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Creators (Definite): W. Rees Wright; Warrington YorkeDate: 1926
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Created by W. Rees Wright
1926
Description:‘In the now extensive literature relating to the malaria treatment of general paralysis, the statement is not infrequently encountered that maintenance in the human host for prolonged periods, by direct inoculation of infective blood from one individual to another, modifies the malaria parasite in certain important respects.
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In previous papers (Yorke and Macfie, 1924, and Yorke, 1925) reference is made to the fact that a strain of Plasmodium vivax maintained by direct passage in the human host since September, 1922 -partly at Whittingham, and partly at Sheffield, mental hospitals - was still capable of infecting A. maculipennis at various passages up to the forty-first.
In March, 1926, after the strain had been maintained in the human host for three and a half years, its capacity to infect A. maculipennis was again examined. Forty-seven mosquitos were allowed to feed three times on a patient of the fifty-third passage, and once on a patient of the fifty-fourth passage. Fifteen days after the first feed, the mosquitos were divided into four groups, each of which was fed on a general paralytic; all four patients became infected [327-328] with malaria. Twenty-three of the mosquitos, which lived for longer than a week after the first feed, were dissected, and of these nineteen were found to be infected-three with oocysts only, and sixteen with sporozoites in the salivary glands.
This observation shows that the strain in question had preserved unimpaired its power to infect mosquitos after fifty-three or fifty-four direct passages through man during a period of three and a half years.’ (327-328)
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Created by Warrington Yorke
1926
Description:‘In the now extensive literature relating to the malaria treatment of general paralysis, the statement is not infrequently encountered that maintenance in the human host for prolonged periods, by direct inoculation of infective blood from one individual to another, modifies the malaria parasite in certain important respects.
...
In previous papers (Yorke and Macfie, 1924, and Yorke, 1925) reference is made to the fact that a strain of Plasmodium vivax maintained by direct passage in the human host since September, 1922 -partly at Whittingham, and partly at Sheffield, mental hospitals - was still capable of infecting A. maculipennis at various passages up to the forty-first.
In March, 1926, after the strain had been maintained in the human host for three and a half years, its capacity to infect A. maculipennis was again examined. Forty-seven mosquitos were allowed to feed three times on a patient of the fifty-third passage, and once on a patient of the fifty-fourth passage. Fifteen days after the first feed, the mosquitos were divided into four groups, each of which was fed on a general paralytic; all four patients became infected [327-328] with malaria. Twenty-three of the mosquitos, which lived for longer than a week after the first feed, were dissected, and of these nineteen were found to be infected-three with oocysts only, and sixteen with sporozoites in the salivary glands.
This observation shows that the strain in question had preserved unimpaired its power to infect mosquitos after fifty-three or fifty-four direct passages through man during a period of three and a half years.’ (327-328)
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Cites W. Yorke and J.W.S. Macfie, 'Observations on Malaria made During Treatment of General Paralysis,' Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 18 (1-2) (1924), pp. 13-33.
Description:‘In the now extensive literature relating to the malaria treatment of general paralysis, the statement is not infrequently encountered that maintenance in the human host for prolonged periods, by direct inoculation of infective blood from one individual to another, modifies the malaria parasite in certain important respects.
...
In previous papers (Yorke and Macfie, 1924, and Yorke, 1925) reference is made to the fact that a strain of Plasmodium vivax maintained by direct passage in the human host since September, 1922 -partly at Whittingham, and partly at Sheffield, mental hospitals - was still capable of infecting A. maculipennis at various passages up to the forty-first.’ (327)
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Cites W. Yorke, ‘Further Observations on Malaria made during Treatment of General Paralysis’, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 19 (3) (1925), pp. 108-130.
Description:‘In the now extensive literature relating to the malaria treatment of general paralysis, the statement is not infrequently encountered that maintenance in the human host for prolonged periods, by direct inoculation of infective blood from one individual to another, modifies the malaria parasite in certain important respects.
...
In previous papers (Yorke and Macfie, 1924, and Yorke, 1925) reference is made to the fact that a strain of Plasmodium vivax maintained by direct passage in the human host since September, 1922 -partly at Whittingham, and partly at Sheffield, mental hospitals - was still capable of infecting A. maculipennis at various passages up to the forty-first.’ (327)