Public Health Chemistry And Bacteriology a Handbook for Dph Students

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Public Health Chemistry And Bacteriology a Handbook for Dph Students
David Mckail
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The latter extension can be prevented by section of the cord. Lately, in India, the relation between subcutaneous or intramuscular injections of quinine (given for malaria) and the production of tetanus has been worked out. Such quinine injections are apt to have a destructive action on the tissues, and the foci of dead tissue produced serve as suitable anaerobic media for the growth of tetanus spores. The latter are believed to reach these foci by absorption from the bowel. This explanation wi...ll also probably serve for the Mulkowal outbreak (1902), when 19 persons developed tetanus (out of 107 injected) after inoculations of Haffkine's plague prophylactic. In India, tetanus spores seem to be present in the bowel in a considerable proportion of the natives.
Toxins. Broth cultures grown anaerobically are usually highly toxic to animals, 0-000005 c. C. (0-00V0 o) or ^ ess Dem g fatal to a mouse of 10 grm. Weight. Fatal dose for a man is given as 0-23 mgr. , equal to 0-003 of a grain, or ^J^.


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