Infectious or Contagious? | Left Side of Phrase | Term | Right Side of Phrase |
Complicated | personal in- tercourse for its transmission, though intensely infectious within such proximity ; the poison of | influenza | , on the other hand, if less contagious, was capable of much wider diffusion, so as |
Yes | being now below the average number in the cor- responding periods of recent years. IS | influenza | CONTAGIOUS? Di!. I’uoisT, as a proof of the contagiousness of influenza, recently cited at the |
Unknown | affection, which is contagious and frequently trans- mitted from one human being to another. The | influenza | first ap- peared at Montbeliard on December 13th last. The patient was an inhabitant who |
Yes | prostration that follows an attack, are equally striking. Other peculiarities of this contagium, which make | influenza | the most typical of epidemic diseases, and at the same time distinguish it from all |
Yes | at so many po’Jnts. Moreover, this would argue a very high degree of contagion in | influenza | patients, the existence of which there is much reason to doubt. Facts appear to me |
Unknown | contagion ; and yet none of them caught the in- fluenza. NOTES ON AN OUTBREAK OF | influenza | AT KING EDWARD’S SCHOOLS FOR GIRLS. By HUBERT C. BRISTOWE, M.B.Lond., Clinical Assistant Betlilem Uoyal |
Complicated | animals bear any causal relationship to the disease in man ? — Dr. Symes Thompson agreed that | influenza | was dependent upon something more than mere contagion, with which the universality and the rapidity |
Unknown | general malarial poisoning,— Dr. SrtrnK.v Mackj!:.\.uk raised the question as to the disease being | influenza | at all, aud as to the existence in lingland of a form of contagious catarrh |
Yes | be said to have brought us directly nearer to a knowledge of the contagium of | influenza | , thoy have never- theless paved the way, as it were, for further researches, for they |
Yes | duplex. Dr. Vassilieff, in the same Society of Russian Physicians, summed up as follows: 1. | influenza | is a disease sui generis, infectious, caused by a microbe yet unknown. 2. It is |
Complicated | present epi- demic which may throw light on the length of these periods in epidemic | influenza | ? The transmission of this disease by infection has been denied, but it is probable that |
Unknown | 8, 1890.] THB BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL. 323 the cause of the influenza, (2) or the | influenza | was produced by other unknown micro-organisms, the pneumococcus being due to a secondary infection |
Complicated | more or less pneumonia, which I consider to be due to climatic influences, and called | influenza | . They may have been due to infection. The first case, T., aged 28, who was |
Complicated | of the rela- tions of meteorology to health. Robbbt Basnbs. THE ETIOLOGICAL REL.\TIOX3 OF | influenza | . Before a specific form for this epidemic infection can be deter- mined, some thought is |
Yes | Cholera stands in this class, though less restricted to special districts than are remittent fevers. | influenza | and dengue are nearly allied ; both are readily infectious, but the latter has a distinctive |
Complicated | on board ship in hot climates. To whichever of these intermediate classes the infection of | influenza | may eventu- ally be assigned, it is clearly not propagated only by direct per- sonal |
Complicated | to say, to a secondary infection, that the diplococcus pnoumoniao is not the microbe of | influenza | , and that this remains, as yet, im- discovered. The last contribution is by Professor Klebs |
Complicated | their disappearance after its subsidence, Professor Kundrat believed that these cases were connected with the | influenza | , and that there were not two inde- pendent infections, as was stated by Professor Nothnagel |
Unknown | severe pulmonary disturbances were the expression of a direct effect of the pathogenic virus of | influenza | , or whether they should be looked upon as being secondary infections. One of his cases |
Yes | from three to six weeks. It thus appears that the majority of the deaths from | influenza | in the past month were of persons who had been infected in the previous months |
Unknown | case of migrating oedema, pleural effusion of albuminuria, probably due to septic infection and to | influenza | , occurring in a man aged 3″, previously healthy and strong, who was free from syphilis |
Unknown | of incubation and infectious- ness in typhus fever, enteric fever, whooping cough, varicella, cholera, and | influenza | . In making this want known to our readers, and requesting them to supply the Committee |