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CONTRIBUTIONS OF EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL RESEARCH TO DERMATOLOGY
J. LAMAR CALLAWAY, M.D.;
GEORGE W. HAMBRICK, Jr.
AMA Arch Derm Syphilol. 1954;69(3):278-304.
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AS NOTED by the title, the scope of this paper is profound. It is impossible to list all the contributions. The efforts reported in this paper are concerned primarily with the reports from two journals, the A. M. A. ARCHIVES OF DERMATOLOGY AND SYPHILOLOGY and the Journal of Investigative Dermatology. From 1932 through 1952 there were approximately 90 articles concerned in some way with small animal experiments reported in the former journal and 100 articles in the latter journal from 1938 through 1952.
Farris, who edited a book entitled "The Care and Breeding of Laboratory Animals," in 1950, presented the following statistical data:
The selection of the species to be included in the book was based primarily upon the results of a survey of animals used by American investigators, or determined by papers presented at annual meetings of three representative scientific organizations: The American Association of Anatomists, The American
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
DURHAM, N. C.
From the Division of Dermatology and Syphilology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine.
Footnotes
Read before the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the American Dermatological Association, Inc., Lake Placid, N. Y., June 10, 1953.
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