some were chromium shadowed at a 30 degree angle. The sections were then examined in a Phillips 300 TEM at 60kv.Carbon coating (C) or carbon coating with chrom shadowing (C-Ch) makes in effect, single stage replicas of the surfaces of the sections and thus allows the damage in the surfaces to be observable in the TEM. Figure 1 (see key to figures) shows the bottom side of a diamond knife section, carbon self-shadowed and chrom shadowed perpendicular to the cutting direction. Very fine knife marks and surface damage can be observed.


Author(s):  
M. Ashraf ◽  
F. Thompson ◽  
S. Miki ◽  
P. Srivastava

Iron is believed to play an important role in the pathogenesis of ischemic injury. However, the sources of intracellular iron in myocytes are not yet defined. In this study we have attempted to localize iron at various cellular sites of the cardiac tissue with the ferrocyanide technique.Rat hearts were excised under ether anesthesia. They were fixed with coronary perfusion with 3% buffered glutaraldehyde made in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer pH 7.3. Sections, 60 μm in thickness, were cut on a vibratome and were incubated in the medium containing 500 mg of potassium ferrocyanide in 49.5 ml H2O and 0.5 ml concentrated HC1 for 30 minutes at room temperature. Following rinses in the buffer, tissues were dehydrated in ethanol and embedded in Spurr medium.The examination of thin sections revealed intense staining or reaction product in peroxisomes (Fig. 1).


Author(s):  
J.M. Titchmarsh

The advances in recent years in the microanalytical capabilities of conventional TEM's fitted with probe forming lenses allow much more detailed investigations to be made of the microstructures of complex alloys, such as ferritic steels, than have been possible previously. In particular, the identification of individual precipitate particles with dimensions of a few tens of nanometers in alloys containing high densities of several chemically and crystallographically different precipitate types is feasible. The aim of the investigation described in this paper was to establish a method which allowed individual particle identification to be made in a few seconds so that large numbers of particles could be examined in a few hours.A Philips EM400 microscope, fitted with the scanning transmission (STEM) objective lens pole-pieces and an EDAX energy dispersive X-ray analyser, was used at 120 kV with a thermal W hairpin filament. The precipitates examined were extracted using a standard C replica technique from specimens of a 2¼Cr-lMo ferritic steel in a quenched and tempered condition.


Author(s):  
T. R. Dinger

Zirconia (ZrO2) is often added to ceramic compacts to increase their toughness. The mechanisms by which this toughness increase occurs are generally accepted to be those of transformation toughening and microcracking. The mechanism of transformation toughening is based on the presence of metastable tetragonal ZrO2 which transforms to the monoclinic allotrope when stressed by a propagating crack. The decrease in volume which accompanies this transformation effectively relieves the applied stress at the crack tip and toughens the material; microcrack toughening arises from the deflection of a propagating crack around sharply angular inclusions.These mechanisms, however, do not explain the toughness increases associated with the class of composites investigated here. Analytical electron microscopy (AEM) has been used to determine whether solid solution effects could be the cause of this increased toughness. Specimens of a mullite (3Al2O3·2SiO2) + 15 vol. % ZrO2 were prepared by the usual technique of mechanical thinning followed by ion beam milling. All observations were made in a Philips EM400 TEM/STEM microscope fitted with EDXS and EELS spectrometers.


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