DuvoisinRC, YahrM.Encephalitis and parkinsonism.Arch Neurol1965; 12: 227–39.
4.
BuzzardE, GreenfieldJG. Lethargic encephalitis; its sequelae with morbid anatomy.Brain1919; 42: 305–38.
5.
McAlpineD.The pathology of the Parkinsonian syndrome following encephalitis lethargica, with a note on the occurrence of calcification in this disease.Brain1923; 46: 255–81.
6.
SmithHF. Epidemic encephalitis.Publ Health Rep1921; 36: 207–42.
7.
MottFW, PantonPN, JamesSP.Royal Society of Medicine Report. Encephalitis lethargica.Lancet1918: 590–4.
InnisBR. Japanese Encephalitis. In: PorterfieldJS ed. Exotic Viral Infections.London: Chapman and Hall,1995: 146–74.
30.
ClementsGB, McGarryF, NairnC, GalbraithDN. Detection of enterovirus specific RNA in serum: the relationship to chronic fatigue.J Med Virol1995; 45: 156–61.
31.
BowlesNE, BaystonTA, ZhangHY.Persistence of enterovirus RNA in muscle biopsy samples suggests that some cases of chronic fatigue syndrome result from a previous inflammatory viral myopathy.J Méd1993; 24: 145–60.
32.
ElizanTS, CasalsJ, SwashM.No viral antigens detected in brain tissue from a case of acute encephalitis lethargica and another case of postencephalitic parkinsonism.J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry1989; 52: 800–1.
33.
BojinovS.Encephalitis with acute parkinsonian syndrome and bilateral inflammatory necrosis of the substantia nigra.J Neurol Sci1971; 12: 383–415.
34.
BassoeP.The delirious and the meningo-radicular types of epidemic encephalitis.JAMA1920; 74: 1009–12.
35.
LumbJ.Two cases of encephalitis lethargica with scarlatinal desquamation.Lancet1923; ii: 14–5.
36.
YatesAL, BarnesS.Encephalitis lethargica; nasal sinuses as a route of infection.Lancet1925; ii: 180–1.
McCartneyJE. Criteria of transmission and cultivation of encephalitis and allied viruses.Lancet1924; ii: 511–12.
45.
SmithW, AndrewesCH, LaidlawP.A virus obtained from influenza patients.Lancet1933; ii: 66–8.
46.
Stuart-HarrisCH. A neurotropic strain of human influenza virus.Lancet1939; i: 497–9.
47.
FrancisTJr., MooreAE. A study of the neurotropic tendency in strains of the virus of epidemic influenza.J Exp Med1940; 72: 717–28.
48.
LindenmannJ, LaneCA, HobsonD.Resistance of mice to myxo-viruses.J Immunol1963; 90: 942–51.
49.
FiskeRA, KleinPA. Effect of immunosuppression on the genetic resistance of A2G mice to neurovirulent influenza virus.Infect Immun1975; 11: 576–87.
50.
MirchinkEP, ZuevVA, YamnikovaSS, VorkunovaGV. Changes in some properties of influenza virus in the course of persistence in mice with a slow influenza infection.Voprosy Virusolog1992; 1: 46–9.
51.
GamboaET, WolfA, YahrMD.Influenza virus antigen in postencephalitic parkinsonism brain: detection by immunofluorescence.Arch Neurol1974; 31: 228–2.
IshiiT, NakamuraY.Distribution and ultrastructure of Alzheimer's neurofibrillary tangles in postencephalitic parkinsonism of Economo type.Acta Neuropathol1981; 55: 59–62.
54.
GosztonyiG, Cervos-NavarroJ.Immunohistochemical and electron microscopic techniques in the diagnosis of viral encephahtidesPath Res Pract1988; 183: 223–52.
55.
SchwartzJ, ElizanTS. Search for viral particles and virus-specific products in idiopathic Parkinson Disease material.Ann Neurol1979; 6: 261–73.
56.
ElizanTS, TerasakiP, YahrMD. HLA-B14 antigen and postencephalitic Parkinson's Disease; their association in an American-Jewish ethnic group.Arch Neurol1980; 37: 542–4.
LaingP.Influenza viruses induce autonatibodies to a brain-specific 37-k Da protein in a rabbit.Proc Natl Acad Sci1989; 86: 1998–2002.
59.
GeddesJF, HughesAJ, LeesAJ, DanielSE. Pathological overlap in cases of parkinsonism associated with neurofibrillary tangles.Brain1993; 116: 281–302.
60.
LuckPC, HelbigJH, WitzlebW.Immunofluorescent staining of influenza virus antigen in fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue of experimentally infected hamsters.Acta Histochem1989; 85: 47–50.