Intranasal Inoculation
Intranasal inoculation is placing germs or medicine into the nose to study how infections start and spread.
Think of it this way
A glass bowl sits on its side on a kitchen counter, with its opening facing up. You drop a few small berries into the opening. They roll down to the bottom of the bowl. The bowl is the nose, and the berries are the germs or medicine.
Explaining intranasal inoculation by grade level
Scientists can put a tiny drop of germs into a mouse's nose. The germs travel from the nose to other parts of the head. This helps scientists learn how ear infections begin. The nose is a doorway germs use to get inside the body.
