2,430 results
Search Results
2. The survival of Shigella sonnei on cotton, glass, wood, paper, and metal at various temperatures.
- Author
-
NAKAMURA M
- Subjects
- Glass, Metals, Paper, Shigella ethnology, Shigella sonnei, Temperature, Textiles, Wood
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A simple method for the determination of bacterial sensitivity to sulphonamides by the use of blotting-paper disks.
- Author
-
EVANS RJ
- Subjects
- Paper, Sulfonamides
- Published
- 1948
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Notes on the preparation of papers for publication in the Journal of Hygiene and in Parasitology.
- Author
-
Nuttall, G. H. F.
- Abstract
Before the foundation in 1893 of the Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology by the late Professor Sir G. Sims Woodhead, there was no English journal devoted to pathology, bacteriology and kindred subjects. In 1901 Professor G. H. F. Nuttall founded the Journal of Hygiene, the second English journal of this type, and edited it till his death in December 1937. Owing to the increasing number of papers on parasitological subjects, which he received for publication in this journal, he founded Parasitology in 1908 and was its chief editor till 1933. He was very proud of both journals, and for some years made himself personally responsible for the heavy expenses of production. Within a few years of its foundation each began to pay for itself, and afterwards both were taken over by the Cambridge University Press. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1940
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A note on the seven papers by the late A. Stanley Griffith published during 1941-2.
- Author
-
Griffith AN
- Published
- 1944
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Letter relating to the paper entitled "The successful application of Preventive Measures against Beri-Beri," by Dr Hamilton Wright.
- Author
-
Travers GA
- Published
- 1905
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Notes on the subject matter of a previous paper.
- Author
-
Buchanan-Wollaston HJ
- Published
- 1942
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Appendix to the Paper by M. Greenwood, E. M. Newbold, W. W. C. Topley and J. Wilson "On the Mechanisms by which Protection against Infectious Disease is acquired in 'Natural' Epidemics.
- Author
-
Newbold EM
- Published
- 1927
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Present State of our Knowledge of Hay-Fever: Being a Paper Presented at the Berlin Congress of the Royal Institute of Public Health.
- Author
-
Dunbar WP
- Published
- 1913
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Note to the foregoing paper by Professor Ronald Ross.
- Author
-
Nuttall GH
- Published
- 1906
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Relating to the paper entitled “The successful application of Preventive Measures against Beri-Beri,” by Dr Hamilton Wright.
- Author
-
Travers, G. A. O.
- Published
- 1905
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Note to the Foregoing Paper By Professor Ronald Ross.
- Author
-
G. H. F. N.
- Abstract
In view of the great interest attached to the questions discussed in the preceding paper, and the doubt expressed therein regarding the accuracy of Schaudinn's observations on the relationship between Halteridium and Trypanosoma, it seems expedient to reprint the following short papers by Novy, MacNeal, and Torrey, and Novy and Knapp, which appeared on February 9th, 1906, in Science (vol. 23, pp. 207–208). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1906
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Aerosol sampling methods for the virus of foot-and-mouth disease and the measurement of virus penetration through aerosol filters.
- Author
-
Thorne, H. V. and Burrows, T. M.
- Abstract
Single and multi-jet liquid impingers and membrane-filters were found to be efficient sampling devices for aerosols generated from suspensions of the virus of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Concentration of the aerosol samples with an adsorbent, Attaclay, facilitated the detection of small amounts of virus. Sodium dodecyl sulphate could be used for elution as the virus of FMD is resistant to this anionic detergent.The penetration of these aerosols through various air filtration media was determined using impinger samplers. A glass fibre paper was found to be the most efficient with a virus penetration of less than 0·001%.We wish to thank Dr D. W. Henderson and Dr H. M. Darlow, of M.R.E. and Mr R. G. Dorman of C.D.E. Porton for valuable prefatory discussions and advice. We are also indebted to Miss S. Cartwright for inoculating mice, to Miss M. Shoobridge and Mr S. Taylor for technical assistance, and to Vokes Ltd. for supplying materials. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Typhoid Fever in Palestine.
- Author
-
Peller, S.
- Abstract
No information from official or non-official sources is available on the prevalence of enteric fevers in Palestine in pre-war days. Since the establishment of the British Administration (1919) the Annual Reports of the Government Department of Health invariably emphasise the high incidence of enteric fevers. Several papers dealing with the epidemiology of the disease appeared in the Hebrew periodicals Briuth Haam and Harefuah and in 1926 an elaborate Report was submitted to the Department of Health by a Committee of Enquiry appointed by the Department to consider and advise on the situation as regards enteric fever in the country. The data thus accumulated, although very valuable for the local health authorities, did not reveal any peculiar features of more than local interest. Their publication abroad seemed, therefore, superfluous. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1928
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Studies in the Meaning and Relationships of Birth and Death Rates. I. The Relationship between “Corrected” Death Rates and Life Table Death Rates.
- Author
-
Brownlee, John
- Abstract
Circumstances in connection with the recent census have again directed my attention to the laws which govern human life. I have long been of the opinion that the old ideas that birth rates and death rates had no biological relationship beyond the obvious ones, that many infants mean more deaths, etc., usually found stated in public health text books, were based on a very imperfect induction. On one aspect of this I published a paper a number of years ago in the Transactions of the Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow (1), and last summer Sir Shirley Murphy(2) read a paper on another aspect of the same subject before the Sanitary Congress held at York. But I have hitherto refrained from publishing theories because I believe that until quantitative measures are applied no scientific results worthy of discussion can be obtained. Now that such seem to be possible, I propose to discuss in a series of papers the different relationships which I have investigated. No mathematics will be introduced in the earlier papers, but the results of all will be summarised and dealt with in their mathematical and physico-chemical relationships in a concluding communication. The first paper relates to the connection between the “corrected” death rates and the “true” death rates as found by constructing a life table. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1913
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Vi antigen of Salmonella paratyphi B.
