Pneumonia Its Supposed Connection Pathological And Etiological With Autumnal
Pneumonia Its Supposed Connection Pathological And Etiological With Autumnal
R Ren La Roche
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Drake, who thought it likely that autumnal fevers would decrease, and typhus and typhoid fevers become more prevalent, throughout the whole Valley of the Mississippi. Doubtless, it is not to be denied that typhoid fever is found occasionally to prevail in malarial districts conjointly with periodic fevers. Ramcl 1 described the combination long ago, as having fallen under his observation in some parts of the coast of Barbary and Provence, where intermittents were and are still of common occur r...ence. It is also found in La Vendee, in Brittany, in sundry valleys near Paris, and other malarial parts of France, where periodic fevers are matters of annual observation. In this country, too, it is on the increase, or already prevails extensively in some aguish or fever localities, as at Memphis, for example, where fevers attributable to malaria have not yet, notwithstanding the appearance of the intruder, lessened in frequency. 2 It may be true, also, that one of the main reasons of typhoid fever being in general less common in rural dis tricts than in cities, as also in the marshes of Corsica, Languedoc, Italy, Algeria, and this country, is to be sought in the sparscness of the population, and in the absence of other morbific agencies which are found in denser communities, and are known to lend a powerful aid to the production and propagation of the disease; while the causes of periodic fevers, which are not found in the latter localities, have not been removed in the former, and continue, therefore, to exercise there their baneful influence.
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