Proteus OX19

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Proteus OX19 is a strain of the Proteus vulgaris bacterium.

History[]

In 1915, Arthur Felix and Edward Weil discovered that Proteus OX19 reacted to the same human immune antibodies as typhus, so developed the Weil-Felix test for typhus and other rickettsial diseases.

Use in fake epidemic in Poland[]

Drs. Eugeniusz Lazowski and Stanisław Matulewicz worked with Proteus OX19 during World War II in the small town of Rozwadów in Poland to keep Nazi Germany from taking over the town. The doctors began inoculating villagers with dead Proteus, rendering false positives in tests for typhus. When the blood samples of the townspeople were sent to the German authorities for testing, authorities were convinced a typhus epidemic was burning through Rozwadów. The two Polish doctors used Proteus OX19 to save thousands of Poles.[citation needed]

In fiction[]

The novel 1979 Night Trains, by Barbara Wood and , is a fictionalized account of the Proteus story, with details altered.[citation needed]

References[]

External links[]

  • Hasten, Dianna. "Proteus 0X19". Missouri S&T Microbiology Homepage. Retrieved 2020-07-08.
  • "Fake Epidemic Saves a Village from Nazis". HolocaustForgotten.com. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
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