A conventional and easy method to establish a murine oral candidiasis model, which has not only a stable yeast population in the oral cavity but also symptoms characteristic of oral thrush, was developed by using a sedative agent. Mice were immunosuppressed with prednisolone and were given tetracycline hydrochloride. They were orally infected with 106 viable cells of Candida albicans by means of a cotton swab and enough chlorpromazine chloride had been injected to keep them in a sedative state about for 3 hr after inoculation. From day 3 to day 7 post inoculation, 105-106 colony forming units of Candida were recovered from the oral cavity of each mouse and whitish, curd-like patches were observed on most parts of tongue. Microscopically, germ tubes had appeared on the tongue surface. This model would be a useful experimental oral candidiasis for investigating the pathogenesis of C. albicans oral infection and the efficacy of various antifungal agents microbiologically and symptomatically.
CITATION STYLE
Takakura, N., Sato, Y., Ishibashi, H., Oshima, H., Uchida, K., Yamaguchi, H., & Abe, S. (2003). A novel murine model of oral candidiasis with local symptoms characteristic of oral thrush. Microbiology and Immunology, 47(5), 321–326. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1348-0421.2003.tb03403.x
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