Several names are used for the disease caused by Bartonella bacilliformis: bartonellosis, verruga peruana, Peruvian warts, Oroya fever, and Carrión’s disease. Who was Carrión? Daniel Carrión studied the relationship between the disfiguring, but seemingly benign, cutaneous disease verruga peruana, and the often-deadly disease Oroya fever. As part of a student research competition in 1885, the 26-year-old medical student inoculated himself with the blood of a patient with verruga peruana. Carrión soon developed the malignant form of Bartonella infection, Oroya fever, characterized by high fevers, severe myalgias, and profound hemolytic anemia. He postulated that the two conditions were related, but his experiment sadly ended fatally. A few decades later, his theory was proven correct, and now Carrión is the hero of the Peruvian medical profession. Leonard J: Daniel Carrión and Carrión’s disease, Bull Pan Am Health Organ 25:258–266, 1991. |
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