Literature DB >> 2659700

Vaccination and skin test studies on the children of leprosy patients.

J L Stanford1, C A Stanford, K Ghazi Saidi, Y Dowlati, S F Weiss, Y Farshchi, F Madlener, R J Rees.   

Abstract

In an attempt to achieve maximal skin-test positivity to leprosin A in children of leprosy patients living in Baba Baghi Leprosy Sanatorium in Iranian Azerbaijan, two new vaccines have been employed. Children without scars of previous BCG and without response to leprosin A were given a vaccine containing 10(8) viable units of BCG Glaxo plus 10(7) killed Mycobacterium vaccae per dose (vaccine B). Children with BCG Pasteur (Teheran) scars but without response to leprosin A were given a vaccine containing 10(8) killed M. vaccae alone (vaccine D). Eight years later skin testing was repeated, and both new vaccines were found to have significantly increased the numbers of children responding to leprosin A above the level that would have been expected had they received BCG Pasteur alone. This increase was due in large part to increases in the proportions of individuals responding to group i (common mycobacterial) antigens, and known as category 1 responders. The use of suspensions of killed M. vaccae in conjunction with BCG may represent a considerable advance in inducing protection from multibacillary leprosy in close contacts of leprosy patients if leprosin A positivity is truly a correlate of protective immunity. A comparison, using the same criteria, with the other proposed vaccines for leprosy would be very interesting.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2659700

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis        ISSN: 0148-916X


  4 in total

1.  Lsr2 peptides of Mycobacterium leprae show hierarchical responses in lymphoproliferative assays, with selective recognition by patients with anergic lepromatous leprosy.

Authors:  Mehervani Chaduvula; A Murtaza; Namita Misra; N P Shankar Narayan; V Ramesh; H K Prasad; Rajni Rani; R K Chinnadurai; Indira Nath
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2011-12-05       Impact factor: 3.441

2.  Leprosy Associated with Atypical Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Nicaragua and Honduras.

Authors:  Lucrecia Acosta Soto; Nelson Caballero; Lesny Ruth Fuentes; Pedro Torres Muñoz; Jose Ramón Gómez Echevarría; Montserrat Pérez López; Fernando Jorge Bornay Llinares; John L Stanford; Cynthia A Stanford; Helen D Donoghue
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 2.345

Review 3.  Dogma and innovation in the global control of tuberculosis: discussion paper.

Authors:  J M Grange; J L Stanford
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  1994-05       Impact factor: 18.000

Review 4.  Rapidly Growing Mycobacterium Species: The Long and Winding Road from Tuberculosis Vaccines to Potent Stress-Resilience Agents.

Authors:  Mattia Amoroso; Dominik Langgartner; Christopher A Lowry; Stefan O Reber
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 5.923

  4 in total

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