Abstract
One of the few points on which all observers of vaccine bodies are agreed is that these structures are extremely susceptible to artificial changes. The author has for some years endeavored to find a method of examination of these bodies by which artificial changes could be avoided; and this object seems to have been accomplished by the very simple procedure of making Klatsch preparations of corneal vaccine ulcers.
A glass slide is cleaned with soap and water, and thoroughly heated in a Bunsen flame. It is then found to be unusually adhesive. The cornea of an anesthetized rat or rabbit, presenting a vaccine ulcer at any stage, is exposed by holding back the eyelids and protruding the eyeball. The cooled slide is then lightly applied to the ulcer and quickly withdrawn without lateral motion. The slide carries away with it an impression of the ulcer in the form of isolated cells or groups of cells loosened by edema. In this way ten to twenty impressions may be taken in serial order and the minute ulcer may be completely excavated without sacrificing the animal. The isolated cells dry instantly and may be fixed by gentle heat, and afterward by methyl alcohol, and then stained by various methods, preferably by Nocht-Romanowsky for ten minutes. The vaccine bodies are then presented with a clearness equal to that of the malarial parasite in blood spreads.
In the Klatsch preparations stained by Nocht's method the following features of the vaccine bodies appear to be demonstrated. The vaccine body is a portion of the cytoreticulum, its reticular structure being continuous on the one hand with the cytoreticulum and on the other usually with the nuclear reticulum. The clear zone surrounding the vaccine body in sections of tissue is an artifact. The reticulum of the vaccine body takes the chromatin stain, indicating that it contains chromatin, and many of the bodies are so intimately connected with the nucleus, the meshes of one passing insensibly into the other, as to force the conclusion that these particular bodies have arisen by recent extrusion of nuclear chromatin into the cytoreticulum.
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