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Some peculiar and probably Specific Bodies in the Erythrocytes in Rinderpest and another allied Disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Extract

The virus of rinderpest is present in the blood and all the body-fluids during the febrile period. In the blood it is so plentiful that the inoculation of a single drop of a 1 in 10,000 dilution is said to be sufficient to infect a calf. According to Nicolle and Adil Bey the causal agent is filterable, and therefore is supposed to be ultra-microscopic. Direct examination of fresh specimens reveals nothing parasitic, nor has anything of the kind been shown by various methods of staining of dried films.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1913

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References

1 Études sur la peste bovine.” Ann. d. l'Inst. Pasteur, 04 1899 and 09 1901.Google Scholar

2 Ultimately, whether after natural recovery or at the end of the immunising process, the earlier shaptes give place to short thick and stumpy or rounded forms which resemble mere accretions of haemoglobin and stain, only they are seen entirely withing a perhaps unaltered corpuscle. (See Plate XIX figs. 111, 112.)Google Scholar

1 Meaning proportion of deaths to number of animals in a known herd, in a limited area where all are possible contacts.Google Scholar