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"DOG BITES AND RABIES"

L. B. Gloyne, M.D.
JAMA. 1939;113(19):1752. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800440056023.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  Your remarks on "Dog Bites and Rabies" (The Journal, October 7, p. 1434) is a fine example of how one mistake often leads to another.Cabot in 1899 reported that he saved 91 per cent of the guinea pigs cauterized with nitric acid at the end of twenty-four hours. Rosenau more recently has reported practically 100 per cent of guinea pigs saved by prompt application of nitric acid. In my experience wounds treated with nitric acid heal satisfactorily, and I have never seen one become infected. I believe that the theory that the use of nitric acid causes the spread of infection is not borne out by clinical experience.Cases of paralysis, some of which have ended fatally following the Pasteur treatment, have been reported in the literature. It should be pointed out that practically all veterinarians who treat rabies have discontinued the use of material prepared

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