Conquering Polio
Fifty years ago, a scientific panel declared Jonas Salk's polio vaccine a smashing success. A new book takes readers behind the headlines
- By Jeffrey Kluger
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 9)
More than 70,000 cats were killed that month, but the epidemic roared on. If cats weren’t responsible, perhaps mosquitoes were. If it wasn’t mosquitoes, it was rats or sewers or the always dirty GowanusCanal that runs through the heart of Brooklyn. New Yorkers called, cabled and wrote the Department of Health with all manner of things they were certain were causing the plague, including high groundwater, ice-cream cones, excavations, flies, bedbugs, street dust, cornflakes, the subway, parasites in the water, alloys in cooking utensils, gases from munitions factories, the bent-over position children assumed at school desks, mercury poisoning, white clothing, earthquakes, volcanoes, electrical disturbances, sunburn, intestinal derangements, secondhand bedding, decayed food, excessive glare, unclean milk bottles, carrying coins in the mouth and tobacco.
Tens of thousands of people decided to quit the city altogether. For families without the means to flee, like Jonas Salk’s, there was little to do but wait. Salk turned 2 years old in October, the same month the weather at last grew cool and New York City could begin to put the season of terror behind it. In the end, the doctors counted 27,000 cases of poliomyelitis around the country, 6,000 of them fatal. Nine thousand of the victims lived in the boroughs that made up New York City.
Salk was too young to remember what his city endured that summer, but he had heard the tales and learned them well. Some 20 years later, he entered New York University (NYU) MedicalSchool with a plan to become not a practicing physician but a researcher. By the time a patient came wheezing or aching into a doctor’s office, he reasoned, a disease had already scored a hit. Better to develop ways to prevent people from getting sick in the first place.
In 1942, not long after completing his residency, Salk had a chance to do just that, when he went to the University of Michigan to work with the celebrated microbiologist Thomas Francis. During World War I, millions of people worldwide had died of the great influenza pandemic, with soldiers on the European battlefields suffering worst of all. Now, in the first full year of America’s involvement in World War II, the Army wanted no health crisis heaped on top of a military crisis and ordered Francis to develop a vaccine against influenza. Francis, in turn, conscripted Salk, whom he’d met at NYUwhen Salk was still a student. Within two years, Francis and Salk gave the military just what it had asked for—the world’s first influenza preventive. By 1947, Salk left Michigan and went to the University of Pittsburgh to establish his own research lab. With one disease under control, he would now go gunning for another. What he didn’t know was which one.
The NFIP, founded on January 3, 1938, by Franklin Roosevelt—the world’s best-known polio victim—was always on the hunt for scientific talent. When word got out that Salk was available, the NFIP pounced, promising him lots of work and plenty of funds. Salk accepted, poured himself into basic polio research, and within a few years was trying to develop the elusive vaccine.
Earlier vaccines, such as the one against yellow fever, had shown that being protected against a viral disease required catching a tiny case of it. The vaccine had to wake up the immune system so that it could learn to recognize the virus that causes the illness and then produce antibodies that would attack and kill the pathogen if it ever invaded the body. Most vaccines achieved this by using live viruses that had been bred to be so weak that they could infect the system without doing any true harm. The problem was, there was always a chance the weakened virus could mutate back into a deadly form, afflicting the person with the very disease the vaccine was meant to prevent. Salk wanted no part of such a biological crapshoot. He preferred a vaccine made of a virus that had been not just weakened but killed—one that could introduce the bug to the body with no risk of illness at all. Salk and Francis had proved this approach could work with their influenza vaccine, made with killed virus. Salk was convinced this approach would stop polio as well.
From 1947 to 1952, Salk and his co-workers devoted themselves to polio, first coming up with techniques to prove the widely held theory that there were three different types of the virus, then working on a vaccine that could protect against all of them. To make the vaccine, they came up with ways to grow the poliovirus and then kill it, with diluted formaldehyde. Tests in lab dishes showed the techniques worked. Additional studies in mice and monkeys showed that the vaccines protected the animals from the virus— though many succumbed to the polio injections before Salk perfected his formula. In December 1951, the NFIP granted Salk permission to move on to people.
The first human subjects Salk worked with were boys and girls who had already contracted polio. They would be carrying a load of antibodies in their blood and would be immune to contracting another case of the disease in the event the vaccine went awry. Salk first tested each child’s blood to determine which of the three types of poliovirus he or she carried and in what concentration. Then he injected a child with a vaccine made only from that viral type. Weeks later, he drew more of the subject’s blood to see if the antibody level had risen. If it had, this would be evidence that the vaccine did in fact prod the body to muster its defenses—a critical first step.
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Comments (4)
I was needing info on polio to do a science project on some disease and their development on the vaccine for it. I think this an excellent source.
Posted by Crymsun on February 13,2013 | 08:29 AM
I am needing information on polio, the vaccine, and more. If anyone has any advice of where to get the information (needs to be 3 different sources)please let me know. Thank you.
Posted by Shaun on April 13,2011 | 01:37 PM
I am currently writing a thesis paper on Jonas Salk. This is a great source and I am impressed by the accuracy of Mr. Kluger's writing.
Posted by Esther on February 28,2010 | 02:04 PM
My husband lived in Missouri in 1952. A doctor gave a vacinne to several children that year including his own daugther. His daugther and my husband then got polio. They only talk about the vaccine coming out in 1954. Why is that? Where they considered part of the "test".
Posted by Denise on February 5,2009 | 09:30 AM