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THE INFLUENCE OF INORGANIC ELEMENTS ON BLOOD REGENERATION IN NUTRITIONAL ANEMIA

VICTOR C. MYERS, Ph.D.; HOWARD H. BEARD, Ph.D.
JAMA. 1929;93(16):1210-1213. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710160024007.
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The older textbooks on therapeutics1 list a number of inorganic elements, in addition to iron, which are reputed to be of value in the treatment of anemia. Among these arsenic stands out most prominently, although reference may also be found to the use of salts of manganese, copper, mercury and vanadium. With a clearer appreciation of some of the factors underlying the anemias, the use of this form of therapy has fallen somewhat into disrepute, efforts being devoted more to the use of diets tending to promote the formation of hemoglobin. The work done by Whipple2 stands out most prominently in this connection and it paved the way for the discovery by Minot3 of the specific value of liver in the treatment of pernicious anemia.

The advance that has occurred recently in our methods of treating the anemias is due directly or indirectly in large part to

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