File:The American journal of tropical medicine (1921) (14761382456).jpg

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Identifier: americanjou01ameruoft (find matches)
Title: The American journal of tropical medicine
Year: 1921 (1920s)
Authors: American Society of Tropical Medicine. Transactions American Society of Tropical Medicine
Subjects: Tropical Medicine Tropical medicine
Publisher: Baltimore, Williams and Wilkins
Contributing Library: Gerstein - University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto

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MICROGRAPHS X 150 Fig. 7. Larva amid blood in section of heart (right ventricle) of guinea-pigkilled seventeen hours after feeding Ascaris eggs. Fig. 8. Section of lung of guinea-pig killed seventeen hours after feedingAscaris eggs. Larva at center of figure. Fig. 9. Section of lung of mouse killed twenty-four to seventy-two hoursafter infection (repeated feedings with Ascaris eggs). Larva in small bloodvessel (? vein). Fig. 10. Section of lung of guinea-pig killed five days after infection. Larvain an alveolus. Note the larger size as compared with those shown in precedingfigures. Fig. 11. Section of lung of guinea-pig killed eight days after feeding Ascariseggs. Note the still larger size of the larva as compared with that shown in figure10. The surrounding tissue is becoming solidified. Fig. 12. Section of mesenteric node of guinea-pig killed twenty-four hoursafter feeding Ascaris eggs. Larva at center. 158 COURSE OF MIGRATION OF ASCARI3 LARVAE D. 11. R\N;OM AND E. B. CRAM PLATE II
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159 A METHOD FOR THE CULTIVATION OF BALANTIDIUM COLI HARVEY P. BARRET and NANCY YARBROUGHFrom the Laboratory of the Charlotte Sanatorium, Charlotte, North Carolina Received for publication April 1, 1921 The cultivation of the parasitic intestinal protozoa has beenattempted time and again with but partial success. At present,only Hinkelman (1, 2) has reported successful cultivation ofBalantidium coli. Hinkelmans finding balantidia in the bloodand urine as well as feces is so unusual as to throw considerabledoubt on the organism with which he is dealing. The workreported in this paper was concluded without knowledge ofHinkelmans papers. The following notes on the cultivation of Balantidium coliare offered as a preliminary communication on the subject, andrepresent the results obtained using the medium to be described,in carrying the organism through eleven successive transferscovering a period of thirty-two days. In future articles, datawill be submitted on the cultivation of Blastocyst

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American Society of Tropical Medicine. Transactions;

American Society of Tropical Medicine
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30 July 2014



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