| Literature DB >> 27047477 |
Abstract
In the United States in the 1930s, although the pathogen was not known, atypical pneumonia was clinically distinguished from pneumococcal pneumonia by its resistance to sulfonamides. Reimann (1938) reported seven patients with an unusual form of tracheo bronchopneumonia and severe constitutional symptoms. He believed the clinical picture of this disease differed from that of the disease caused by influenza viruses or known bacteria and instead suspected "primary atypical pneumonia." For many years, the responsible infectious agent was tentatively classified as a filterable virus that could pass through a Seitz filter to remove bacteria and was reported to be a psittacosis-like or new virus. After that, Eaton et al. (1942, 1944, 1945) identified an agent that was the principal cause of primary atypical pneumonia using cotton rats, hamsters, and chick embryos. Eaton et al. (1942, 1944, 1945) did not perform an inoculation study in human volunteers. During the 1940s, there were three groups engaged in discovering the etiology of the primary atypical pneumonia. (1) Commission on Acute Respiratory Diseases Diseases directed by John Dingle, (2) Dr. Monroe Eaton's group, the Virus Research Laboratory of the California State Public Health Department, (3) The Hospital of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research directed by Horsfall. During 1940s, the members of the Commission on Acute Respiratory Diseases concluded that the bacteria-free filtrates obtained from the patients, presumably containing a virus, could induce primary atypical pneumonia in human volunteers via Pinehurst trials. During 1950s, serological approaches for identification of the Eaton agent developed such as Fluorescent-Stainable Antibody, and at the beginning of the1960s, the Eaton agent successfully grew in media, and finally accepted as a cause of primary atypical pneumonia. Thus, technical difficulties with visualizing the agent and failure to recognize the full significance of the Pinehurst transmission experiments resulted in a lapse of 20 years before acceptance of the Eaton agent as Mycoplasma pneumoniae. This review describes the history of M. pneumoniae pneumonia with a special focus on the recognition between the 1930 and 1960s of the Eaton agent as the infectious cause.Entities:
Keywords: Eaton agent; Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia; Pinehurst trials; history; primary atypical pneumonia
Year: 2016 PMID: 27047477 PMCID: PMC4801885 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
History of acceptance of the Eaton agent as a cause of primary atypical pneumonia.
| Author | Summary |
|---|---|
| First isolation of | |
| Recognition of symptoms of “atypical pneumonia” | |
| Discovery of Eaton agent | |
| Pinehurst trials: first trial | |
| Pinehurst trials: second trial | |
| Pinehurst trials: third trial | |
| Establishment of IF technique | |
| Eaton agent causes lower respiratory tract infection | |
| Eaton agent grow in cell culture, monkey kidney tissue culture | |
| Eaton agent causes lower respiratory tract infection | |
| Fluorescent-stainable antibody to the Eaton agent positive for primary atypical pneumonia | |
| Eaton agent is not a virus | |
| NIH conference (1961) | Acceptance of Eaton agent as a cause of primary atypical pneumonia |
| Inoculation of volunteers with Eaton agent | |
| Successful culture of the Eaton agent on cell-free medium | |
| Taxonomic designation of | |