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ARTICLE |

PRURITUS ANI ET VULVAE DUE TO ALLERGY

Richard L. Sutton, M.D.
JAMA. 1949;140(16):1290. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02900510040017.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  Skin testing with regard to contactant injury pertinent to pruritus ani et vulvae has received the condemnation of Dr. H. Hailey (Hailey, H.: Pruritus Ani et Vulvae, J. A. M. A. 139: 837 [March 26] 1949) and the approbation of Dr. A. H. Rowe (Pruritus Ani et Vulvae Due to Allergy, correspondence, J. A. M. A. 140:644 [June 18] 1949). When contactant irritation is suspected, as it is in most cases of pruritus ani et vulvae, the effort of the practitioner (in contradistinction, perhaps, to the medical scientist) is to keep possibly irritant substances off the affected regions and to obtain the cure not by doing something to the patient but by inducing the patient not to do something harmful to himself. Soap, toilet articles and medicines are the common causes of contact dermatitis of the anogenital region. Rather than doing skin tests with them, the

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