- Author
-
Felix, A.
- Abstract
1. Salmonella paratyphi B possesses a Vi antigen essentially similar to the Vi antigens of Salm. typhi and Salm. paratyphi A.2. The biological function of the Vi antigen of Salm. paratyphi B is to protect the O antigen against the action of the natural or immune O antibody, thereby increasing the virulence of the microorganism.3. The most suitable paratyphoid-B vaccine strains are those that develop both the Vi and the O antigens in maximum quantities. The methods of testing vaccine strains of Salm. paratyphi B are essentially the same as those applied to the virulent Vi+O form of Salm. typhi.4. Evidence is brought to show that Kauffmann's conclusion that Salm. paratyphi B does not develop Vi antigen is unfounded. The so-called O-factors V and V obviously cannot be classified as O antigens.5. It is suggested that the symbol V of the Kauffmann-White schema be abandoned and this antigenic component be classed as the Vi antigen of Salm. paratyphi B. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. An account of the Journal of Hygiene, 1901–1950.
- Author
-
Graham-Smith, G. S.
- Abstract
The manuscript notes from which the following Account of the Journal of Hygiene has been prepared for the press were left unfinished by Dr Graham-Smith at the time of his death on 30 August 1950. He intended that the Account should be published to mark the fiftieth year of the Journal's existence. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Quantitative aspects of antigen-antibody reactions. II. Some comparisons between the theory and the experimental results.
- Author
-
Teorell, Torsten
- Abstract
The quantitative theory for the interaction between antigen and antibody presented in the previous paper has been compared with some experimental precipitin reactions published in the literature. These reactions include Type VIII pneumococcus polysaccharide-homologous (horse) antibody, egg albumin-(rabbit) anti-egg albumin and diphtheria toxin-(horse) antitoxin.1. The general course of the experimental precipitation curves (total amount of precipitate, amounts of precipitated antigen and antibody) corresponded well to the theoretical type curves. Hence it may be concluded that the precipitates may be composed of mixtures of compounds of the types AG, A2G, A3G, …, ANG in accordance with the law of mass action. In the cases with ‘inhibition zones’, however, AG, or ANG, or both (and perhaps several more compounds) retain the same solubility as the free antigen (G) and free antibody (A).2. With regard to the location of the ‘equivalence zones’, experiment and theory also showed a satisfactory agreement.3. A hypothesis on the velocity of flocculation in the precipitin reaction is presented and compared with some recent results. The relation between the immunological concepts ‘equivalence (neutral) point’, ‘optimum point’ and ‘maximum precipitation point’ is also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1946
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Contributions to the mathematical theory of epidemics: V. Analysis of experimental epidemics of mouse-typhoid; a bacterial disease conferring incomplete immunity.
- Author
-
Kermack, W. O. and McKendrick, A. G.
- Abstract
In a recently published paper (Kermack & McKendrick, 1937) the observational data relating to epidemics of ectromelia in populations of mice maintained under experimental conditions (Greenwood et al. 1936) has been analysed in the light of a mathematical theory of epidemics developed by us during recent years (Kermack & McKendrick, 1927, 1932, 1933, 1936). It was shown that the life table giving the chance of mice surviving for various lengths of time in infected communities is very closely represented by a formula calculated on the assumption that the various rates—infection rate, recovery rate, death rate, etc.—are constants. It is, of course, realized that this simplifying assumption can only be regarded as approximately true. It renders the application of the general theory practicable, and the result of the investigation justifies its use, in so far as the theory so simplified does actually conform to the experimental results. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1939
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. “Laws” of Mortality from the Biological point of view.
- Author
-
Greenwood
- Abstract
For some years one of my principal interests has been to study, in collaboration with my colleagues, E. M. Newbold, W. W. C. Topley and J. Wilson, the epidemiological phenomena observable in communities of mice exposed to risk of infection. In this work we have often found it convenient to summarise part of our results under the form of what we call a Life Table. We treat the entrants to our communities as live-births and determine the rate of mortality prevalent in the community over a certain epoch for each day of life, in the familiar life-table form. The result has a formal resemblance to a life table, but, from the nature of the case, it can have little or no bearing upon the course of events in a normal community. Naturally, however, one desired to set up some normal standard of mortality for the animal species used and, having obtained some scanty data, one was led to speculate further upon the biology of the so-called “laws” which have been from time to time proposed to describe the course of mortality in man. In this paper, I have brought together the imperfect results of such study as I have been able to make. Their practical value, from the point of view of the description of human mortality, is, it need hardly be said, negligible, while as a contribution to the history of “laws” of mortality what is omitted is perhaps as important as what is discussed. I have, however, felt justified in printing this essay in the hope that it might be accepted as a tribute in piam memoriam of my friend and colleague John Brownlee. The title of one of Brownlee's papers—“The Biology of a Life Table”—was the inspiration of much of his life-work. He approached the problem with an erudition, both biological and mathematical, to which I have no pretensions and, had his power of exposition been equal to his natural sagacity and learning, there would have been small need of any other writer. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1928
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Spread of Bacterial Infection; Some General Considerations.
- Author
-
Topley, W. W. C.
