2015년 6월 21일 일요일

A Practical Treatise on Smallpox 8

A Practical Treatise on Smallpox 8


In the practical production of vaccine virus calves are vaccinated
much as human beings are vaccinated, but over a larger area. Usually
the posterior abdomen and the insides of the thighs are covered with
superficial linear incisions, and into these incisions the seed virus
is rubbed. In the laboratory of the New York City Health Department
all operations relating to the vaccination of the animals and to the
collection of the virus are carried on in an operating-room provided
with a cement floor, glazed brick walls, and equipped with enamelled
metal operating furniture, such as would be used in a hospital. The
attendants wear sterile gowns and the technique of the operations is
aseptic. The seed virus is either humanized virus collected by touching
sterile pieces of bone to the serum exuding from ruptured vesicles
on the arms of children, or in the great majority of cases bovine
glycerinated virus which has been preserved two months or longer.
 
It is found that the crust of the vesicle, the serum issuing from the
vesicle after the crust is removed, the pulp which forms the semi-solid
contents and base of the vesicle, and the serum which exudes from the
base of the vesicle after the pulp has been removed by a curette,
all convey material capable of producing the vaccine vesicle in a
susceptible person, and are therefore all different forms of vaccine
virus. It has been shown, however, that if any of this material is
filtered, so that all the solid particles are removed, the filtrate is
inefficient. In other words, the serum is efficient as vaccine virus
simply by virtue of the solid particles which it contains. It is also
found that the pulp is so rich in the active principle of vaccine virus
that it may be mixed with several times its weight of glycerin or other
diluent and still maintain its efficiency.
 
The different sorts of vaccine virus on the market are simply different
ways of supplying this material coming from the vesicle. Most material
is in one of three forms,--
 
(_a_) The pulp diluted with some excipient, such as glycerin, vaseline,
or lanolin. The emulsion, made by mixture with glycerin, may be
contained in a vial or in a capillary tube, or may rest on some holder,
such as an ivory or bone point. In the latter case the point is usually
protected by some form of cap. Mixture with vaseline or lanolin makes
a paste, which is usually issued in a box. This is in use in parts of
Italy and in India.
 
(_b_) The serum dried on a holder, as an ivory or bone point or a quill.
 
(_c_) The serum mixed with some excipient, usually solid or semi-solid,
until it becomes a paste, and furnished like dried serum on a holder.
 
For a physician the choice among these three forms is governed by
considerations of efficiency, safety, and ease of use. All the forms
are under certain conditions efficient, but comparative tests show that
the emulsion of the pulp issued by different laboratories is much more
certainly efficient than the other forms, and the glycerinated emulsion
is at present in most general use both abroad and in this country.
 
It is also true that all forms may be perfectly safe. All forms
contain bacteria when prepared, and the majority of these bacteria
die within a few weeks or months after preparation. On account of the
mildly antiseptic quality of glycerin the bacteria in the glycerinated
emulsion usually die sooner than those in the other forms of virus,
and so far as bacteria are objectionable in the virus the glycerinated
form may therefore be said to be somewhat preferable. It should be
added, however, both that glycerinated virus is usually put in the
market before the bacteria have disappeared and that the bacteria
present in virus issued by well-conducted laboratories are not found
to be pathogenic to persons when inoculated by the customary method of
vaccination.
 
The ease of use of any form of virus depends largely upon the custom of
the physician. In vaccinating a large number at one time there can be
no question that the use of a liquid virus supplied in vials is more
rapid than the use of a dried virus, as the latter has to be thoroughly
moistened before it can be applied effectively.
 
*Methods of Vaccination.*--The usual method of vaccination is to
scarify a spot on the skin and to rub the virus on that spot. The
choice of place depends partly on æsthetic reasons and partly on
convenience. To avoid the formation of an unsightly scar on the arm,
the leg may be used instead. If the arm is chosen, the insertion of
the deltoid is the place of election on account of the small number of
lymphatics there. If the leg is chosen, the area just below the head of
the fibula presents the same anatomical advantage; but a spot a short
distance above the knee on the outside of the thigh is often thought
to offer less opportunity for injury and infection. Choice between the
sides depends in an adult on the use to which the vaccinated limb is to
be put, and in a baby on the advantage of vaccinating the side which is
carried away from the nurse.
 
