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G. Kelemen (1959)
LVII Aural EmbryopathiesAnnals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 68
G. Bellussi, P. Filippi, L. Scalfi (1959)
Virus and rickettsial diseases in otorhinolaryngology.Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum, 147
E. Potter (1952)
Pathology of the Fetus and the NewbornArchives of Disease in Childhood, 27
E. Goodpasture, S. Auerbach, H. Swanson, E. Cotter (1939)
Virus Pneumonia of Infants Secondary to Epidemic Infections.JAMA Pediatrics, 57
J. Kaldor (1933)
Congenital pneumonia of the stillborn and the newbornAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 25
K. Grünberg, W. Lange, P. Manasse
Handbuch der Pathologischen Anatomie des menschlichen Ohres
Scheibe (1890) is generally credited with having been the first to find in the secretions of an influenzal otitis, bacilli, not present in inflammations of the middle ear of other origin. They were identified later, with the help of newer culture methods as influenza bacilli. Hirsch (1912) found that the influenza bacillus rarely initiates the disease; it rather prepares the soil for other organisms; streptococci, pneumococci, and others are to be considered the true originators of what is called influenzal otitis. Later, virology gave the pathology of grippe and influenza new interpretations. The clinical and pathological pictures of otitis in the wake of influenza is among the best known of all infections of the ear. However, it is considered mostly a disease of adults and this group offered the main material for study. Pathological investigations of influenzal otitis of the newborn are lacking, although there is no doubt about the
Archives of Otolaryngolog – American Medical Association
Published: Aug 1, 1960
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