Schneeweiss U, Fabricius E M, Schmidt W
Z Exp Chir. 1979 Aug;12(4):201-8.
A re-evaluation of the specificity of the tumour-tetanus assay of the mouse was performed by analysing the wound-tetanus assay under comparable test conditions. This was achieved by injecting 1 X 10(6) viable Ehrlich carcinoma cells admixed with 1 X 10(2) tetanus spores subcutaneously, in a 0.1 ml dose volume or, 1 X 10(2) tetanus spores suspended in 5% CaCl2 solution, respectively. By comparison, these two groups of mice developed about the same tetanus mortality rates, however, following tetanus antitoxin therapy with 3 doses of 100 IU each day on days 0, 4 and 7 after infection, clinical signs of late tetanus exclusively belonged to tumour bearing animals. This typical tetanus behaviour may be explained by a spatial-temporal association between growing tetanus rods and proliferating cells of warm-blooded animals. In this manner tumour tissue can be differed from wound granulomatous tissue by way of permanently cloning stem cells.