- Abstract
In a recent series of papers, Flexner (1922), Lynch (1922), Amoss (1922a and b) and Webster (1922a and b) record the results obtained at the Rockefeller Institute in an experimental investigation of epidemics among laboratory animals. These experiments bear a close similarity to those which have been recorded in previous papers of the present series (Topley, 1919, 1921 a and b, 1922 a and b, and Topley, Weir and Wilson, 1921). Their publication affords an opportunity of comparing the results obtained in two independent enquiries, which have been carried out along slightly different lines, and of describing in more detail certain points in the general technique of our own experiments, which have an important bearing on the significance of the results obtained. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1923
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Canine Piroplasmosis. VI. Studies on the Morphology and Life-History of the Parasite.
- Author
-
Nuttall, George H. F. and Graham-Smith, G. S.
- Abstract
In the present paper we describe the results of further investigations on the life-history of Piroplasma canis in the blood of the dog. In our last paper (x. 1906) we described and figured the movements of the parasite and the mode of multiplication in the dog's blood, and since that time we have confirmed most of our previous observations, and added further facts. The technique of these examinations was fully explained in that paper (p. 604), and it is only necessary to state here that all our later observations on living blood have been made at a temperature of 35°—40°C. The drops of blood were mounted on clean glass slides and cover-glasses kept at this temperature, and were placed as rapidly as possible on the stage of a microscope kept at a similar temperature in a Nuttall's thermostat and examined under a oil immersion lens. In fact we have endeavoured to make our observations in such a manner that the blood should be altered as little as possible. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1907
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Notes on the Parasites of Mosquitoes found in India between 1895 and 1899.
- Author
-
Ross, Ronald
- Abstract
On reading the excellent paper on the parasites of the Culicidae recently published by Dr Léon Dyé, I was struck by the fact that several of the organisms mentioned by him had been seen and described by me long ago in the course of my original studies on malaria and mosquitoes carried out in India during 1895–1899. My observations were, however, recorded for the most part in Indian medical publications, which are little accessible to European readers, and have been so far forgotten that some of the parasites of mosquitoes seen by me have been recently rediscovered by various observers. It may therefore be of interest—perhaps not alone from the historical point of view—to resuscitate these old records and compare them with more recent and exact work. I may add that attempts were made by me to infect men with two of the organisms which I observed. My writings on the subject were contained in the following publications, which are here numbered for reference:— [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1906
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. An Improved Method of constructing Shortened Life-Tables.
- Author
-
Hayward, T. E.
- Abstract
The following is an addendum to a paper which appeared in the last number of this Journal.The primary object of the paper was to give working formulae for the construction of a shortened Life-Table, set forth with sufficient clearness to enable them to be practically used by anyone who understands ordinary arithmetic and the use of logarithms, without any necessary comprehension of the principles of the differential or of the integral calculus, by means of which the formulae have been deduced. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1905
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. An Improved Method of calculating Birth-Rates.
- Author
-
Newsholme, Arthur and Stevenson, T. H. C.
- Abstract
1. The ordinary method of calculating the birth-rate does not distinguish between the influence of fertility and of variations in conditions of the population as to age and marriage.2. In ascertaining the true meaning of the great reduction of the birth-rate which has occured in the last 25 years it is necessary to have means for distinguishing between the accidental and the intrinsic causes of change.3. A step in the right direction is made when the legitimate births are stated in terms of the married women at child-bearing ages, and the illegitimate births in terms of the unmarried women of the same ages.4. This method fails to correct for the differences of fertility of the various ages comprised in the age-period 15–45.5. By calculating standard fertility-rates for given populations McLean overcame the above difficulty, and was thus able to compare experiences of a given community at different times with the standard.6. In this paper it is shown that by continuing the above process and obtaining corrected fertility-rates, the fertility-rates of different communities can be made directly comparable.7. The inconveniences of this new and unfamiliar method, and the necessity involved in it of calculating the crude as well as the corrected fertility-rate in every instance, indicate the desirability of obtaining a factor for each community which throughout an entire intercensal period can be applied to the crude birth-rate of that community.8. The desirability of such a factor is increased by the fact that the method of corrected fertility-rates does not take into account the proportion of married women in each population.9. In this paper a method is described of obtaining factors, which, when applied to the readily available crude birth-rates, correct completely both for the varying proportion of married women in compared populations and for the varying fertility at different periods of married life.10. The practical bearings of these corrected birth-rates will be discussed in a later paper. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1905
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. On the Construction and Use of Life-Tables from a Public Health point of view.
- Author
-
Hayward, T. E.
- Abstract
The following notes are to serve as a postscript to the paper which appeared under the above title in the preceding number of the Journal of Hygiene (pages 1—42). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1902
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Comparison of materials used for cleaning equipment in retail food premises, and of two methods for the enumeration of bacteria on cleaned equipment and work surfaces.
- Author
-
Gilbert, R. J.
- Abstract
There is no official scheme for testing disinfectants and detergent/disinfectants for use in the retail food trade and few recommended procedures have been given for the cleaning of equipment with these agents. Therefore, field trials were carried out in a large self-service store. Comparisons were made of the various cleaning efficiencies, as determined by bacterial plate counts, of detergent and disinfectant solutions and machine cleaning oils applied with either clean cloths or disposable paper towels to items of equipment. The most satisfactory results were always obtained when anionic detergent (0·75 % w/v) and hypochlorite (200 p.p.m. available chlorine) solutions were applied in a ‘two-step’ procedure.Tests were made to compare the calcium alginate swab-rinse and the agar sausage (Agaroid) techniques for the enumeration of bacteria on stainless steel, plastic, formica and wooden surfaces before and after a cleaning process. Although recovery rates were always greater by the swab-rinse technique, the agar sausage technique was considered to be a useful routine control method for surface sampling. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. An electron microscope study of molluscum contagiosum.
