Abstract

Twelve dogs were injected intradermally with 352,770 to 14,391,660 Trypanosoma equiperdum and afferent and efferent lymph, lymph nodes, and blood examined by mouse inoculation at minute, hourly, and daily intervals following inoculation. The log dosage of trypanosomes given each dog was closely related to their body weight ( P < 0.01). Afferent lymph contained trypanosomes as soon as 5 and 27 min after inoculation. Lymph nodes on the side of injection became positive within 5 min of injection, while those on the contralateral side remained negative for at least 120 min after injection. Blood contained trypanosomes as soon as 5 min after injection, although the average time for all dogs, before trypanosomes were demonstrated in the blood, was 40 min postinjection. Efferent lymph did not contain organisms until 25–76 hr after inoculation. We consider this sequence to indicate that T. equiperdum can leave the dermis in afferent lymphatics, reach the local lymph node, invade the blood stream from this site, and only after a day or longer do they leave the node via the efferent lymphatics.

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