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Dive into the research topics where G. Howard Bailey is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Howard Bailey.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1935

HEMOLYTIC ANTIBODIES FOR SHEEP AND OX ERYTHROCYTES IN INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS

G. Howard Bailey; Sidney Raffel

Paul and Bunnell (1932) observed very high concentrations of agglutinins and hemolysins for sheep cells in the sera of patients during the acute stages of infectious mononucleosis, and this observation was found by these investigators to be of much value in the diagnosis of the disease. This finding has been confirmed and extended by Rosenthal and Wenkebach (1933), Boveri (1933), Bunnell (1933) and Bernstein (1934). In addition to the practical application in diagnosis, theoretical interest centers about the fact that antibodies for sheep cells are produced or enhanced in a disease of unknown etiology. Paul and Bunnell offered two explanations for their findings: (1) that the unknown agent responsible for infectious mononucleosis contains the heterophile or Forssman antigen; (2) that they were dealing with an example of isoagglutinin production elicited by abnormal cells, which are present either in the blood, or elsewhere, during active stages of the disease. In studies of infectious mononucleosis by different investigators, a probable bacterial origin has often been suggested, with special mention of the streptococcus group, diphtheroid bacilli, and Vincents organisms, all of which have been found in nose, mouth or throat lesions during the disease. Nyfeldt (1929) has reported the isolation of a small V-shaped or curved gram positive organism from the blood, which he called Bacterium monocytogenes hominis, and with which he produced the cellular blood picture of infectious mononucleosis in rabbits. Agglutination of this organism in 1 to 250 dilution by the serum of the patient was observed, but only five days after the temperature had become normal. Gorham, Smith and Hunt (1929) claimed to have produced the typical blood picture of the disease in guinea pigs by inoculation of membrane from the pharynx of


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1931

HETEROPHILE ANTIGEN IN PNEUMOCOCCI

G. Howard Bailey; Mary Shaw Shorb


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1933

IMMUNOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS OF PNEUMOCOCCI AND OTHER HETEROPHILE ANTIGENS AND BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE IN PNEUMOCOCCUSC INFECTIONS

G. Howard Bailey; Mary Shaw Shorb


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1925

THE EFFECT OF FATIGUE UPON THE SUSCEPTIBILITY OF RABBITS TO INTRATRACHEAL INJECTIONS OF TYPE I PNEUMOCOCCUS

G. Howard Bailey


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1934

HETEROPHILE ANTIGEN IN VARIOUS BACTERIAL SPECIES

Mary Shaw Shorb; G. Howard Bailey


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1933

CHEMICAL AND IMMUNOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF PNEUMOCOCCI AND OTHER HETEROPHILE ANTIGENS

G. Howard Bailey; Mary Shaw Shorb


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1933

A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF ANTIPNEUMOCOCCUS SERUM CONTAINING HETEROPHILE ANTIBODY

H. M. Powell; W. A. Jamieson; G. Howard Bailey; Roscoe R. Hyde


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1931

IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF COLDS AND INFLUENZA. III. COMPLEMENT FIXATION WITH HEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE AND THE SERUM OF AN INDIVIDUAL WITH AN UPPER RESPIRATORY INFECTION PRESUMABLY CAUSED BY THIS ORGANISM

G. Howard Bailey; Janet M. Bourn; V. A. Van Volkenburgh


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1930

Immunological Studies of Colds and Influenza. I. Complement Fixation in Influenza with Hemophilus influenzae and Bacterium pneumosintes.

G. Howard Bailey; Mary Shaw Shorb


American Journal of Epidemiology | 1928

RESPIRATORY IMMUNITY IN RABBITS. III. THE PRODUCTION OF HETEROPHILE ANTIBODY IN RABBITS BY INTRANASAL INFECTION WITH BACTERIUM LEPISEPTICUM

G. Howard Bailey

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Roscoe R. Hyde

Johns Hopkins University

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