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ARTICLE |

The Diagnostics and Treatment of Tropical Diseases.

JAMA. 1919;72(24):1788. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610240076031.
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ABSTRACT

This book by Admiral Stitt is well known as a practical guide to its subject. In the third edition only minor changes have been made, with the exception of the section on trench fever, which has been extensively rewritten, these changes of course being required by the newer war medicine researches.

Disease and the Odor Humanus.  —The emanations from the skin vary with every passing phase of health, and in pronounced disease the altered smell may be easily noticeable. Inasmuch as all constitutional diseases are mirrored in the blood, and inasmuch as the cutaneous and respiratory emanations tend to alter with every alteration of the blood, it is probably no exaggeration to say that an all-wise physician with a sufficiently delicate sense of smell, could diagnose most (constitutional) diseases by the mere smell of his patient. But we have not arrived at that stage yet.—Medical Press.

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