GRANULOMA INGUINALE: ITS OCCURRENCE IN THE UNITED STATES
- 27 November 1926
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 87 (22) , 1785-1790
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1926.02680220001001
Abstract
Granuloma inguinale is a chronic, infectious, ulcerative process, which usually involves the genitalia or neighboring parts, shows little or no tendency to spontaneous healing, and yields to treatment with antimony and potassium tartrate (tartar emetic). The disease was probably first recognized in 1882 by MacLeod in India, who called it "serpiginous ulceration of the genitals." Conyers and Daniels,1in 1896, reporting cases from British Guiana, were the first accurately to describe the disease as a clinical entity. Galloway,2in the following year, reported a case in London and named the condition "ulcerating granuloma of the pudenda"; Grindon3reported the first cases in the United States, while to Symmers and Frost4belongs the credit of being the first to recognize the Donovan bodies in cases seen in this country. Granuloma inguinale has been called by various names, which are generally unsatisfactory. The disease is by no meansKeywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: