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CONVEYANCE OF INFECTION THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF THE EAR SYRINGE: A REMEDY.

FRANK C. TODD, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(16):949-950. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450680017001e.
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ABSTRACT

Inflammation of the middle ear may result from various affections of the nose and throat or from infection externally, and may terminate in recovery without treatment. With modern treatment many cases undergo a speedy recovery, running a course of from a few days to two months, while others under similar conditions and with the same treatment result in a most violent inflammation involving the mastoid and surrounding structures, or lapse into chronic suppuration.

The variation in severity and chronicity is in a large degree due to the character of the bacterium or bacteria causing the infection. "Whether the disease shall promptly run its course or change into the chronic form depends upon the continued activity of the germs present or upon the gradual dying out of the first culture and implantation of new varieties upon the now affected membrane." (C. R. Holmes.)

The germs commonly causing inflammation of the middle

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