- Author
-
Charles, Arwyn
- Abstract
The development of the molluscum body and of the molluscum contagiosum virus is described. All cells of the molluscum lesion do not form molluscum bodies, but those which do probably show cytoplasmic abnormality prior to the appearance of virus particles within the cytoplasm. Such abnormal cells may reflect the activity of some infective precursor of the morphologically observable virus particle; they may alternatively represent cells which have successfully resisted invasion by the infective precursor.Cells which have failed to resist invasion gradually become filled with virus particles and the nucleus becomes eccentric. The molluscum body thus formed is virtually a bag of virus particles, the wall of the bag being the peripheral cytoplasm, which seems to resist invasion and in which the nucleus remnant can readily be detected.There appear to be two kinds of viruses. Development of the commoner virus is compared and contrasted with studies by Morgan and his colleagues of vaccinia and fowl pox. It is akin to fowl pox in its origin from foci of finely dispersed cytoplasm, here called cytoplasmic clouds; it is akin to vaccinia in that no evidence can be found of a denser, finely granular, pre-nucleoid material; it is like both in that the virus does not observably develop within the nucleus; and it is unlike both in that a nuclear change—the appearance of rather unspecific dense bodies—is seen. The structural changes seen in the virus particles during development are similar to those described by Morgan et al., but a slightly different interpretation is given of the behaviour of the transient ‘nucleoid’: they believe that it expands to form a central viroplasm, whereas in this paper it is believed to disperse through an already present central viroplasm.The second type of virus is of uncertain origin. It may develop from, or at least it seems to be related to, a double-membrane structure seen in abnormal lesion cells. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. HYG volume 23 issue 4 Cover and Back matter.
- Published
- 1925
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. HYG volume 23 issue 3 Cover and Back matter.
- Published
- 1924
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The serological classification of Bacteriaceae.
- Author
-
Felix, A.
- Abstract
1. Four different Bacteriaceae possessing the same Vi antigen showed, after exposure to heat, striking differences in the physico-chemical behaviour of the Vi antigen. The most noticeable differences observed were those in the changes in Vi-agglutinability and O-inagglutinability of the bacteria; lesser differences were noted in the agglutinogenic activity of the Vi antigen, and none in its agglutinin-binding capacity.2. Treatment with alcohol altered the TVi antigen of one of the species (Bact. coli 5396/38) in a way different from that seen in the other three species.3. On the other hand, dilute acid or alkali produced the same chemical changes in the TVi antigen of all four Bacteriaceae.4. The TVi antigen present in the four Bacteriaceae appears to be one and the same substance; it cannot be differentiated by the customary serological methods. Its different physico-chemical state after exposure to heat or alcohol is, therefore, conditioned by other constituents of the bacterial cell, which may, or may not, be antigenic.5. The simultaneous O- and Vi-inagglutinability resulting from heating at 75° C. is particularly impressive since it does not appear to be specially related to any one of the known antigenic components.6. These findings invalidate the basis on which the L, A and B antigens of Bact. coli have been differentiated.7. There is also no valid reason for designating the labile somatic antigens of Salmonella and other Bacteriaceae as K antigens. These antigens have the general characters of the Vi antigen of Salm. typhi, are demonstrated by methods developed in the study of the typhoid Vi antigen, and are not associated with typical capsules.8. The M (mucoid) antigens of Salmonella and of Bact. coli are in many respects different from the Vi antigens and should be classified separately.I gratefully acknowledge the valuable technical assistance received from Mr F. J. Flynn throughout the work reported in this and the preceding papers of this series. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A statistical analysis of Cambridge University Health Service records, 1948–50.
- Author
-
Bailey, Norman T. J.
- Abstract
The Cambridge University Health Service started work in October 1948. So far it has been restricted to preventive measures and has been confined to new entrants to the University on an entirely voluntary basis. The Service provides a clinical examination and a chest X-ray. A general survey of the scope of the Service and the results obtained have been given in the annual reports of the Senior Health Service Officer, Sir Alan Rook (1950, 1951). In addition to the original clinical records a Hollerith punched-card record system has been used since the inception of the Service to facilitate detailed investigations. In Appendix I to the first annual report mentioned above (Rook, 1950) I gave a few preliminary results on various physical measurements for the first 900 men examined. It has now been possible to complete a much more extensive investigation, the results of which are given in the present paper. In some cases this has been based on the completed records for the year 1948–9, while in others the records for the two years 1948–50 have been utilized. I have already given a brief summary of the contents of this paper in Appendix I to the second annual report (Rook, 1951). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The adjustment of biological assay results for variation in concomitant observations.
- Author
-
Finney, D. J.
