Transmission experiments have shown that epidemic diarrhea of infant mice of the CFW strain is infectious and communicable. Cage to cage spread can take place by the air-borne route. The agent appears to be a fairly heat-resistant virus that can be serially transferred and that is neutralized by specific hyperimmune antiserum from rabbits. Mice are susceptible to it by the oral route from at least the 3rd day after birth to the 10th or 11th day. Thereafter they appear to become resistant. The shortest incubation period observed has been 40 hours from the time of feeding infectious material; the longest period could not be ascertained under the conditions of test. Factors relative to the differentiation of this virus from other viruses are briefly discussed.
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1 November 1957
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November 01 1957
STUDIES ON THE ETIOLOGY AND TRANSMISSION OF EPIDEMIC DIARRHEA OF INFANT MICE
Lisbeth M. Kraft
Lisbeth M. Kraft
From the Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Institute for Experimental Physiology, Surgery, and Pathology, and the Department of Microbiology, New York University College of Medicine, New York
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Lisbeth M. Kraft
From the Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Institute for Experimental Physiology, Surgery, and Pathology, and the Department of Microbiology, New York University College of Medicine, New York
Received:
June 27 1957
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
Copyright, 1957, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1957
J Exp Med (1957) 106 (5): 743–755.
Article history
Received:
June 27 1957
Citation
Lisbeth M. Kraft; STUDIES ON THE ETIOLOGY AND TRANSMISSION OF EPIDEMIC DIARRHEA OF INFANT MICE . J Exp Med 1 November 1957; 106 (5): 743–755. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.106.5.743
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