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2.
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ; 80(1): 1-9, 1985.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3937011

ABSTRACT

One hundred and fourteen strains of Bacillus cereus were isolated during presumptive plate-counts from 18 groups of industrialized, non-industrialized, crude or cooked food, belonging to 10 separate classes. Specific presumptive counts ranged from 10(2) to 6 X 10(3)/g or ml. Among these isolates, 13 strains were derived from 3 outbreaks of food poisoning (involving a minimum of 57 people), as determined by the assayed bacteriological quality of the ingested foods. As an adopted procedure to correlate toxicity and ability to promote illness in man, culture fluids of all strains were assayed to determine their ability to increase vascular permeability (APC) to cause necrosis in rabbits skin and to kill albino mice. APC was positive in 86.85% of the 114 strains, death of albino mice occurred in 65.79% and a combination of APC and death was observed in 59.65%. APC plus necrosis, or only necrosis, occurred with 34.21% of the culture fluids. Death, APC and death with or without necrosis, were demonstrated in the strains implicated with illness. This confirmed the known individuality of action exhibited by certain B. cereus food-borne toxigenic factors. The low presumptive counts of this bacterium in the order of 10(2)-10(3)/g or ml found in food, implicated or not with illness, suggests that the recommended number of B. cereus per g or ml of food sample should be reevaluated in our country. Furthermore, a wider range of food should be brought under bacteriological sanitary control for this species.


Subject(s)
Bacillus cereus/pathogenicity , Food Microbiology , Foodborne Diseases/microbiology , Animals , Bacillus cereus/isolation & purification , Brazil , Capillary Permeability , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , Necrosis , Rabbits , Skin/pathology
5.
Arch Geschwulstforsch ; 45(7): 637-47, 1975.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-179493

ABSTRACT

The subcutaneous implant of a fibrosarcoma covered with silica, in rats, resulted in a temporary retardation of tumor growth. The histological study demonstrated that the silica provoked, within and at the periphery of the tumor, inflammatory foci which altered the composition of the fundamental substance and which promoted the accumulation of principally macrophages in the interior as well as on the surface of the tumoral mass. Besides the macrophages of the host, a number of tumor cells do also phagocyte silica crystals, leading to destruction of all those cells. The authors are of the opinion that the local modifications provoked by silica, could have interfered in the adaptation of the tumor with its nutrient stroma. Of these modifications, the stroma sclerosis seems to be the most effective in the inhibition of tumor growth. Some correlations were suggested between the here described results and those obtained by other workers who have used other inflammatory agents of different nature.


Subject(s)
Fibrosarcoma/pathology , Silicon Dioxide/pharmacology , Adaptation, Biological , Animals , Female , Neoplasm Transplantation , Rats , Sarcoma, Experimental , Time Factors , Transplantation, Homologous
6.
Arch Geschwulstforsch ; 45(3): 255-8, 1975.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-170883

ABSTRACT

In applying amorphous silica and talc in the site of solid Sarcoma 180 implants, the authors found a suppression and delay of tumor growth which was proveked by peritumoral foreign-body granulomas. Correlating these findings which those experiments which resulted in granulomas of hypersensitivity type, it may be suggested that any kind of peritumoral chronic inflammation enables an anti-tumor effect.


Subject(s)
Sarcoma 180/physiopathology , Silicon Dioxide , Talc , Animals , Chronic Disease , Foreign Bodies , Foreign-Body Reaction , Granuloma/physiopathology , Infections , Male , Mice
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