Abstract

Rabbits with intracardiac catheters were immunized with heat-killed Pseudomonas aeruginosa or saline and challenged with either 10(9) (high inoculum) or 10(7) (low inoculum) pseudomonas. Immunization did not decrease the incidence of endocarditis when compared with controls, but it did significantly prolong survival. The longer survival of immunized rabbits after high-inoculum challenge was not due to prolongation of the course of endocarditis but to type-specific protection from early, overwhelming bacteremia. However, after low-inoculum challenge there were no early deaths and there was a significantly (P < 0.01) longer survival of immunized (17.4 days) than unimmunized (10.6 days) animals dying of endocarditis. Increased survival was associated with higher total and 2-mercaptoethanol-resistant hemagglutinating antibody titers 1 week after challenge in immunized as compared with unimmunized rabbits. Early (48 h after challenge) vegetation colonization was also significantly (P < 0.05) greater after type-specific as opposed to non-type-specific or saline immunization and low-inoculum challenge. However, whereas 67% of type-specifically immunized rabbits had colonized vegetations at 48 h, only 38.9% died with bacteremic endocarditis. Another 19.2% of immunized rabbits had vegetations colonized with > 10(5) colony-forming units of pseudomonas at elective sacrifice 2 weeks after challenge but no bacteremia; no unimmunized rabbit exhibited similar late colonization. Preexisting antibody may be important in the pathogenesis of pseudomonas endocarditis in drug addicts, and its presence may explain the subacute and often protracted course of the disease.

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