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ARTICLE |

THE ACUTE FORMS OF ABDOMINAL TUBERCULOSIS

DANIEL N. EISENDRATH, A.B., M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(4):291-294. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420300031001i.
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There has been a general impression for many years in the minds of the profession that tuberculosis of the various abdominal structures was a disease which almost invariably began in a slow insidious manner.

The fact that the lesions caused by the tubercle bacillus are often accompanied by such acute symptoms as to simulate in every detail the well-recognized acute forms of disease of the various abdominal viscera is not as well known as it deserves to be.

The two structures which are most apt to be thus involved are the appendix and the peritoneum, and the present paper will be limited to these two. Mayo,1 however, has called attention to such an acute onset in cases of tuberculosis of the Fallopian tube, and in a previous paper2 I have emphasized the relative frequency with which a mixed gonococcus and tuberculous infection of the epididymis will be accompanied

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