EXPERIMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY OF COCCIDIOIDOMYCOSIS: 1. EPIZOOTIOLOGY OF NATURALLY EXPOSED MONKEYS AND DOGS
Abstract
Animals from constant populations of monkeys and dogs (24 of each divided among 3 exposure sites) housed for 1 year in the open in a known endemic area for coccidioidomycosis (Tucson, Arizona) were removed - upon contracting infection with Coccidioides immitis - to air-conditioned quarters for further observation and were immediately replaced at the exposure sites with other susceptible animals. Periodic soil and air samples were obtained, and appropriate climatic data were recorded throughout the one-year period. Clinical and laboratory observations were continuously recorded for all animals, and complete necropsies were performed at the termination of the experiment. Approximately 15% (5/34) of the monkeys (housed 26 inches above ground) and 58% (29/50) of the dogs (allowed free run of 30 x 40 ft. pens) became infected during the 1-year period, the majority (25/34) during the cooler months (November through March). Comparison of the pathogenesis of the disease in the naturally-infected monkeys with that in experimentally-infected monkeys indicated a natural, air-borne, infectious dose of probably less than 10 arthrospores. The infection rate, as well as the extent of disease, in the naturally-infected dogs was greater than in either the naturally-infected monkeys or the experimentally-infected dogs, and was attributed to their contact with the ground.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Dec 01, 1965
- Accession Number
- AD0655182
Entities
People
- Ernest M. Snyder
- Harry W. Kuller
- John G. Ray Jr.
- John L. Converse
- Raymond E. Reed
- Robert J. Trautman
Organizations
- United States Army Biological Warfare Laboratories