50 per cent glycerine injected intraperitoneally, intramuscularly, or intravenously, greatly enhances the activity of equine encephalomyelitis virus injected intramuscularly, increasing its virulence up to 100-fold. The same effect is produced by very concentrated sodium chloride. The result appears due to dehydration of the nervous system, suddenly produced. Gradual withdrawal of body fluids, produced by depriving animals of drinking water, results in sharp concentration of the blood, equal to that produced by glycerine or salt. But such deprivation of water alone does not result in significant dehydration of the brain, nor does it have any effect on virus action. The facilitation effect is not produced by drastic procedures involving shifts of electrolytes without loss of total water from the brain. Glycerine has no facilitating action when the virus is administered intranasally or intraocularly, suggesting a fundamental difference in pathogenesis between these routes and the intramuscular.
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1 October 1942
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October 01 1942
STUDIES ON EASTERN EQUINE ENCEPHALOMYELITIS : VI. FACILITATION OF INFECTION IN THE MOUSE
Lester S. King
Lester S. King
From the Laboratory of the Fairfield State Hospital, Newtown, Connecticut, and the Department of Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut
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Lester S. King
From the Laboratory of the Fairfield State Hospital, Newtown, Connecticut, and the Department of Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut
Received:
June 08 1942
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
Copyright, 1942, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1942
J Exp Med (1942) 76 (4): 325–334.
Article history
Received:
June 08 1942
Citation
Lester S. King; STUDIES ON EASTERN EQUINE ENCEPHALOMYELITIS : VI. FACILITATION OF INFECTION IN THE MOUSE . J Exp Med 1 October 1942; 76 (4): 325–334. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.76.4.325
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