EFFECT OF COLD ON BLOOD CLEARANCE OF CARBON AND BACTERIA OF DIFFERENT VIRULENCE,
Abstract
Mice singly housed without bedding at 5C clear carbon from the blood more slowly than animals similarly housed at 25C. Increasing the time of exposure to cold to 2, 18 or 72 hours does not further alter the rate of clearance. Bacteria are also 'cleared' uniformly at the two temperatures when a highly virulent straing (SR-11) of Salmonella typhimurium is injected intravenously, but not when one of low virulence (RIA) is used. The RIA strain disappears from blood more slowly in mice at 5C than in those at 25C. This was demonstrated both by dilution counts and by labeling the bacteria with P32 and following the decline in radioactivity of blood with time. Livers of mice were sampled at times postinfection for radioactivity and for viable bacterial counts. Housing temperature had no effect on radioactivity changes, but viable counts were higher and decreased more slowly in mice at 5C than at 25C. These findings are believed to account, in part, for the greater susceptibility to infection with RIA that was previously seen in mice exposed to cold compared to those at 25C. (Author)
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 01, 1965
- Accession Number
- AD0615010
Entities
People
- Dorothy S. Smythe
- L. Joe Berry
Organizations
- Bryn Mawr College