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ARTICLE |

NASAL AND AURAL COMPLICATIONS IN EPIDEMIC INFLUENZA.

SARGENT F. SNOW, M. D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(22):1331-1333. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450740019001f.
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ABSTRACT

The importance of ear and nose complications in epidemic influenza impresses itself on us as we come more and more to see that much of the acute suffering in the disease depends on their severity. Practically all its headaches and cranial pains are due to pressure in the nasal passage, or to pent-up secretions within the adjacent sinuses, the outlets of which are blocked by the acutely congested membranes, and it is for the sake of emphasizing and sustaining this argument to those of the general medical profession who read the proceedings of this Section that I shall inflict many well known and seemingly useless details upon the specialists here assembled.

The ethmoidal cavities are particularly susceptible to inflammation in la grippe, and in some cases they may be the only ones involved, but in a few patients the disease rapidly extends, one sinus after another being affected until perhaps

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