Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T05:12:34.090Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Researches on the Intestinal Protozoa of Monkeys and Man. IV. An experimental study of the Histolytica-like species of Entamoeba living naturally in Macaques

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Clifford Dobell
Affiliation:
National Institute for Medical Research, London, N.W. 3.

Extract

Nine attempts to infect kittens directly with E. histolytica macacorurn by means of amoebae (per anum) or cysts (per os) in the faeces of 2 M. sinicus (Polo and Susanna) and 1 M. rhesus (Jacko), were wholly unsuccessful. Four similar experiments with cysts (per os) from another M. sinicus (Bonar) gave 2 positive (Kittens 28 and 31) and 2 negative results.

Attempts to transmit strains of E. histolytica macacorum from one species of Macacus to another have been uniformly successful.

A strain (D.) of E. histolytica, derived from a man suffering from acute amoebic dysentery, has been cultivated in vitro continuously for 5½ years.

(i) The fact has been confirmed that strains of E. histolytica which, when newly isolated, are infective for kittens, may lose this infectivity after continued cultivation in vitro.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bach, F. W. (1923). Zur Kenntnis der bei Affen vorkommenden Entamöben. Arch. Schiffsu. Tropen-Hyg. 27, 31.Google Scholar
Behrend, K. (1914). Kurze Angaben über eine nichtpathogene Amöbe aus dem Darm von Macacus rhesus. Arch. Protistenk. 34, 35.Google Scholar
Boeck, W. C. and Drbohlav, J. (1925). The cultivation of Endamoeba histolytica. Amer. J. Hyg. 5, 371.Google Scholar
Brug, S. L. (1923). Protozoölogische1 waarnemingen. Geneesk. Tijdschr. Nederl.-Indië, 63, 620.Google Scholar
Castellani, A. (1908). Note on a liver abscess of amoebic origin in a monkey. Parasitology, 1, 101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatton, E. (1912). Entamibe (Loeschia sp.) et myxomycète (Dictyostelium mucoroides Brefeld) d'un singe. Bull. Soc. Path. Exot. 5, 180.Google Scholar
Chiba, E. and Kuwabara, N. (1930). On the pathogenicity of Entamoeba histolytica cultivated in Tanabe and Chiba's medium. Keijo J. Med. 1, 94.Google Scholar
Deschiens, R. (1927). Sur les protozoaires intestinaux des singes. Bull. Soc. Path. Exot. 20, 19.Google Scholar
Dobell, C. (1919). The Amoebae living in Man: a Zoological Monograph. London.Google Scholar
Dobell, C. (1927). Further observations and experiments on the cultivation of Entamoeba histolytica from cysts. Parasitology, 19, 288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobell, C. (1928). Researches on the intestinal Protozoa of Monkeys and Man.—I. General introduction, and II. Description of the whole life-history of Entamoeba histolytica in cultures. Parasitology 20, 357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobell, C. with Bishop, A. (1929). Idem.—III. The action of emetine on natural amoebic infections in macaques. Parasitology 21, 446.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobell, C. and Laidlaw, P. P. (1926). The action of ipecacuanha alkaloids on Entamoeba histolytica and some other entozoic amoebae in culture. Parasitology 18, 206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobell, C. and Laidlaw, P. P. (1926 a). On the cultivation of Entamoeba histolytica and some other entozoic amoebae. Parasitology 18, 283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drbohlav, J. (1925). [Demonstration of method of cultivating E. histolytica.] Trans. Roy. Soc. Trop. Med. and Hyg. (Proc. of Lab. Meeting, 20 Nov. 1924), 18, 238.Google Scholar
Drbohlav, J. (1925 a). Une nouvelle preuve de la possibilité de cultiver Entamoeba dysenteriae type histolytica. Ann. Parasitol. 3, 349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faust, E. C. (1930). The Endamoeba coli index of E. histolytica in a community. Amer. J. Trop. Med. 10, 137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forbes, H. O. (1896, 1897). A Hand-book to the Primates. 2 vols. London.Google Scholar
