Arthur L. Lewis
Florida State University
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Neurology | 1970
Lawrence P. Levitt; Thomas A. Rich; Stewart W. Kinde; Arthur L. Lewis; Emily H. Gates; James O. Bond
SUMMARYWe have reviewed 64 cases of documented central nervous system mumps which were referred to the Epidemiology Research Center for laboratory diagnosis between 1963 and 1968. Fifty-five were classified as mumps viral meningitis and 9 as meningoencephalitis. The average time interval between onset of parotitis and the development of CNS symptoms was 2.7 days, and mumps viral complement-fixing antibodies reached a geometric mean peak level of 1:96 between two and three weeks after onset of mumps illness. Follow-up neurological, psychometric, and audiometric performance tests on 19 patients revealed no significant differences between the patients and a group of matched controls, although one of those with meningoencephalitis had suggestive evidence of minimal brain damage.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
Nathan J. Schneider; E. C. Prather; Arthur L. Lewis; James E. Scatterday; Albert V. Hardy
Diarrheal diseases consistently have been the major disease problem at the monkey-conditioning farm operated by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis a t Okatie Farms, S.C. In 1953 A. V. Hardy, of the Comniission on Enteric Infections of the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board, was called in for consultation to determine what could be done to reduce the high mortality experienced in the monkey colony at Okatie Farms. A preliminary report1 of his findings was presented a t the Animal Care Panel in 1954 in Chicago, Ill. His studies indicated that Shigella and Salmonella were widely present in these primates and that the sulfonamide drug therapy used a t that time was not proving effective in reducing enteric infections or mortality. On the basis of these early findings and in order to determine more fully the nature and extent of enteric infections as they are related to diarrheal disease and mortality, intensive laboratory studies were initiated. Okatie Farms was established to receive shipments of rhesus (Macaca mulatta) and cynomolgus (Macaca cynomolgus) monkeys from India and the Philippines, respectively, and to hold them for a period of conditioning before shipment to laboratories throughout the United States. There has been in recent years an urgent need for large numbers of monkeys for use in tissue culture procedures, for diagnostic studies, and for research in virology, particularly in poliomyelitis. During 1955 more than 60,000 monkeys were received a t Okatie Farms. The physical facilities a t the farm originally were divided into four areas: (1) well area; ( 2 ) ready-for-shipment area; (3) hospital; and (4) recuperation area. Upon arrival, the 80 to 100 animals contained in 6 to 8 small shipping crates were transferred to a large group cage in the well area to be held for 1 to 4 weeks, unless illness ensued. These “gang cages” were checked twice daily, and all apparently ill animals were removed to the hospital for specific therapy. Following clinical recovery from the illness, the animals were transferred to the recuperation area and later to the well area. Clinically healthy animals were placed in the readyfor-shipment area to await distribution. The maintenance in large gang cages and the repeated transfers provided ample opportunity for the spread of enteric infections. Later, the above plan was modified by instituting intramuscular injection of all animals with broad-spectrum antibiotics on their arrival. This was done to ensure mass prophylactic therapy on an individual basis with a minimum handling of animals. Also, in so far as practicable, animals received in one shipment were kept together a t least until most of the animals were distributed. Rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys were always caged separately and in different areas if possible. Each shipment included about 1500 to 1800 animals.
Public Health Reports | 1966
James O. Bond; W. McD. Hammon; Arthur L. Lewis; Gladys E. Sather; D. J. Taylor
Dr. Bond is director, Dr. Lewis is chief virologist, and Mr. Taylor is chief entomologist, Encephalitis Research Center, Florida State Board of Health, Tampa. Dr. Hammon is professor of epidemiology, and Miss Sather is a research associate, department of epidemiology and microbiology, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pitts¬ burgh, Pa. Epidemiologic studies were directed in part by Dr. Emily H. Gates, biological studies by Dr. Wil¬ liam L. Jennings, entomological identification by Karen Meadows, serologic work by Florence Y. Lewis, and statistical analyses by Ingrid Baugh-
Journal of Wildlife Management | 1960
William L. Jennings; Nathan J. Schneider; Arthur L. Lewis; James E. Scatterday
Fox rabies has always been recognized as a substantial part of the rabies problem in Florida. The purpose of this paper is to present our data on rabies in the gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus floridanus Rhoads), the only native species which supports epizootic rabies in Florida. Red foxes (Vulpes fulva), which are increasing in number in parts of the western counties, have not been implicated as rabies vectors. The data presented here were gathered from records of the state and county health organizations, from citizens and public servants who were involved in rabies control work, and from field observations made during control operations in the last four years of an epizootic. Much of the information about rabid fox behavior came from
Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1964
Arthur L. Lewis; W. L. Jennings; Nathan J. Schneider
Summary A summary of data relating to the initial isolation and identification of St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) virus from Culex mosquitoes in Florida has been presented. The agent PI5 was isolated from mosquitoes collected in November 1961 and was used to prepare HA and CF antigens for serological studies of the 1962 epidemic in Florida.
American Journal of Public Health | 1954
Nathan J. Schneider; James E. Scatterday; Arthur L. Lewis; William L. Jennings; Homer Venters; Albert V. Hardy
American Journal of Public Health | 1960
James L. McQueen; Arthur L. Lewis; Nathan J. Schneider
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1970
William L. Jennings; Arthur L. Lewis; Gladys E. Sather; L. V. Pierce; James O. Bond
Public Health Reports | 1960
James E. Scatterday; Nathan J. Schneider; William L. Jennings; Arthur L. Lewis
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1965
Donald T. Quick; A. G. Smith; Arthur L. Lewis; Gladys E. Sather; W. McD. Hammon