Studies on the nasopharyngeal secretions from patients with common colds

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Abstract

From the foregoing experiments it appears that with the filtered nasopharyngeal secretions from early cases of typical infectious common colds in the first 3 to 18 hours of the disease, a similar condition can be transmitted to man. With the unheated but not with the heated secretions from four of six such patients we have succeeded in transmitting an affection indistinguishable from common cold to four men and in two instances the condition was conveyed from the person with the experimental disease to a second individual—in all, therefore, to six supposedly normal subjects. The periods of incubation in the experimental disease varied from 8 to 48 hours. We failed to obtain these results with the filtered secretions from cases of common colds 18 and 20 hours after the onset of symptoms and from a patient with the experimental disease 20 hours after the first symptoms. It would appear that the secretions are more active in the early hours of the affection. We also failed in the two instances in which colds were caused by exposure to the elements, or chilling of the body, and not by definite contact with other cases of common colds. © 1923, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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APA

Olitsky, P. K., & McCartney, J. E. (1923). Studies on the nasopharyngeal secretions from patients with common colds. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 38(4), 427–440. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.38.4.427

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