- Abstract
When individual responses in a biological assay show considerable variation associated with the values of a concomitant variate, covariance analysis may be used in order to adjust the mean responses and to improve the precision of the assay. Usually this is preferable to the choice of an adjustment which involves an arbitrary assumption about the effect of variations in the concomitant variate on the measured response. Published accounts of the process are open to certain theoretical objections, though they may be sufficiently exact for most practical purposes.The present paper describes a method of calculating the relative potency, and its precision, which may be a little more laborious, but which is in full accord with standard statistical practice. The computations are illustrated on data from a prolactin assay by the pigeon crop-gland technique, in which the final crop-gland weight showed a positive correlation with the body weight at the start of the assay. The results are compared with those obtained either from the unadjusted crop-gland weights or from these weights expressed as proportions of body weights. The covariance method leads to a more precise estimate of the potency of the test preparation than do either of the others; there is evidence, however, that the increase in precision will not necessarily be large unless the correlation between the response and the concomitant variate is very close.In a final section, the full statistical tests of assay validity in the covariance analysis are described; these are lengthy, and fortunately are required only when the validity is in considerable doubt.The methods of adjustment have been described in this paper with respect to an assay depending upon parallel regression lines of responses on the logarithms of doses. They may be adapted for use with ‘slope-ratio’ assays (Bliss, 1946; Finney, 1945; 1948; Wood & Finney, 1946), in which the regression of response on dose itself is linear. So far the need for adjusting for concomitant variation in these assays seems not to have arisen, and discussion of computational details may be postponed until the need is felt. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Effect of continuous aeration on bacterial oxidation of organic matter.
- Author
-
Allen, L. A. and Eden, G. E.
- Abstract
Growth of bacteria in an infusion of flax under quiescent conditions resulted in the formation of an acidic liquor with an appreciable content of volatile acids. When a similar infusion was aerated by a continuous current of air, the liquid tended to become alkaline and the content of volatile acids was much smaller and in some cases negligible. Aeration reduced the polluting strength of the liquor, as measured by oxygen absorbed from permanganate and by the biochemical oxygen demand, by much larger amounts than did growth under quiescent conditions.Experiments with infusion in which the natural flora was allowed to grow, and with sterile infusion inoculated with pure strains of different types of bacteria, showed that the general effect of aeration was to alter the metabolism of the bacteria in the direction of more complete oxidation of the substrate. Balance sheets for carbon showed that the organic carbon lost from the culture was accounted for by the CO2 evolved. Thus carbohydrates, which under anaerobic conditions were fermented to organic acids, neutral volatile compounds, and gases, were oxidized, when the conditions were sufficiently aerobic; to CO2 and water.The magnitude of the effects observed depended largely on the nature of the organisms present, and partly on the strength of the infusion in which they grew. With pure cultures of Bact. coli, Bact. aerogenes and Bacillus subtilis, and with the natural mixed flora of the flax, aeration at moderate rates in bottles for 3–5 days reduced the value for oxygen absorbed from permanganate by 43–52 %, and the biochemical oxygen demand by 26–92 %, indifferent experiments. The organic carbon content of the infusion was reduced by 30–31 % by Bact. aerogenes, by Bacillus subtilis and by the mixed flora. With streptococci and with a strain of Achromobacterium the effects observed were very small. Aeration at higher rates with diffused air in small open tanks reduced the organic carbon content of a flax infusion by 50 % in about 80 hr., and of a beetroot infusion by 50 % in about 60 hr. Sugar was destroyed during the aeration and disappeared rapidly from the flax infusion in the early stages.The work described in this paper was carried out in connexion with an investigation of retting of flax and disposal of waste waters, made, as an extramural research, for the Ministry of Supply as part of the programme of the Water Pollution Research Board of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. The paper is published by permission of the Chief Scientific Officer, Ministry of Supply, and of the Department. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1946
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Diphtheria in Hull: A Review of six years bacteriological typing.
- Author
-
Leete, H. Mason
- Abstract
This paper embodies the findings in all proven cases of diphtheria admitted to the Hull City Hospital during the years 1938–43 inclusive. All cases during those 6 years were typed and the clinical and bacteriological findings correlated. Since 1932 all severe cases had been typed and in the winter of 1932–3 a consecutive series of 313 cases was investigated and the results published (Leete, McLeod & Morrison, 1933). The 1933 paper showed a high gravis incidence of 59% and an associated high case fatality rate. Not until the end of 1937 was it again possible to type every case admitted but since then we have done so, and the series now presented embodies observations on 2039 infections, the great majority of which were clinical cases. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1945
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. On refection in rats and on the nature of the growth promoted by the addition of small quantities of milk to vitamin-free diets.
- Author
-
Hopkins, Frederick Gowland and Leader, Violet Ruby
- Abstract
1. In the course of this investigation we have dealt with many cases of refection, but during a period of several years we never obtained the condition except when raw potato starch was the carbohydrate in the synthetic diet. Recently, in the exceptional circumstances described in the text, we have had a few cases with rice starch.2. Like other authors, we have always found that in refected rats the caeca are always enlarged and their contents the seat of specially great bacterial activity. The nature of the dominant organisms present has varied from case to case, and in one it was apparently a yeast. Nevertheless, there is a suggestion that certain organisms are more potent in promoting refection than others. In rice starch refection, such organisms seem to be present.3. We have found that the administration of roughage in the manner described can, to a large extent, prevent the establishment of refection. The number of organisms in the caeca is then greatly reduced and the contents indeed may become nearly sterile.4. Using potato starch as the carbohydrate of the diet, we have had no difficulty in reproducing the results of the early experiments published by one of us (Hopkins, 1912), but we found that to obtain a growth induced by administering very small quantities of milk to vitamin-free diets, the presence of this starch is necessary. Indeed, the growth so promoted calls for the same particularity in the carbohydrate supply as does the establishment of refection.5. Nevertheless, we have obtained what seems to be conclusive evidence showing that the growth with milk is wholly independent of refection.6. We have obtained some evidence that potato starch contains growth factors in association with protein which only becomes soluble when liberated by treatment with pepsin HCl. As our experimental results bearing on this, for some reason at present unexplained, have lacked constancy, we can only claim, that they are suggestive. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1945
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The effect of temperature of incubation on the results of tests for differentiating species of coliform bacteria.
