Herbert L. Amyx
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Herbert L. Amyx.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982
Paul Brown; Clarence J. Gibbs; Herbert L. Amyx; David T. Kingsbury; Robert G. Rohwer; Michael P. Sulima; D. Carleton Gajdusek
RECOMMENDATIONS for the disinfection of virus-contaminated tissues from patients with Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD), published five years ago in the Journal, 1 relied heavily on data from experim...
The Lancet | 1985
D. Carleton Gajdusek; Clarence J. Gibbs; Pamela Rodgers‐Johnson; Herbert L. Amyx; David M. Asher; Leon G. Epstein; Prem S. Sarin; Robert C. Gallo; Annette Maluish; Larry O. Arthur; Luc Montagnier; Donna Mildvan
The authors report the isolation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) associated retroviruses from packed leukocytes of 2 chimpanzees inoculated intracerebrally and intravenously with brain tissue suspension from 2 patients with AIDS encephalopathy on days 7 and 14 after inoculation. Antibody to the AIDS-associated retroviruses has appeared in sera of 2 chimpanzees inoculated intravenously with plasma from different AIDS patients in 1 chimpanzee inoculated intravenously with brain and thymus suspension and in 1 chimpanzee inoculated intracerebrally with brain tissue suspension from a patient with AIDS encephalopathy. 11 chimpanzees inoculated with supernatant fluids from tissue cultures infected with human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III) lymphadenopathy-associated virus (LAV) and IDAV have acquired antibodies to the LAV/HTLV-III viral antigens 2-8 weeks after inoculation. Virus was recovered from the lymphocytes of all 6 seroconverted animals between 8-154 days after primary inoculation of HTLV-III. 2 animals have severe suppression of T-cell function. However all 23 chimpanzees that have seroconverted to HTLV-III or LAV antigen have remained clinically well for 2-15 months of follow-up. There have been no tumors lymphadenopathy or severe opportunistuc infections. Other species of non-human primates similarly inoculated with HTLV-III and LAV have not seroconverted 2-10 months postinoculation. These findings confirm the active and persistent virus infection of chimpanzees with retroviruses derived from AIDS patients. They further establish the presence of viruses in the plasma and brain of AIDS patients by direct transmission of their virus to chimpanzees.
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1984
Richard Yanagihara; Arne Svedmyr; Herbert L. Amyx; Pyung-Woo Lee; Dmitry Goldgaber; D. Carleton Gajdusek; Clarence J. Gibbs; Kurtny Ström
Three strains of nephropathia epidemica (NE) virus were isolated from lung tissues of bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) and a grey-sided vole (C. rufocanus) trapped in Västerbotten county, Sweden. Two of these isolates were serially passaged in seronegative laboratory-bred bank voles. Experimentally infected animals developed a subclinical infection characterized by virus persistence, particularly in lung tissue. Attempts to infect other species of colonized rodents with NE virus and to isolate NE virus from acute phase patient blood were unsuccessful. The serial propagation of NE virus in colonized bank voles provides opportunities to study experimental infection in its reservoir rodent host.
Brain Research | 1987
Patrick Gourmelon; Herbert L. Amyx; Henry Baron; Georges Lemercier; Louis Court; Clarence J. Gibbs
Alterations in sleep organization were studied during the clinical phase of experimental Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in cats. Twenty months after intracerebral inoculation of a CJD agent, cats developed clinical signs including behavioral changes, diminished grooming activity, dysmetria, startle reflex, myoclonus, and unusual sleep abnormalities. Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep displayed a new and irreversible organization, with a continuous and constant pseudoperiodic pattern of rapid eye movements, synchronous with diffuse bursts of cortical abnormalities and with ponto-geniculo-occipital (PGO) wave activity. Computer analysis revealed a constant morphology of cortical bursts and their temporal relationship with ocular episodes. Induction of PGO wave activity with benzoquinolizine derivative Ro 4-1284 demonstrated the PGO-dependent nature of the cortical alterations. Abnormal unresponsive states were observed during REM sleep phases and arousal thresholds were increased in CJD cats during REM sleep. The percentages of wakefulness and slow-wave sleep were reversed in these animals. Preliminary neuropathological observations included discrete to minimal spongiosis of cerebral gray matter and a remarkably focalized intracytoplasmic vacuolation in neurons of the raphé system. Our findings suggest that particular neuronal systems involved in sleep regulation are impaired in CJD cats.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1980
Clarence J. Gibbs; Herbert L. Amyx; Alfred E. Bacote; Colin L. Masters; D. Carleton Gajdnsek
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982
Theodore F. Tsai; Sally P. Bauer; Donna R. Sasso; Joseph B. McCormick; Henry B. Bradford; Charles T. Caraway; Louise M. McFarland; Oscar Medrano; George Soulie; James W. LeDuc; Gregory A. Smith; Lauren R. Bagley; Sherman E. Hasty; Karl M. Johnson; Pyung Woo Lee; Richard Yanagihara; Maryellen C. Franko; Herbert L. Amyx; Clarence J. Gibbs; D. Carleton Gajdusek; Robert Traub
International Congress for Infectious Diseases | 1985
D. C. Gajdusek; Clarence J. Gibbs; Leon G Epstein; Herbert L. Amyx; David M. Asher; Pamela Rodgers‐Johnson; L O Arthur; Robert C. Gallo; Prem S. Sarin; Luc Montagnier; Donna Mildvan; V Mathur-Wagh; Jaap Goudsmit
Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1982
Pyung-Woo Lee; Arne Svedmyr; Herbert L. Amyx; D. Carleton Gajdusek; Clarence J. Gibbs; Ola Löfgren; Kurt Nystr¨m
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004
Clarence J. Gibbs; Herbert L. Amyx; Alfred Bacole; Colin L. Masters; D. Carleton Gajdusek; Kenneth L. Tyler
Journal of Bacteriology and Virology | 1986
Pyung Woo Lee; Ho Wang Lee; Herbert L. Amyx; D. Carleton Gajdusek