Also produced were anti-plague, anti-typhoid, anti-staphylococcal, anti-gonococcal, anti-colibacillairy, anti-streptococcal and anti-meningococcal vaccines, along with tetra-vaccines and various Besredka filtrates.
Their laboratories performed 1838 medical exams that year, helping to identify cases of dysentery, diphtheria, leprosy, malaria, typhoid fever and typhus.
[2] A report published in a French magazine in September 1952 showed the Institute was still producing vaccines against contagious human diseases, such as cholera, typhoid fever, gonorrhea, cerebrospinal meningitis, colibacillosis and pneumonia.
[2] A new strain of Penicillium was isolated from hepatic lesions on a bamboo rat used for experimental infections at the Institute in 1956.
One such declaration was issued in November 2010 at a conference in Haiphong, mentioning a cooperation that dates back 20 years.
The strain was called S. dalat (also and more commonly known as Salmonella ball[10]) and was isolated from fecal matter from a gecko captured in Phanrong.