- Author
-
Taylor, C. B.
- Abstract
1. A study has been made of different types of coliform bacteria with particular reference to (a) their ability to ferment lactose in MacConkey broth at different temperatures, and (b) the effect of using different temperatures of incubation for the indol, methyl-red, V.P., and citrate tests.2. It was found that 97% of the cultures of Bact. coli (indol positive, methyl-red positive, V.P. negative, citrate negative) examined could ferment lactose with production of acid and gas between 40 and 44° C. The number was not appreciably reduced at 45° C. but was markedly reduced at 46° C. 28% of the cultures of Bact. coli (indol negative, methyl-red positive, V.P. negative, citrate negative) and 15% of Bact. aerogenes (indol negative, methyl-red negative, V.P. positive, citrate positive) were found to be positive at 44° C.3. The adoption of a temperature of incubation of 30°C. for the V.P. test as advocated by Levine (1941) and the use of O'Meara's test showed that many cultures previously regarded as unable to produce acetylmethylcarbinol were in fact able to do so. Employing a temperature of 30°C. for 5, or in some cases 7, days for the methyl-red test, it was found that with nearly all the cultures tested there was an inverse correlation between the results of the methyl-red test and those of the V.P. test. With these modifications in technique some cultures originally designated as Intermediate type I were found to have reactions corresponding with those of Bact. aerogenes type I. Similarly, many cultures originally classified as Intermediate type II should have been typed as Bact. aerogenes type II.4. It was found that all cultures of Intermediate type I classified as such by the new technique were incapable of using the nitrogen of uric acid for growth, but that the majority produced hydrogen sulphide. Cultures of Bact. aerogenes type II, on the other hand, grew well in uric acid medium, but produced no hydrogen sulphide.The investigation described in this paper was carried out by the Freshwater Biological Association, as part of the programme of the Water Pollution Research Board of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. The paper is published by permission of the Department. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1945
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Comparison Between the Direct and Indirect Occupational Risk in Mortality From Pulmonary Tuberculosis.
- Author
-
Cheeseman, E. A.
- Abstract
It has long been recognized that there is a relationship between environment and health and examples of this association are easy to cite—overcrowding tends to spread infection. But our knowledge of the exact part played by occupational as distinct from economic and social environment is as yet imperfect.' The liability of the worker to ill-health, apart from any inborn constitutional weakness, is determined broadly by two factors. The first is the influence of the type of work directly upon the worker, an influence inherent in the actual occupation and the conditions under which the work is done. This might be regarded as the direct occupational risk. The second is the economic and social environment conditioned by the occupation followed: this might be termed the indirect occupational risk. This distinction was recognized by the Eegistrar-General who stated that both factors are essentially components of the total occupational risk since ' If a man is obliged by his place of work and his rate of pay to live in an insanitary area, the extra risk of death involved is, in a wider but very real sense, part of the occupational risk'. The purpose of the present paper is to try to disentangle the parts played by each in determining the occupational mortality from a specific disease like tuberculosis. The difficulty which previously presented itself was the absence of a standard which could be regarded as a measurement of the indirect occupational risks. The Registrar-General, in his last Occupational Mortality Supple-ment, has provided an approximate index, by publishing data on the mortality of males following particular occupations and also that of their wives. His viewpoint was.'. for no trade could longer be regarded as directly prejudicial to health if it were found to entail as much excess risk for the wife as for the husband. In such a case excess mortality would evidently be in the main attributable to the social conditions implied.' Greenwood likewise stated that ‘the wives share the social and geographical advantages of their husbands’ occupation but, with relatively ummportant exceptions, are not exposed to their specific occupational risks’. The purpose of the present paper is to try to disentangle the parts played by each in determining the occupational mortality from a specific disease like tuberculosis. The difficulty which previously presented itself was the absence of a standard which could be regarded as a measurement of the indirect occupational risks. The Registrar-General, in his last Occupational Mortality Supplement, has provided an approximate index, by publishing data on the mortality of males following particular occupations and also that of their wives. His viewpoint was. ‘..for no trade could longer be regarded as directly prejudicial to health if it were found to entail as much excess risk for the wife as for the husband. In such a case excess mortality would evidently be in the main attributable to the social conditions implied.’ Greenwood likewise stated that ‘the wives share the social and geographical advantages of their husbands’ occupation but, with relatively ummportant exceptions, are not exposed to their specific occupational risks'. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1941
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The ventilation of houses after fumigation with hydrogen cyanide.
- Author
-
Page, A. B. P., Lubatti, O. F., and Gloyns, F. P.
- Abstract
In June 1935, certain problems arose concerning the fumigation of houses with hydrogen cyanide for the destruction of bedbugs. Workmen reconditioning houses in Rochester, which had been given the customary 24 hr. aeration after fumigation with hydrogen cyanide “disks”, had complained of sickness during their work. The walls, cavities and floor spaces of some of these houses had been tested by Mr Topping, the Chief Sanitary Inspector of Rochester, who, using benzidine acetate-copper acetate paper, had obtained a strong positive reaction indicative of the presence of hydrogen cyanide after 24 hr. aeration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1939
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The titration of therapeutic anti-typhoid serum.
- Author
-
Felix, A.
- Abstract
An account has been given in a previous paper of the immunizing procedures now employed in the preparation of anti-typhoid serum in the horse for therapeutic use in man (Felix & Petrie, 1938). The object of the present communication is to describe the methods used for the titration of the serum. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1938
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Studies on the influence of diet on resistance to infection II. The effect of various diets on the resistance of mice to bacterial infection.
