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      Experimental model to evaluate the human body louse as a vector of plague.

      The Journal of Infectious Diseases
      Animals, Bacteremia, microbiology, Disease Models, Animal, Feces, Humans, Insect Vectors, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Pediculus, Plague, transmission, Rabbits, Survival Analysis, Yersinia pestis, isolation & purification

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          Abstract

          Yersinia pestis has been found in human body lice during plague outbreaks. To evaluate the role that the human body louse plays as a vector of plague, we allowed lice to feed on rabbits made bacteremic by intravenous inoculation of 10(9) colony-forming units of 3 strains of Y. pestis. High mortality rates were observed in all lice 2 and 3 days after infection. The lice remained infected with the strains for their life span and excreted viable organisms in their feces from day 1, although they were unable to lay eggs. The lice infected with 2 virulent strains of Y. pestis transmitted the organisms during feeding to uninfected rabbits, which became septicemic and died of plague (with 1 exception) 1 day later. Infections were transmitted to naive lice that were fed on these rabbits, showing that lice can be vectors of Y. pestis in an experimental model.

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