Tick-Borne Pathogens with Special Reference to a Possible Extra-Human Cycle of Epidemic Typhus Infection.
Abstract
The studies undertaken in the contract are fully counter to the recent and much-quoted contention that ticks and domestic animals play a significant role in the ecology of epidemic typhus and, instead, strongly suggest that the serological data that had been presented in support of such a hypothesis are based upon artifacts. Thus, out of 861 Ethiopian livestock sera and 2,849 sera from Egyptian domestic animals tested by complement fixation (CF) in our program, none of the samples contained antibodies specific for rickettsiae of either epidemic typhus or murine typhus. Moreover, 821 of 822 sera from Egyptian donkeys were anticomplementary and therefore nonspecifically 'positive' in CF tests. It is our opinion that the identical or a similar anticomplementary substance, identified by us as IgM, accounted for the results reported as 'positive' by earlier workers. (Modified author abstract)
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Sep 30, 1974
- Accession Number
- AD0783069
Entities
People
- Charles L. Wisseman Jr.
- Joseph E. Mcdade
Organizations
- University of Maryland, Baltimore