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ARTICLE |

URETHRAL DISEASE AND MARRIAGE.

FREDERICK W. ROBBINS, A. M., M. D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(22):1203-1204. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450490004002b.
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ABSTRACT

One who has followed the literature of pelvic surgery for the last few years has no doubt come to believe that the great majority of cases of salpingitis and allied diseases are of gonorrheal origin. One need not have practiced medicine for a long time before having under his care patients who give a history of perfect health before marriage, but that event has ushered in discomfort, distress even, to the extent of practically rendering one unable to cope with the duties of life. Life has lost its charm; there is no home; sexual life is repulsive or impossible; children do not come to brighten the family life; love itself is fast ebbing away, and both husband and wife are beginning to wish that the marriage contract had never been entered into. The wife in her innocence does not think to question her husband's virtue, and the husband is very

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