Guest guest Posted April 25, 2005 Report Share Posted April 25, 2005 The metrics for counting bacteria are usually called " colony forming units " or CFUs for short. Counting Gram positive bacteria is represented by a Log scale because they replicate so fast. AFter they're cultured, viability counts are listed as: - Log10 CFU/mL - and are then are plotted over time to show the population increase (or decrease if it's ab abx suseptibility experiment). I've seen bacterial counts for Endocardidtis be: 10 to the 9th/G of tissue. It's possible you misread the viability counts in tissue for borrelia. It' was probably more like: 10 to the 5th CUFs/mL or per G of tissue. There would never be just 10 organisms of anything infectous the body- it's more like 10 gazilion trillion organisms Barb > > ...known for any mammal? > > I thought I had seen it claimed to be 1-10 organisms on some > website/forum, but I cant find anything. > > For Treponema pallidum it is evidently >10 organisms in the > highly-suceptible guinea pig, with 0/10 pigs infected at 10^1 and 5/10 > infected at 10^2: > > http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi? artid=257764 & blobtype=pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2005 Report Share Posted April 25, 2005 Oh, I'm talking injected infectious doses, not infection tissue concentrations. Of course the chances of getting infected by one microbe or five are nonzero but they are usually low, because the handful of microbes will probably all be destroyed by the host. So, you see figures like ID50 for the infectious dose (number of organism Y) that infects individuals of host X 50% of the time. Of course it can be different for other infection routes, eg for humans there is a low infective dose for M tuberculosis bacilli contained in 1-3 um aerosol droplets produced by coughing. <egroups1bp@y...> wrote: > > The metrics for counting bacteria are usually called " colony forming > units " or CFUs for short. Counting Gram positive bacteria is > represented by a Log scale because they replicate so fast. AFter > they're cultured, viability counts are listed as: - Log10 CFU/mL - and > are then are plotted over time to show the population increase (or > decrease if it's ab abx suseptibility experiment). > > I've seen bacterial counts for Endocardidtis be: > 10 to the 9th/G of tissue. > > It's possible you misread the viability counts in tissue for borrelia. > It' was probably more like: 10 to the 5th CUFs/mL or per G of > tissue. > > There would never be just 10 organisms of anything infectous the body- > it's more like 10 gazilion trillion organisms > > Barb > > > > > > > > > > > ...known for any mammal? > > > > I thought I had seen it claimed to be 1-10 organisms on some > > website/forum, but I cant find anything. > > > > For Treponema pallidum it is evidently >10 organisms in the > > highly-suceptible guinea pig, with 0/10 pigs infected at 10^1 and 5/10 > > infected at 10^2: > > > > http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi? > artid=257764 & blobtype=pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2005 Report Share Posted April 26, 2005 Oh sorry- Gee.. I don't know how many organisms can migrate out of the ticks gut - probably depends on how long it feeds when things get mobilized.. Barb > > > > > > ...known for any mammal? > > > > > > I thought I had seen it claimed to be 1-10 organisms on some > > > website/forum, but I cant find anything. > > > > > > For Treponema pallidum it is evidently >10 organisms in the > > > highly-suceptible guinea pig, with 0/10 pigs infected at 10^1 and 5/10 > > > infected at 10^2: > > > > > > http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi? > > artid=257764 & blobtype=pdf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2005 Report Share Posted April 26, 2005 Yeah, it does look like theres a time-relationship overall. Special factors may apply, too, in tick bite, such as anti-immune factors injected by ticks, which inadvertantly benefit any invading organisms. > > > Oh sorry- > Gee.. I don't know how many organisms can migrate > out of the ticks gut - probably depends on how long it feeds > when things get mobilized.. > Barb > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.