Response of man to infection with Vibrio cholerae. I. Clinical, serologic, and bacteriologic responses to a known inoculum.

The spectrum of illness and the immunologic response produced by cholera in volunteers were studied. The strains of Vibrio cholerae used were classical Inaba 569B and classical Ogawa 395. An oral dose of 108 organisms in buffered saline was required to induce the diarrhea of cholera. When given with live organisms, NaHCO3 lowered the infecting dose from 108 to 104 organisms. Clinical manifestations of infection varied from culturally positive formed stools to "rice water" diarrhea. Severe diarrhea did not have an explosive onset but rather progressively increased in volume during a 24-hr period. In 45% of cases the stool was positive for V. cholerae before the onset of diarrhea. Titers of vibriocidal antibody rose after diarrhea, peaked the second week after challenge, and rapidly fell during the next four weeks.

[1]  K. Aziz,et al.  The 1968-1969 cholera-vaccine field trial in rural East Pakistan. Effectiveness of monovalent Ogawa and Inaba vaccines and a purified Inaba antigen, with comparative results of serological and animal protection tests. , 1970, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[2]  J. Feeley,et al.  Concentration and purification of cholera exotoxin by absorption on aluminum compound gels. , 1970, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[3]  H. D. Hochstein,et al.  Titration of cholera antitoxin in human sera by microhemagglutination with formalinized erythrocytes. , 1970, Applied microbiology.

[4]  T E Woodward,et al.  The Broad Street pump revisited: response of volunteers to ingested cholera vibrios. , 1971, Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine.

[5]  H. L. Smith,et al.  DETECTION OF BACTERIAL GELATINASES BY GELATIN-AGAR PLATE METHODS , 1958, Journal of bacteriology.

[6]  A. Cruz,et al.  A controlled field trial of the effectiveness of cholera and cholera El Tor vaccines in the Philippines. , 1967, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[7]  R. Cash,et al.  Gastric acid secretion in cholera patients. , 1970, Lancet.

[8]  S. Gitelson Gastrectomy, achlorhydria and cholera. , 1971, Israel journal of medical sciences.

[9]  W H Mosley,et al.  Seroepidemiologic studies during a simultaneous epidemic of infection with El Tor Ogawa and classical Inaba Vibrio cholerae. , 1970, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[10]  R. Sack,et al.  Gastric acidity in cholera and noncholera diarrhoea. , 1972, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[11]  J. Feeley,et al.  PASSIVE SERUM PROTECTION OF THE INFANT RABBIT AGAINST EXPERIMENTAL CHOLERA. , 1964, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[12]  T. Yoshikawa,et al.  Concentrations of Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole in Blood After a Single, Large Oral Dose , 1976, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.