Abstract
In order to confirm the clinical and histological diagnosis of scrapie and to determine the infectivity titer of the scrapie agent in the brain of a naturally infected Suffolk sheep, 123 white Swiss mice were inoculated intracerebrally. From about 13 to 20 months post-inoculation, 28 mice died, and 95 that were sick were killed. In the terminal stages of disease, the mice developed weakness, gradual emaciation, posterior ataxia, and occasionally alopecia. The average infection (83%) of mice affected with scrapie occurred in groups 1 to 4 inoculated with dilution 10(-1) to 10(-4) of scrapie sheep brain. Sixty-seven (54.5%) of the mice developed spongiform lesions and vacuolar degeneration of neurons. Similarities of scrapie with other subacute spongiform encephalopathies in animals and humans are discussed.
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