scholarly journals Letter to the Editor regarding: “History of dermatology: the study of skin diseases over the centuries”

Author(s):  
Mohammad Reza Mirzaei ◽  
Javad Ghazi-Sha’rbaf ◽  
Reza Mohammadinasab
2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-45
Author(s):  
Bosiljka M. Lalević-Vasić ◽  
Branko Bobić

Abstract Medieval medicine in Serbia used to be the scientific medicine of that time. It included dermatology and venereology, which developed into an independent discipline in the second half of the 19th century. The most relevant sources for studying dermatology and venereology are Serbian medieval medical and therapeutic codices. The terms used in the manuscripts report about the diseases people in Serbia suffered from and were treated for in the Middle Ages. The following diseases were reported: scabies, leprosy, fungal scalp infections, as well as psoriasis, crusts (pyococcal ulcers), granulation, baldness, excessive body hair, leg wounds and old wounds, facial spots, unspecified skin diseases, urethritis and syphilis. Special attention was also given to cosmetics. Topical remedies were applied - various herbs, sulphur, mercury, tar, pyrethrum, plasters, ground glass, auripigment - in the form of a powder, liniment, ointment or plaster.


Author(s):  
Iago Gonçalves Ferreira ◽  
Magda Blessman Weber ◽  
Renan Rangel Bonamigo

2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 159-165
Author(s):  
Bosiljka M. Lalević-Vasić

Abstract Owing to the enforced sanitary laws, the health care service in Serbia evolved systematically till the beginning of the Balkan Wars (1912). At the early phase of this period, in general hospitals dermatovenereology diseases accounted for 10.5% (Užice) to 45% (Zaječar), while venereal diseases prevailed (83.3% and 16.7%, respectively). In the period from 1880 to 1897, there were 12.354 Serbian soldiers with venereal diseases: 56.9% had Gonorrhoea, 28.9% had Ulcusmolle, and 14.2% had Syphilis. The first official and professional statistics on Syphilis was done in 1898, and according to the report, 0.26% of the population of Serbia was affected by Syphilis: 1.42% in the Timok Region and 0.27% in Belgrade. Nevertheless, these data must be taken with caution, being very low. In regions with endemic Syphilis, tardive and tertiary Syphilis prevailed, whereas out of these regions, secondary forms of the disease were most common. In the period from 1882 to 1910, according to the reports of the Sanitary Department of the Ministry of Defense, skin diseases were reported in 3.1% to 15.2% of all hospitalized soldiers. Leprosy was diagnosed in 15 cases in Serbia; notification of all cases became compulsory in 1890. From 1912 to 1918, Serbia was at war, and the most common skin disease was a dermatozoonosis - pediculosios (lice infestation), which caused a tragic epidemic of exanthematous typhus in the army, but also among civilians. It was estimated that there were 500.000 sick persons, out of which over 150.000 died, including 56% of physicians and other medical staff working in hospitals. Disinfestation was the main treatment modality, using steam in so called “Serbian barrel”. At the Thessaloniki front line, in the Dermatovenereology Department, there were 41 dermatoses or groups of dermatoses, affecting the hospitalized soldiers, but scabies was scarce, owing to good hygiene. After the end of the First World War, the Serbian army and population were decimated, and the country ruined. Reconstruction of the country began once again.


1935 ◽  
Vol 213 (8) ◽  
pp. 339-345 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHARLES J. WHITE

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 166-167
Author(s):  
Gabriel J. Escobar

Dr Wiswell does well to remind us that selective criteria for lumbar puncture sometimes fail to identify cases of neonatal meningitis (Pediatrics 1995;95:803-806). It should not surprise us when a guideline fails. However, it does not follow that, because of this observation, one should subject every newborn suspected of sepsis (130 000 to 400 000 each year in the United States1-3) to a spinal tap. The history of neonatology is full of unfortunate events resulting from similar blanket recommendations.4


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