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The Effects of Colloidal Silica on Experimental Tuberculosis in Guinea-Pigs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

S. L. Cummins
Affiliation:
From the Tuberculosis Department, Welsh National School of Medicine, Cardiff.
Cicely Weatherall
Affiliation:
From the Tuberculosis Department, Welsh National School of Medicine, Cardiff.
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Gye and Kettle (1922), from a study of the effects of subcutaneous inoculation of silica alone, tubercle bacilli alone and tubercle bacilli with silica, arrived at the conclusion that there is, after the introduction of tubercle bacilli with silica, “a much greater local reaction than with an infection of tubercle bacilli alone and, further, that general dissemination is earlier and more active.” As a result, “a small dose of bacilli becomes a dose of considerable magnitude and, inasmuch as an important factor in determining an infectious process is the number of organisms introduced, a simple explanation is forthcoming of the effect of silica upon such tuberculous lesions as we have described.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1933

References

Gye, W. J. and Kettle, E. H. (1922). J. Exper. Path. 3, 241.Google Scholar
Krause, A. K. and Willis, H. S. (1924). Bull. Internat. Union against Tuber. 1, No. 3.Google Scholar
Maver, M. E. and Wells, H. Gideon (1924). Amer. Rev. Tuberc. 8, 318.Google Scholar
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