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  Vol. 58 No. 6, December 1948 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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HERXHEIMER REACTIONS IN PENICILLIN TREATMENT OF SYPHILIS IN PREGNANCY

JACK H. BOWEN, M.D.; H. N. COLE, M.D.; J. R. DRIVER, M.D.; RICHARD C. LIGHT, M.D.; JOHN E. RAUSCHKOLB, M.D.; M. H. Gustafson, M.D.; Burt Held, M.D.; J. M. Kam, M.D.; Manly Utterback, M.D.; A. E. Walker, M.D.

Arch Derm Syphilol. 1948;58(6):735-739.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

SINCE October 1943 treatment with sodium penicillin has been carried out in a total of 182 cases of pregnancy complicated by early syphilis at the Cleveland City Hospital and the University Hospitals. Although total doses of penicillin increased as time went on from 60,000 to 9,600,000 units, in the bulk of the cases (86 per cent) at least 2,400,000 units were given in divided doses every three hours for from sixty to one hundred and twenty injections. The results of treatment are measured in terms of the efficacy of penicillin in protecting the fetus or, better, in curing the fetus of the maternal infection.

In this study there were 5 cases of primary syphilis, 63 cases of secondary syphilis and 114 cases of early latent syphilis. Excluded were all cases of patients thought to have had adequate treatment who were re-treated for protection of the fetus, and all late latent . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

CLEVELAND

From the Department of Dermatology and Syphilology, Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and of the Cleveland City Hospital and the University Hospitals.


Footnotes

The work described in this paper was done under a contract, recommended by the Committee on Medical Research, between the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the Western Reserve University School of Medicine and under a grant-in-aid from the National Institute of Health, Syphilis Study Section, United States Public Health Service.



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