RT Journal A1 BROWN L, PASQUERA G T1 ETiologic studies in tuberculosis JF Journal of the American Medical Association JO Journal of the American Medical Association YR 1919 FD November 22 VO 73 IS 21 SP 1576 OP 1578 DO 10.1001/jama.1919.02610470012004 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1919.02610470012004 AB The etiology of pulmonary tuberculosis is far from being a closed subject, and this communication is an attempt to supply what seems to some workers missing links in the etiologic chain. The dicta of many authorities have been apparently blindly accepted by their followers. On close scrutiny it is seen that many statements rest on inference rather than on fact. We have attempted in these few experiments on guineapigs to accept no statements, and to trace the tubercle bacillus, if possible, directly from the source of infection to the apparently exposed animal. The final test was of course the necropsy of the guinea-pig. In succession we studied the dust of rooms, the telephone receivers, the eating utensils, the infected hands of patients, the saliva, the transmission by kissing, the infection of tooth brushes, and the danger of flies and of coughing in tuberculous infection for guinea-pigs.I. THE DUST OFÂ