Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . may be found; also Lassar, Dermatolog. Zeit., xi. No. 8; Neisser,Deut. med. Woch., 1904, p. 1369; Zabolotny, Arch. sci. Biol., vol. xi, and 2, p. 155; full discussion before Tenth Congress of Dermatology, Berlin,Sept., 1904; Salmon, C. R. Soc. de Biol., June 11, 1904; Arnal and Salmon,Annales de ITnst. Pasteur, July 25, 1904; Tomasczewski, Deut. med. Woch., 1903, No. 26; Hoffmann, Berl. klin. Woch., Feb. 6, 1905, and Queyrat, des Hop., Jan. 13, 1905. Piorkowski, Berl. k
Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . may be found; also Lassar, Dermatolog. Zeit., xi. No. 8; Neisser,Deut. med. Woch., 1904, p. 1369; Zabolotny, Arch. sci. Biol., vol. xi, and 2, p. 155; full discussion before Tenth Congress of Dermatology, Berlin,Sept., 1904; Salmon, C. R. Soc. de Biol., June 11, 1904; Arnal and Salmon,Annales de ITnst. Pasteur, July 25, 1904; Tomasczewski, Deut. med. Woch., 1903, No. 26; Hoffmann, Berl. klin. Woch., Feb. 6, 1905, and Queyrat, des Hop., Jan. 13, 1905. Piorkowski, Berl. klin. Woch., Sept. 19, 1904, Successful Inoculation of a Horse. Klingmiiller and Baermann, Woch., 1904, Non-filterability of Syphilitic Virus. For recent studyof immunity in syphilis see Nagelschmidt, Ueber Immunitat bei Syphilis nebstBemerkungen ttiber Diagnostik und Scrotherapie der Syphilis, Berlin, of the recent work on the spirochaeta of syphilis is given in full byFlexner and Noguchi, Med. News, June 17, 1905, p. 1145; also McWeeney,Brit. Med. Jour., June 10, 1905, p. Fig. 97.— from aSyphilis —{McWeeney.)A, A. Pairs united at one end B, B. Twistedforms. C. Double length forms. BACTERIA AS CAUSES OF DISEASE. I 75 to look with favor upon the Spirochaeta pallida discovered by Schaudinnand Hoffmann. This organism has been identilied in syphilitic lesions,both natural and experimental, and has not been found in any otherinfection. The organism may also be found in the fluids aspirated fromenlarged glands and in the curetings and expressed juices of the initiallesion. It is 4 , to 14 , in length and does not exceed /^ in diam-eter; it is actively motile, rotating on its axis, bending, shortening, andlengthening the spirals. In some organisms a suggestion of an undulat-ing membrane has been observed; flagclla have not been the superficial lesions of syphilis the parasite is associated with alarger and more readil
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