The size of the scarification is important. The vesicle is always
somewhat larger than the scarification, and the larger the vesicle the
greater danger that the surface may be broken, and the more opportunity
there is for the introduction of extraneous infection. A spot as
large as the head of a medium pin is about as small as can be easily
scarified, and vesicles formed on such scarifications are least liable
to have inflammatory complications. If, as certain evidence tends to
show, a larger area of scar guarantees greater protection, and if a
larger area is therefore desired, it is better to vaccinate in two or
three small spots than in one large one. It is somewhat difficult to
rub the virus from a bone point on a spot of the minute size described,
and as this form of virus is usually more dilute than glycerinated
virus, a larger area may safely be employed.
 
The scarification may be made with any sharp instrument, or with the
point itself. The only precaution necessary is that the instrument
should be free from infection. As a scarifier the ordinary cambric
needle presents the advantages that it is usually clean, is easily
sterilized, and is so inexpensive that a fresh one can be used for
every operation.
 
It is not necessary that the scarification should draw blood, although
blood is not objectionable unless it flows so freely as to wash away
the virus, or unless the subject has hæmophilia.
 
Although with a notably susceptible subject or with especially active
virus it may be sufficient simply to smear the virus on the scarified
area, it is usually necessary and always advisable to rub in the virus
with a wooden slip or with the point firmly and thoroughly.
 
Other methods of introducing vaccine virus are by puncture, by deep
injection, and by the mouth.
 
In the method by puncture either a grooved lancet or a hollow needle
may be used. A shallow puncture is made and the virus is deposited in
it. The resulting vesicle is usually small and nearly circular, and
generally remains free from infection; but as the hole in which the
virus is placed is small, it is possible that the issuing blood may
wash it away completely, and the percentage of success with this method
of inoculation is not quite so large, even in careful hands, as by
the process of scarification with the same virus. Animal experiments
with deep injection of virus through a hypodermic syringe and with
administration of virus by the mouth show that there is no certainty of
successful vaccination by these means, and that when success results
there is no proof of it without a subsequent vaccination on the skin to
test or to demonstrate the immunity.
 
*Care after Vaccination.*--As vaccination is a surgical procedure, it
should be conducted aseptically with a sterile instrument on clean
skin, and the wound should be guarded against extraneous infection.
It is well therefore to put either a sterile gauze cover or a clean
shield over the wound as soon as the virus has been sufficiently
absorbed, and to leave the protection on until the natural crust has
been formed,--_i.e._, for a few hours. If the guard could be kept
in position without motion and also without injurious pressure, it
might remain until the process ended with the formation of a scar and
the exfoliation of the crust; but practically it is so certain that
the guard will be moved that it is wise to remove it and to trust
to the protection of a clean muslin or linen cloth attached to the
loose sleeve or other undergarment. For a day or two at the time when
the inflammation is at its height it may be well again to guard by
a shield against injury from a blow or push, but the shield should
always be regarded as itself a danger. If by any accident the vaccine
pustule becomes infected, it should be treated like any other infected
wound,--the crust removed, the ulcer cleansed with antiseptics and
dressed surgically. The immunity given by the pock is not at all
lessened by this treatment.
 
*Normal Clinical Course.*--After primary vaccination in man there is a
stage of incubation lasting for from forty-eight to seventy-two hours;
a papule then develops, and by the end of the third or fourth day
this has begun to show umbilication and a vesicular structure. When
fully developed, about the sixth day after vaccination, the vesicle is
distended and pearly in color. On the seventh or eighth day the areola
develops,--_i.e._, the skin about the vesicle becomes hard, sensitive,
and red, the redness extending a variable distance, not usually more
than two inches from the edge of the vesicle. In the course of the next
day or two the vesicle loses its pearly appearance and becomes opaque
and often slightly yellow. With the development of the areola and of
the pustule the adjacent lymph glands may swell and become somewhat
painful; there may also be constitutional derangement,--some fever,
pain, anorexia, restlessness, and more or less prostration; there is
usually a moderate leucocytosis. About the eleventh or twelfth day the
areola begins to fade, the constitutional symptoms to subside, and
the pustule to dry up. A dark crust is formed which drops off usually
between the eighteenth and twenty-fifth days, leaving a rosy depressed
scar on which not infrequently a secondary scab is formed, to be shed a
few days later.
 
*Variations in the Clinical Course.*--The vesicles may appear on the
second day, but it is more frequently delayed until the fourth, fifth,
sixth, seventh, or even the eighth day, and cases have been observed in
which the delay was even longer.
 
The areola, which should be bright red, may be purple, and may extend a
long distance from the vesicle.
 
The pustule may be hemorrhagic or may be filled with greenish pus; in
this case there is probably a mixed infection.
 
Sometimes instead of a vesicle there appears a hard elevated nodule, in
color like a red raspberry. With this there is usually no areola, and no constitutional symptoms develop. The growth is usually an evidence of poor virus. It may persist for some time before absorption.

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