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Notes on Cases of Fever frequently confounded with Typhoid and Malaria in the Tropics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

Aldo Castellani
Affiliation:
Director of the Clinic for Tropical Diseases, Colombo (Ceylon).
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Every practitioner in Tropical Countries knows how frequently cases of fever occur in which it is impossible to arrive at a definite diagnosis.

Much light has been thrown on the subject of long-continued fevers by the researches of Leishman, Donovan, Manson, Rogers, etc., especially with regard to Kala-azar. Moreover, the work of Wright, Lamb, and others, has shown that some other forms of long-continued tropical fevers represent cases of Malta fever.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1907

References

REFERENCES

Boycott, (1906). Journal of Hygiene, vol. VI. pp. 33—73.Google Scholar
Lamb, . Lancet, 1906.Google Scholar
Macconkey, (1905). Journal of Hygiene, vol. v. p. 365.Google Scholar
Manson, Tropical Diseases.Google Scholar
Morgan, (1905). British Medical Journal, vol. I. p. 1257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, (1905). Indian Medical Gazette, vol. XL. pp. 90—95.Google Scholar