THE PRESENT STATUS OF MYCETOMA
- 1 March 1928
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 16 (3) , 774-788
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1928.01140030146006
Abstract
The term mycetoma is used at the present time to include maduromycosis and actinomycosis. In 1846, before the causes of these chronic inflammatory conditions were known, Colebrook1 first recorded in the literature the geographico-anatomic name, Madura foot. Carter,2 in his monograph published in 1874, designated them on the basis of etiology and pathology by the term mycetoma (meaning fungus tumor). The term maduromycosis was introduced in 1916 by Chalmers and Archibald3 to apply to an etiologic subgroup of mycetoma, which they distinguish from actinomycosis. Actinomycosis, as caused by Actinomyces bovis, has been known since the work of Bollinger in 1878, and as many of the organisms isolated from cases of Madura foot or mycetoma of the foot have been found to belong to the genus Actinomyces, actinomycosis likewise has become a subgroup of the mycetomas. Although progress has been made during the last decade in respect toKeywords
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