- Author
-
Watson, Marion
- Abstract
The preceding paper recorded experiments on the influence of various “natural” and “synthetic” diets on the fertility of breeding does, and on the growth and survival of young mice. The present paper records the relative resistance of mice, bred and reared or fed for shorter periods on these diets, to Bact. typhi-murium, or to its endotoxin. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1937
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Occurrence of Typhoid Bacilli Containing Vi Antigen in Cases of Typhoid Fever and of Vi Antibody in their Sera.
- Author
-
Felix, A., Krikorian, K. S., and Reitler, R.
- Abstract
The investigation recorded in the present paper was undertaken as a corollary to the clinical trials with a new antityphoid serum, the results of which were recently published (Felix, 1935). Its object was to enquire into:(i) the occurrence of Vi antigen in strains of B. typhosus freshly isolated from cases of typhoid fever;(ii) the occurrence of Vi antibody in the blood serum of typhoid patients and convalescents. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1935
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Relation Between Specific and Non-Specific Agglutination in the Brucella Group.
- Author
-
Pandit, S. R. and Wilson, G. S.
- Abstract
1. Altogether 117 strains of Brucella, belonging to different types and isolated from different parts of the world, have been examined by the thermoagglutination, salt agglutination, acid agglutination, and specific serum agglutination tests.2. The results obtained by the thermo-agglutination and the serum agglutination tests are in close agreement; there is a fairly high degree of correlation between these tests and the acid agglutination test, and a rather lower correlation with the salt agglutination test.3. Generally speaking, a strain which is highly thermo-agglutinable is frequently agglutinated by salt, is usually agglutinated strongly by acid, and reacts to a paramelitensis, but not to an abortus serum.4. A strain which is moderately thermo-agglutinable is seldom agglutinated by salt, is frequently agglutinated by acid, and reacts either with an abortus or a paramelitensis serum, or with both sera.5. A strain which is not thermo-agglutinable is not agglutinated by salt, seldom reacts markedly to acid agglutination, and is generally agglutinated by an abortus, but not by a paramelitensis serum.6. There remain, however, a certain number of strains, particularly of the porcine and bovine abortus types which, though non-thermo-agglutinable, inagglutinable by salt, and reacting only with an abortus serum, yet show some degree of acid agglutination.7. Of the twelve porcine strains examined only one strain was strongly thermo-agglutinable; of the forty-seven bovine strains only two were strongly thermo-agglutinable, a further two showing a milder degree of thermoagglutinability; of the forty-seven melitensis strains eight were strongly, and thirteen were moderately thermo-agglutinable; while of the eleven paramelitensis strains ten were strongly thermo-agglutinable.8. These results are taken to indicate, in accordance with the suggestion made by certain previous workers, that those strains which are non-thermoagglutinable, are not agglutinated by salt, and are agglutinated by an abortus but not by a paramelitensis serum, represent the smooth form, while those strains which are strongly thermo-agglutinable, are frequently agglutinated by salt, and are agglutinated by a paramelitensis but not by an abortus serum, represent the rough form.9. If this interpretation is correct it will be noticed that the great majority of the porcine and bovine strains examined were of the smooth type, that nearly half the melitensis strains were partially or completely rough, while all but one of the paramelitensis strains were rough.10. Whether melitensis strains have a greater tendency than abortus strains to undergo the smooth to rough transformation it is difficult to say with certainty, but the reports in the literature and the observations in the present paper render this probable.11. By serial passage through broth at 5-day intervals, it is possible to transform smooth strains of all three types into the rough form. This transformation appears to occur more readily and to proceed further in a given time with melitensis than with abortus strains; but since only three strains of each type were examined, the results may have been determined as much by chance selection of strains as by any greater inherent tendency of the strains of the melitensis type to undergo variation.12. It is clear that none of the tests employed suffices to differentiate individual strains of abortus and melitensis. The thermo-agglutination test and the agglutination test with specific smooth and rough sera do, however, enable a differentiation to be made between smooth and rough strains of all types.13. In the present paper no attempt has been made to distinguish abortus and melitensis strains by specific agglutination and absorption tests. The general failure of workers hitherto to obtain any clear-cut serological distinction between these types may possibly be due to the fact that many of the strains with which they worked were either partially or completely ... [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1932
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A Comparison of Extended and Short Methods in the Calculation of a Life Table for Males in London.
- Author
-
Raja, K. C. K.
- Abstract
The last life table for the Administrative County of London was prepared by Mr King from the census population of 1911 and the deaths in 1910, 1911, 1912, and published in Part I of the Supplement to the 75th Annual Report of the Registrar-General, 1914. The national life tables (No. 9), prepared by Sir Alfred Watson after the census of 1921, included one for “Greater London,” the boundaries of which extend considerably beyond the County Council area and enclose the range of jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Police, so that this table is not geographically comparable with Mr King's 1911 table. The object of the present study was a comparison between the extended method of Mr King and the shorter ones of Drs Brownlee and Snow, to see whether the methods gave comparable results as regards the expectation of life, the question with which the public health worker is mainly concerned. As an example I selected the County of London (census population for 1921, deaths in 1920, 1921, and 1922) as affording, at the same time, an opportunity of making a table comparable with that which Mr King prepared for 1911. Drs Brownlee and Snow have already shown that their methods gave very satisfactory results as judged by the older life tables of this country. This paper will show that similar results have, in the main, been obtained as regards the 1921 experience. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1931
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A Review of the Cancer Statistics in England and Wales and in Scotland between 1891 and 1927.
- Author
-
Russell, W. T.
