Polyplax serrata: Effects of limb disability on lousiness in mice: VI. Lack of tolerance after neonatal exposure |
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Authors: | Scott J. Stewart J.Frederick Bell Bryan Hestekin G.John Moore |
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Affiliation: | Rocky Mountain Laboratory, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Public Health Service, United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Hamilton, Montana 59840, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Mice restrained from grooming become heavily infested with lice. Ordinarily the hosts develop resistance to the infestation which results in limitation or extinction of louse populations. However, individual mice, the number depending on breed, die of anemia or, in some cases, become debilitated but survive with continuous heavy louse burdens. A similar condition of tolerance is occasionally seen in domestic animals. Experiments were conducted to determine whether heavy exposure to lice in the neonatal period could induce tolerance to the parasite. When adequate provision was made to prevent mortality from louse infestation, survival and acquisition of resistance developed at the same rate and to the same degree in neonatally exposed and in naïve mice. |
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Keywords: | Ectoparasite louse, tolerance lack resistance Mice, limb disability, neonatal exposure |
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