4i 6 Diphtheria 



This mixture is filled into tubes, coagulated, and sterilized like 

 blood-serum, and is one of the best known media to be used in con- 

 nection with the study of diphtheria. 



Material from the infected throat can be taken with a swab or 

 platinum loop and spread upon the surface of several successive 

 tubes of Loffler's blood-serum media. Upon the first a confluent 

 growth of the bacillus usually occurs; but upon the third, scattered 

 cream-white colonies suitable for transplantation can usually be 

 found. 



The studies of Michel* have shown that the development of 

 the culture is much more luxuriant and rapid when horses' serum 

 instead of beef or calves' serum is used. 



Westbrook suggested that the addition of a small amount of 

 glycerin to the preparation of blood-serum would prevent it from 

 drying so rapidly as usual and would have the added advantage of 

 preventing the growth of certain varieties of bacteria not desired. 

 Dubois I carried out a series of observations upon this question 

 and found that 3 to 5 per cent, of glycerin makes a very valu- 

 able addition, as the diphtheria bacilli grow very rapidly and 

 almost in pure culture upon the blood-serum mixture to which 

 it is added. The blood serum is not liquefied or otherwise visibly 

 changed. 



Potato. Upon potato it develops only when the reaction is 

 alkaline. The potato growth is not characteristic. 



Milk. Milk is an excellent medium for the cultivation of Bacillus 

 diphtherias. The milk is not coagulated. Litmus milk is useful 

 for detecting the changes of reaction brought about. Alkalinity, 

 which at first favors the development of the bacillus, is soon replaced 

 by acidity that checks it. When the culture becomes old, the reac- 

 tion may again become strongly alkaline. This variation in reaction 

 seems to depend entirely on the transformation of sugar in the 

 media. 



Vital Resistance. As the diphtheria bacillus does not form spores, 

 it possesses very little vital resistance and is delicate in its thermic 

 sensitivity. It grows slowly at 2oC., rapidly at 37C., and ceases 

 to grow at about 4oC. It is killed when exposed to 58C. for a 

 few minutes. Besson states that when dried in fragments of false 

 membrane it resists high temperatures and has been found alive 

 after exposure to iooC. for an hour. Drying quickly destroys it, 

 but if organic matter be present it may remain alive a long time. 

 Roux and Yersin were able to keep the bacilli alive in a piece of dry 

 pseudo-membrane, kept in the dark, for five months. 



Reyes has demonstrated that in absolutely dry air diphtheria 

 bacilli die in a few hours. Under ordinary conditions their vitality, 



* "Centralbl. f. Bakt. u. Parasitenk.," Sept. 24, 1897, Bd. xxn, Nos. 10 and n. 

 f "Seventeenth Annual Report of the Department of Health and Charities," 

 Indianapolis, Ind., 1907. 



