THE ANTISTREPTOCOCCAL PROPERTY OF MILK
Open Access
- 1 January 1952
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 95 (1), 51-59
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.95.1.51
Abstract
The ability of lactenin to prevent the multiplication of group A streptococci when milk becomes contaminated with that organism accounts in part at least, for the infrequency of milk-borne streptococcal epidemics. From epidemiological studies it has been shown that most such epidemics arise from the consumption of raw milk in which streptococci occur as a result of bovine mastitis due to group A streptococcus. Lactenin fails to prevent the establishment of mastitis due to the group A streptococcus because the milk in the cow's udder is at a low oxidation-reduction potential and the lactenin is inactive. Lactenin, being destroyed by temperatures of 80°C. or above, is absent from canned and powdered milk. When the latter have been diluted or reconstituted, they can serve as excellent growth media for group A streptococci, and epidemics have occurred as a result of contamination of milk supplies of those types. The administration of lactenin by mouth or intraperitoneal injection failed to protect mice from peritonitis or subcutaneous infection due to group A streptococcus.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE ANTISTREPTOCOCCAL PROPERTY OF MILKThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1952
- "Explosive" Outbreak of Haemolytic Streptococcal TonsillitisBMJ, 1944
- Milk-borne Outbreaks Due to Serologically Typed Hemolytic StreptococciAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1943