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ARTICLE |

CEREBELLAR ABSCESS OF OTITIC ORIGIN—AUTOPSY.

A. D. McCONACHIE, M.D.; C. W. HARTWIG, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(14):755-756. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450410015002c.
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ABSTRACT

The importance of prompt and early arrest of purulent conditions in the middle ear is becoming more and more firmly fixed in the mind of every physician. It is only within recent years that anything like success has been attained in the treatment of these conditions. The pathologic and etiologic factors in such cases are being more thoroughly studied and better understood. We are, to-day, better able than ever before to appreciate the extreme gravity of such conditions and now know that a chronic otorrhea—like a pocketful of dynamite—is a standing menace to life instead of, as formerly, being considered a mere inconvenience. We now regard the condition seriously and do not rest satisfied until the discharge is cured.

Nearly 20 per cent, of all ear cases belong to the class of otorrheas. Suppurative processes in the drum cavity readily lead to necrosis and destruction of the bony

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