• 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 44 (4), 652-656
Abstract
Mice acutely and chronically infected with Sendai virus had impaired healing of incisional wounds. This impairment was overcome by instilling the macrophage stimulators zymosan and glucan into full-thickness incised wound; levamisole, an immunomodulator, had no effect on tensile strength of these wounds (breaking strengths). Another commonly occurring murine virus, murine hepatitis virus, also reduced wound tensile strength in infected mice. The murine strain of herpes simplex virus type 1, which caused greater morbidity, did not reduce tensile strength. Although measurements of wound length and wound breaking strength clearly showed the adverse effect of viral infection, histologic evaluation of wounds did not consistently reveal a similar change in composition of wound cell aggregation centers for mice infected with the Sendai and murine hepatitis viruses.