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ARTICLE |

Syphilis: Acquired and Heredosyphilis.

JAMA. 1929;92(1):80. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700270084041.
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ABSTRACT

This is the first of a series of medical monographs intended to present to the busy practitioner the gist of various medical subjects. The beginning is a good one, for Dr. Dennie has succeeded in condensing into a small volume a great deal of information on an important subject. The book is beautifully printed and it is to be hoped that its presentation in so attractive a form may lead to a wider knowledge of syphilis among the members of the medical profession, for it is a subject that has long been shamefully neglected in undergraduate medical instruction. The author's style is easy and it is plain that most of his information is part of his personal experience. The emphasis put on the recognition of the primary lesion, the fact that it may be not at all ulcerated but only an innocent looking erosion, and the suggestion that the dark

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