Armstrong – Table of Contents
pathogenesis, and epidemiology of medically important viral diseases and 2) development of means for their control. This credo f ...
Zinsser, H. Rats, Lice and History, Printed and published for The Atlantic Monthly Press by Little, Brown and Company, Boston, ...
Armstrong, C.: The production of specific immunity in white mice by intranasal inoculation of encephalitis virus (Saint Louis t ...
Lumsden, L. L.: Saint Louis encephalitis in 1933: observation on epidemiologic features Public Health Reports 73: 340-353, 1958 ...
Armstrong, C., Wooley, J. G., and Onstott, R. B.: Distribution of LCM in the organs of experimentally inoculated monkeys Public ...
Armstrong, C. and Hornibrook, J. W.: Choriomeningitis infection without central nervous system manifestations. Case report Publ ...
Fischer, S. A. et al: Transmission of LCM virus by organ transplantation New England Journal of Medicine 354 (21): 2235-2249; P ...
Poliomyelitis Charles’ Armstrong’s involvement in poliomyelitis research originated in the national forces generated as the resu ...
A brief outline follows of modern information about the acquisition of knowledge and the initiation of control measures for poli ...
About the beginning of the 20th century, epidemics of poliomyelitis began occurring with increasing frequency, almost on an annu ...
tissue high up in the nasal passages. He infected monkeys by intracerebral passage and later recovered poliovirus from the nose ...
coast of Maine. While there, he pursued a vigorous physical life style that included swimming in the frigid waters of the Bay of ...
career as a bacteriologist. He became prominent as a popular writer of medical science books for the lay reading public. The rep ...
“March of Dimes” for the annual fund raising appeal, and the White House became inundated with avalanches of dimes coming from c ...
demonstrated alimentary tract infection in the chimpanzee. They also did extensive pathology studies of infection in monkeys, an ...
research and academic communities. Dr. Salk succeeded in developing a killed polio vaccine containing the three immunologic type ...
but definite risk of paralytic disease (1:2,400,000 cases) occurred when some of the virus regained the ability to invade the ce ...
influential in poliomyelitis affairs because of his perceived knowledge of science, medicine and his widespread circle of acquai ...
nerves. He then instilled live poliovirus into the noses of the monkeys, but the ones with the severed nerves did not become ill ...
The field trials for this approach occurred in close approximation to the growing awareness in the mid-1930s of the experimental ...
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