Franchini, G. (1912). Experimentelle Tropendysenterie. Die Entamoeba beim Affen. ZBl. Bakt. I (Orig.), 61, 590.Google Scholar
Gupta, B. M. Das (1925). A note on the cultivation of an entamoeba from a monkey (Macacus rhesus). Indian Med. Gaz. 60, 323.Google ScholarPubMed
Hirst, L. F. (1929). Municipality of Colombo. Report of the City Microbiologist for the year 1928. Municipal Printing Office, Colombo, Ceylon.Google Scholar
Kessel, J. F. (1926). Some similarities between the dysentery amoeba of the monkey and of man. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. and Med. 23, 675.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kessel, J. F. (1928). Amoebiasis in kittens infected with amoebae from acute and “carrier” human cases and with the tetranucleate amoebae of the monkey and of the pig. Amer. J. Hyg. 8, 311.Google Scholar
Kessel, J. F. (1928 a). Intestinal protozoa of monkeys. Univ. California Publ. Zool. 31, 275.Google Scholar
Knowles, R. (1925). Report of the Professor of Protozoology, in: Ann. Rept. Calcutta School Trop. Med. (for 1924). p. 69.Google Scholar
Knowles, R. (1926). Report of the Professor of Protozoology, in: Ann. Rept. Calcutta School Trop. Med. (for 1925), p. 70.Google Scholar
Knowles, R. (1926 a). New conceptions in amoebiasis. Indian Med. Gaz. 61, 503.Google Scholar
Knowles, R. (1928). An Introduction to Medical Protozoology. Calcutta.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laidlaw, P. P., Dobell, C., and Bishop, A. (1928). Further experiments on the action of emetine in cultures of Entamoeba histolytica. Parasitology, 20, 207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCarrison, R. (1921). Studies in Deficiency Disease. London.Google Scholar
Mathis, C. (1913). Entamibes des singes. Bull. Soc. Méd.-Chir. Indochine, 4, 388.Google Scholar
Mayer, M. (1919). Klinische, morphologische und experimentelle Beobachtungen bei Amöbenerkrankungen. Arch. Schiffs-u. Tropen-Hyg. 23, 177.Google Scholar
Mello, U. (1923). L'amebiasi nei Primati. Ann. d'Igiene, 33, 533.Google Scholar
Musgrave, W. E. and Clegg, M. T. (1904). Amebas: their cultivation and etiologic significance. Manila, Dept. of Interior, Bur. of Govt. Labs., Biol. Lab. Bull. No. 18 (pp. 185).Google Scholar
Noc, F. (1909). Recherches sur la dysenterie amibienne en Cochinchine. Ann. Inst. Pasteur, 23, 177.Google Scholar
Rees, C. W. (1928). The infectivity and pathogenicity of a starch-fed strain of Endamoeba histolytica. J. Parasitol. 15, 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, C. W. (1929). Pathogenesis of intestinal amebiasis in kittens. Arch. Pathol. 7, 1.Google Scholar
Reichenow, E. (1926). Zur Frage des Sitzes von Entamoeba histolytica im Darm. Arb. a. d. Reichsgesundheitsamte, 57, 136.Google Scholar
Report of the Medical Research Council for the Year 19241925. London: H.M. Stationery Office. 1925. Pp. 31, 32.Google Scholar
Report of the Medical Research Council for 19251926. London: H.M. Stationery Office. 1926. Pp. 35, 36.Google Scholar
Report of the Medical Research Council for 19261927. London: H.M. Stationery Office. 1928. Pp. 33, 34.Google Scholar
Report of the Medical Research Council for 19271928. London: H.M. Stationery Office. 1929. P. 38.Google Scholar
Report of the Medical Research Council for 19281929. London: H.M. Stationery Office. 1930. Pp. 44, 45.Google Scholar
Sanders, E. P. (1928). Changes in the blood cells of kittens resulting from infections with Endamoeba histolytica. Amer. J. Hyg. 8, 963.Google Scholar
Sautet, J. (1926). Action de l'amidon sur les cultures d'amibes. Ann. Parasitol. 4, 345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sautet, J. (1929). Pouvoir pathogène des cultures d'Entamoeba dysenteriae faites en présence d'amidon de riz. Ann. Parasitol. 7, 140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swellengrebel, N. H. (1914). Dierlijke entamoeben uit Deli. Geneesk. Tijdschr. Nederl.-Indië, 54, 420.Google Scholar
Ujihara, K. (1914). Studien über die Amöbendysenterie. Z. Hyg. 77, 329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, E. L. in: Walker, and Sellards, (1913). Experimental entamoebic dysentery. Philippine J. Sci. (B. Trop. Med.), 8, 253.Google Scholar