- Abstract
That the number of deaths ascribed to cancer has steadily increased within recent years no one will deny, but as to the causes which have produced the increase there is not the same unanimity of opinion. Thirty years ago cancer did not rank very high in the list of fatal diseases. In 1899 the total number of deaths from cancer amongst persons in England and Wales was 26,325 as against 60,659 allocated to tubercular disease. Nowadays, “the old order changeth yielding place to new.” According to the most recent statistics issued by the Registrar-General, in 1929, the number of deaths assigned to cancer was 56,896 and to all forms of tuberculosis 37,990. In view of this large increase in the number of deaths allocated to cancer it seemed of interest to review the cancer statistics of the last thirty years in this country and in Scotland. No investigation of this nature would be complete without first drawing attention to the very important work already done by Dr Stevenson in the Annual Reports of the Registrar-General, particularly the report for 1917 in which he examined the incidence of cancer in particular sites. The statistics of cancer in Scotland have not, until recently, received quite the same amount of attention as those of England. In a paper read to the Medical Association in Edinburgh and afterwards published in the Journal of that society, Dr Dunlop, the Registrar-General, gave a detailed account of the mortality, according to sites, between the years 1911 and 1928. He compared the actual numbers of deaths in 1920–2 and in 1928 with the numbers that might be expected to occur on the basis of the cancer mortality in age groups which prevailed in 1910–12. His method of analysis conforms partly to that of indirect standardisation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1931
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. An Inquiry into the Health of School Entrants in a Suburban Area.
- Author
-
Nicoll, Agnes Hill
- Abstract
Summarising the results of this investigation, those set out in the first part of the paper are, on the whole, very gratifying. Making due allowances for difficulties of comparison, there is little doubt that entrants now are in a better condition than they were twenty years ago. The characters, e.g. general nutrition and state of teeth, for which there has been no improvement or actually a set back in recent years are those which might be expected to have been influenced by transitory conditions due to the war and are also those the measurement of which most closely depends upon the standard adopted; this standard has probably risen.In the second part of the paper, I have shown that there is an intimate relation between various defects which develop before, sometimes long before, school age and defects or disabilities which are of grave importance during school life. How far one is dealing with environmental effects and how far with inborn weaknesses cannot, of course, be ascertained without further data; but it is clear that the care of the child before admission to school is a matter deserving as much attention as possible, even with respect to shortcomings often attributed to factors only coming into play during school age. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1930
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. On the Mechanism of Protection against Infective Disease.
- Author
-
Greenwood, M., Newbold, E. M., Topley, W. W. C., and Wilson, J.
- Abstract
In the course of a paper by the present writers (this Journal, xxv, 336–53) an attempt was made to assess the relative importance of selective mortality on the one hand and sub-lethal infection on the other in increasing herd resistance to subsequent exposure to infection. The subject was further considered by one of us (E.M.N.) in a later report (this Journal, xxvi, 19–27). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1928
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Experimental Rickets.
- Author
-
Holst, Peter M.
- Abstract
Rickets is produced in rats by feeding exclusively with cereals and yellow peas. Whereas feeding with polished rice results in typical rickets, feeding with rice-starch alone will only produce osteoporosis. This difference is not attributable to nitrogen starvation.If oatmeal is extracted with hydrochloric acid and the extract is given in addition to the starch, the animals develop rickets. The rickets-producing factor of oatmeal must therefore be ascribed to some toxic substance. Evidence is given to show that this substance can pass through parchment-paper and that it can be precipitated with alcohol. Rickets produced by feeding with cereals can be prevented by the administration of calcium-salts, whereas phosphates have no such effect. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1927
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A Study of the Longevity of Males at different periods in the History of Great Britain and Ireland from the Sixteenth to the beginning of the Nineteenth Century, based on Data from the “Dictionary of National, Biography” and ...
- Author
-
Young, Matthew and Russell, W. T.
- Abstract
The life tables that have been constructed from the recorded mortality in England and Wales as a whole at more or less regular intervals since registration of death was introduced in 1837, and those that have been prepared for special districts and cities at various times since that date, afford accurate information regarding the average length of life at different periods during the greater part of last century. There is still comparatively little known, however, about the mean duration of life, and the conditions of health on which it so largely depends, amongst those who lived in the British Isles in pre-registration times and the present paper contains the results of and attempt to supplement existing knowledge on this subject. The data on which the paper is based have been derived from two sources, namely, the Index and Epitome of the Dictionary of National Biography and Burke' Peerage and Baronetage. In the first of these are records of the dates of birth and death with brief summaries of the life histories of persons who were selected as being wminent in various spheres of life in the British Isles and the Colonies from the earliest historical period; in the second are given the genealogical histories of members of the different titled families. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1926
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Acute Infection of the Urinary Tract Due to a Special Group of Haemolytic Bacilli.
- Author
-
Dudgeon, Leonard S.
- Abstract
In a paper on Bacillus coli infections of the urinary tract, Dudgeon, Wordley and Bawtree (1922) refer to two cases of acute pyelo-cystitis, one of which terminated fatally, due to slow lactose fermenting bacilli which were strongly haemolytic. The diagnosis of paratyphoid fever was considered probable on clinical evidence, chiefly because of the severity of the illness and the prolonged pyrexia which was infinitely longer than occurs in typical cases of acute coli fever. An organism was isolated from each case with identical cultural, serological, and haemolytic properties. On cultural evidence both strains were distinct from true colon bacilli, as they formed blue colonies on litmus-lactose-agar which were similar in appearance to typhoid-paratyphoid colonies, and slowly fermented lactose-broth. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1924
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.