pubmed:abstractText |
Four virulent strains of Venezuelan encephalitis virus attained higher concentrations of infectious virus in bloods of adult hamsters than two benign strains when given subcutaneously. One benign virus, the attenuated TC83 vaccine strain, reached higher concentrations in bone marrow and Peyer's patches than virulent subtype I strains, and another benign virus, subtype IV, grew to lower levels. When inoculated intracranially, the two benign viruses attained high concentrations in brain, but did not significantly alter in lethality although morbidity was increased. Intracardiac inoculation failed to increase virus concentrations of two benign viruses in blood or hematopoietic tissues above those found after subcutaneous inoculation, nor did it increase lethalities to those of virulent virus. Three benign virus strains were cleared more rapidly from hamster plasmas than six virulent strains. Differences in clearance rates were apparently not due to destruction of benign viruses by blood or tissue components. Thus viral concentrations in blood correlated directly and clearance rates inversely with hamster virulence, whereas the rate and extent of growth of a VE virus in hematopoietic or brain tissues did not correlate with ability to kill hamsters.
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