Literature DB >> 19870468

RESPIRATORY VERSUS GASTRO-INTESTINAL INFECTION IN POLIOMYELITIS.

S Flexner1.   

Abstract

The debated problem of gastro-intestinal versusrespiratory mode of infection in poliomyelitis has been restudied by several investigators recently, with conflicting findings. Kling and Levaditi in Europe carried out experiments from 1929 to 1933, which led them to the conclusion that the digestive tract affords a ready entrance of the virus of the disease into the body. They believe that the substitution of Macacus cynomolgus for Macacus rhesus as the animal of choice for the tests supports this point of view. Toomey in the United States has arrived at a similar conclusion, not by employing a particular species of monkey for experiment, but by the use of drastic measures of inoculation, which insure that the virus makes contact with the unmyelinated nerve fibers embedded in the intestinal wall. Toomey's methods are so severe and artificial that his results cannot be regarded as simulating a natural mode of infection. We have repeated the tests of Kling and Levaditi, but in a far more comprehensive manner than was followed by them, and, like Clark and his associates who early repeated them, we have failed to confirm them. Indeed, we do not find Macacus cynomolgusand rhesus to differ in any essential way in their response to the presence of the virus of poliomyelitis in the body. Cynomolgido not respond to virus introduced into the stomach when contamination of the buccal and nasal cavities is avoided; they respond, as do rhesi, to virus directly injected into the intestine when virus passes into the intestinal wall and makes the necessary nerve fiber contact. Both Macacus cynomolgus and Macacus rhesus which have resisted feedings of virus are subject to nasal instillations of the same strains of virus and in the same degree. On the basis of the experiments reported in this paper we can reaffirm the conclusion previously arrived at by ourselves, and confirmed independently by investigators in Europe and America, namely that the only established portal of entry of the virus of poliomyelitis into the central nervous system of man is the nasal membrane, and especially the olfactory nervous areas in that membrane.

Entities:  

Year:  1936        PMID: 19870468      PMCID: PMC2133330          DOI: 10.1084/jem.63.2.209

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Med        ISSN: 0022-1007            Impact factor:   14.307


  7 in total

1.  THE EFFECTS OF NASALLY INSTILLED VIRUS OF POLIOMYELITIS ON THE CEREBROSPINAL FLUID AND THE BLOOD OF MONKEYS.

Authors:  S Flexner
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1935-11-30       Impact factor: 14.307

2.  ISOLATION OF POLIOMYELITIS VIRUS FROM THE NASOPHARYNX.

Authors:  J R Paul; J D Trask; L T Webster
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1935-07-31       Impact factor: 14.307

3.  LOCALIZATION OF THE VIRUS AND PATHOGENESIS OF EPIDEMIC POLIOMYELITIS.

Authors:  S Flexner; H L Amoss
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1914-09-01       Impact factor: 14.307

4.  A CONTRIBUTION TO THE PATHOLOGY OF EPIDEMIC POLIOMYELITIS.

Authors:  S Flexner; P F Clark; H L Amoss
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1914-02-01       Impact factor: 14.307

5.  PENETRATION OF THE VIRUS OF POLIOMYELITIS FROM THE BLOOD INTO THE CEREBROSPINAL FLUID.

Authors:  S Flexner; H L Amoss
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1914-04-01       Impact factor: 14.307

6.  CARRIAGE OF THE VIRUS OF POLIOMYELITIS, WITH SUBSEQUENT DEVELOPMENT OF THE INFECTION.

Authors:  E Taylor; H L Amoss
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1917-11-01       Impact factor: 14.307

7.  PERSISTENCE OF THE VIRUS OF POLIOMYELITIS IN THE NASOPHARYNX.

Authors:  S Flexner; H L Amoss
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1919-04-01       Impact factor: 14.307

  7 in total
  9 in total

Review 1.  The Olfactory Bulb: An Immunosensory Effector Organ during Neurotropic Viral Infections.

Authors:  Douglas M Durrant; Soumitra Ghosh; Robyn S Klein
Journal:  ACS Chem Neurosci       Date:  2016-04-08       Impact factor: 4.418

2.  A Review of Recent Studies on the Epidemiology of Poliomyelitis in the United States.

Authors:  J R Paul
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  1938-07

3.  POLIOMYELITIS AND THE LYMPHATIC APPARATUS.

Authors:  J M Yoffey; C K Drinker
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1939-06-30       Impact factor: 14.307

4.  REINFECTION (SECOND ATTACK) IN EXPERIMENTAL POLIOMYELITIS.

Authors:  S Flexner
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1937-03-31       Impact factor: 14.307

5.  Gastrointestinal Immunity and Alpha-Synuclein.

Authors:  Denise Barbut; Ethan Stolzenberg; Michael Zasloff
Journal:  J Parkinsons Dis       Date:  2019       Impact factor: 5.568

6.  SARS-CoV-2 Receptors and Entry Genes Are Expressed in the Human Olfactory Neuroepithelium and Brain.

Authors:  Leon Fodoulian; Joël Tuberosa; Daniel Rossier; Madlaina Boillat; Chenda Kan; Véronique Pauli; Kristof Egervari; Johannes A Lobrinus; Basile N Landis; Alan Carleton; Ivan Rodriguez
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2020-11-25

7.  POLIOMYELITIS IN THE CYNOMOLGUS MONKEY : I. COMPARISON OF THE UPPER PORTION OF THE ALIMENTARY TRACT WITH ITS LOWER, GASTROINTESTINAL PORTION AS A PORTAL OF ENTRY, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE PERIPHERAL GANGLIA.

Authors:  H K Faber; R J Silverberg; L Dong
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1943-12-01       Impact factor: 14.307

8.  THE SUSCEPTIBILITY OF INFANT RHESUS MONKEYS TO POLIOMYELITIS VIRUS ADMINISTERED BY MOUTH : A STUDY OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF VIRUS IN THE TISSUES OF ORALLY INFECTED ANIMALS.

Authors:  D M Horstmann; J L Melnick; R Ward; M J Sá Fleitas
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1947-09-30       Impact factor: 14.307

9.  THE NATURAL HISTORY OF HUMAN POLIOMYELITIS : I. DISTRIBUTION OF VIRUS IN NERVOUS AND NON-NERVOUS TISSUES.

Authors:  A B Sabin; R Ward
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1941-05-31       Impact factor: 14.307

  9 in total

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