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    Med Immunol. 2005 Apr 18;4(1):5.

    Wanted, an Anthrax vaccine: Dead or Alive?

    Smith KA.

    The Division of Immunology, Department of Medicine, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York, NY, 10021, USA. kasmith@med.cornell.edu.

    It has been more than 100 years since the realization that microbes are capable of causing disease. In that time, we have learned a great deal as to how each organism has adapted to the immune system so as to avoid elimination. As well, we have also learned an immense amount since Louis Pasteur first proposed that the solution to infectious diseases was to culture the microbes and attenuate their virulence, so as to use them as vaccines. From the optimism and promise of the 19th century and immunization as the ultimate answer to the invasion by the microbial world, to the scientific realities of the 21st century, it is of interest to retrace the steps of the earliest microbiologists cum immunologists, to realize how far we've come, as well as how far we yet have to go. This editorial focuses on the history of anthrax as a microbial disease, and the earliest efforts at producing a vaccine for its prevention.

    PMID: 15836780 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

    PMCID: PMC1087873

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