To Catch a Virus. John Booss

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To Catch a Virus - John Booss


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Culex fasciatus and finally Aedes aegypti (19), had been identified by Carlos Finlay in 1886. However, Finlay had failed to convince his colleagues that this mosquito was responsible for disease spread. One of the principal reasons for that failure was ignorance of an extrinsic incubation period, a time during which the virus matures in the mosquito.

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      In Reed’s words, “. . . the search for the specific agent of yellow fever while not abandoned, should be given secondary consideration, until we had first definitely learned something about the way or ways in which the disease was propagated from the sick to the well” (30). In preliminary experiments by Lazear, mosquito eggs were supplied by Finlay, and mosquitoes were raised in the laboratory, allowed to feed on yellow fever patients, and allowed to bite human subjects. First among the subjects was Carroll, who fell ill and almost perished (21). Lazear, apparently bitten by a stray mosquito in 1900, was a victim of their research efforts: he contracted yellow fever and died. The results of the experiments


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