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CANCER CYSTS OF THE BREAST AND THEIR RELATION TO NON-MALIGNANT CYSTS

JOSEPH C. BLOODGOOD, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LIII(18):1475-1479. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.92550180001001j.
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New problems and new responsibilities accompany all surgical diseases when they appear for treatment at an earlier stage of the disease than hitherto. Accumulated experience demonstrates that surgical interference of any kind promises better immediate and ultimate results when this procedure is instituted at a period in which the diagnosis is most difficult. This is especially true of tumors and is well exemplified in tumors of the breast.

Pathologists are less interested in gross and cellular pathology to-day than formerly, because investigations as to the etiology of disease along the lines of gross and cellular pathology have been about exhausted or have reached their limit of evident usefulness. Pathologists, therefore, are more and more interested in experimental pathology and physiologic chemistry. Surgeons, I am convinced, will become more and more interested in the gross and cellular pathology of the diseases that they are called on to

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