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Infection and Immunity 1972-Dec

Antibody responses to group A streptococcal infections in the hamster.

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A S Dajani
P Ferrieri
L W Wannamaker

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Abstract

The immune response after streptococcal infections of the skin and of the joints was studied in an experimental animal model. Hamsters were challenged intradermally or intra-articularly with different streptococcal serotypes, and antibodies for streptolysin O (ASO), deoxyribonuclease B (anti-deoxyribonuclease B), and group A carbohydrate (anti-group A CHO) were determined. After a single injection at either site, 7 of 48 animals (14%) developed group A-CHO antibodies; however, none of the animals developed detectable levels of ASO or anti-deoxyribonuclease B. After repeated infections of the skin or joint, anti-deoxyribonuclease B antibodies were detectable in 13% (4 of 30) and 30% (5 of 17) of the animals, respectively. Elevations of ASO occurred after repeated joint infections in 4 of 16 animals (25%), whereas none of 30 hamsters repeatedly infected intradermally developed antibodies against streptolysin O. For all three antibodies tested, elevated levels were more frequently noted after repeated joint infections than after repeated skin infections with the same streptococcal serotype. These data, similar to ones previously noted in human impetigo, indicate that ASO responses are feeble after streptococcal skin infections and that the site of infection per se, rather than the infecting strain, appears to be responsible for this poor response.

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