Non-fatal infection of mice following intracerebral inoculation of yellow fever virus

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Abstract

Observations have been reported which indicate that mice inoculated intrao cerebrally with active yellow fever virus may develop an infection which is not only non-fatal but may also be completely inapparent. The most extensive observations were made on mice which showed signs of infection but were still alive 22 days after inoculation with virus of one or another of several 17D substrains. In such cases, the infection usually progressed no further and partial or complete recovery often ensued. Agents other than yellow fever virus were excluded as a significant cause of such nonfatal infections by the failure of repeated attempts to isolate other infective agents, by the demonstration of antibodies against yellow fever virus in the sera of the mice, and by the demonstration of a high degree of resistance on the part of such surviving mice to reinoculation with large doses of neurotropic yellow fever virus. © 1943, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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APA

Fox, J. P. (1943). Non-fatal infection of mice following intracerebral inoculation of yellow fever virus. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 77(6), 507–520. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.77.6.507

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