Abstract

The hormonal status of rats affected vaginal infection with Candida albicans. Four hours after infection viable counts were higher and germ tubes were longer in those animals in estrous than in other animals. However, the infection was not maintained with the change in epithelial cell type which occurred as part of the estrous cycle. Estrogen dosing following ovariectomy predisposed toward infection, while progesterone dosing did not. In rats injected with progesterone, germ tube clumping was seen, leukocytes were present, and elimination occurred before hyphal growth was evident. In rats injected with estrogen, however, infection was maintained, with hyphal growth extending throughout the cornified epithelial layer. Vaginal washings from rats dosed with estrogen promoted elongation of germ tubes in vitro to a greater extent than washings from other rats. Preincubation of blastospores in progesterone and subsequent infection of rats in pseudoestrous promoted clumping of germ tubes in the vagina. Strains of C. albicans varied in their virulence, which correlated with their ability to produce germ tubes in vitro. Loss of virulence occurred on subculture of a clinical isolate.

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