Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 42
pro vyhledávání: '"Dan C. Cavanaugh"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Infectious Diseases. 129:S26-S29
Studies with sera collected during a 20-year period from 117 individuals who received multiple inoculations of plague vaccine, USP, revealed three patterns of serologic response. Eighty-four individuals responded with high titers of indirect hemagglu
Publikováno v:
Journal of Infectious Diseases. 129:S13-S18
Due to the erroneous concept relating reactogenicity to immunogenicity, killed plague vaccines were initially produced and standardized to insure that the majority of persons receiving them would experience severe local and systemic reactions. Subseq
Autor:
Daniel N. Harrison, John D. Marshall, Dennis M. Schaberg, James E. Williams, Ronald F. Huntley, Dan C. Cavanaugh
Publikováno v:
Journal of Infectious Diseases. 129:S72-S77
The presence of HA antibody to the Fraction I antigen of Yersinia pestis was examined in sera of neonatal, suckling, and newly weaned Rattus norvegicus. Newborn rats from immunized dams possessed antibody at birth, before suckling. Antibody declined
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 135:391-397
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 131:68-71
Publikováno v:
Journal of Infectious Diseases. 125:556-559
Swine were shown to be clinically refractory to experimental plague. Yersinia pestis, formerly known as Pasteurella pestis, was not isolated from blood or from buccal-cavity cultures 4 hr or more after oral challenge. In spite of the lack of clinical
Autor:
Dan C. Cavanaugh, Raymond Randall
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Immunology. 83:348-363
Summary The result of experiments conducted in this laboratory to determine the fate of virulent strains of Pasteurella pestis inoculated into an animal host by a blocked flea led to an examination and extension of the observations of Burrows (3) and
Autor:
Dan C. Cavanaugh
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 20:264-273
Flea-borne bubonic plague cannot exist in epidemic proportions when the mean monthly ambient temperature exceeds 27.5°C. At temperatures in excess of 27.5°C, many fleas do not become blocked with Pasteurella pestis (Yersinia pestis), thus decreasin
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 132:896-903
Publikováno v:
Experimental Biology and Medicine. 124:1083-1086
SummaryPasteurella pestis was isolated from 7 Suncus murinus spleen pools and 3 flea pools obtained from it. Lesions indicating an acute infection were not observed in any of the 1,757 animals examined. When pooled sera were examined, 15 of 55 pools