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RELATION OF TEETH, TONSILS AND INTESTINAL TOXEMIAS TO DISEASES OF THE EYE

GEORGE HUSTON BELL, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;73(15):1127-1134. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610410029009.
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The presence and fatality of diseases whose essence is toxemia make them a subject of prime importance to the whole medical profession. I have selected the subject of focal infections for this paper, for the reason that it is a field in which I have long been interested, having read a paper1 on this subject before the New York Institute of Stomatology, at the New York Academy of Medicine, in October, 1910. My belief has grown stronger and stronger that there is not sufficient attention paid to focal infections as a real cause of diseases of the eye. The epoch-making work of Rosenow2 on the transmutation and selective localization of pyogenic organisms in the various tissues of the body has revolutionized some of our ideas of etiology and pathology. The experimental and clinical investigations of Brown and Irons3 have been especially valuable to us, and we know

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