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PROGRESS IN OTOSCLEROSIS

JAMA. 1947;133(13):938-939. doi:10.1001/jama.1947.02880130038011.
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A recent report on twenty years of research in otosclerosis and related problems1 presents some interesting observations on the prevention and treatment. Davenport, Milles and Frank, who studied the distribution of clinical otosclerosis in several generations of sixty families, found that the females in these families were affected about twice as frequently as the males. When both parents were deaf, nearly all their daughters and nearly two thirds of their sons were deaf. However, the studies of Davenport indicate that the type of blood does not indicate who would be expected to develop defects conducive to otosclerosis. The observations of Guild support the contention of other workers that when the deafness was caused by otosclerosis it was due solely to an ankylosis of the stapes. His statistical studies suggest that in the United States there are between ten million and twelve million white people with otosclerosis and that 1.000,000

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