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. 1974 Jun;47(2):86–92.

Streptococcal L Forms and Phage 1

A Clinical-Epidemiologic Study

Robert W Quinn, P N Lowry
PMCID: PMC2596434  PMID: 4428798

Abstract

This study showed that streptococcal L forms could not be isolated from children who were either carriers of group A streptococci or had disease due to this pathogen. It was possible to induce L colony formation in 15 strains of group A. Streptococcal bacteriophages were demonstrated in 20% of group A streptococci isolated from school children who were carriers, but did not have clinical evidence of streptococcal disease, and from 44.9% of children whose physicians considered they had acute streptococcal upper respiratory infections. Lysogeny (bacteriophage) was demonstrated more frequently during 1969-70 when carrier rates were high and from children who had manifest streptococcal disease, suggesting a possible positive relationship between lysogeny, high carrier rates, and infection in the children studied. Lysogeny and erythrogenic toxin production by group A streptococci occurred simultaneously in approximately half of the strains of group A streptococci tested, suggesting that lysogeny is not a sine qua non for erythrogenic toxin production.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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