Etiology If we may judge from Holy Writ, the ancient Jewish lawgivers regarded the disease as contagious. Modern science declares that it is not. The discovery in recent times of a peculiar bacillus by Hansen gives a clue to the medium of contagion, and corroborates the results of careful clinical observation. While we cannot doubt the possibility of contagion, we must admit that within the temperate zones the direct transfer of the disease from one person to another has been very rarely observed. It is by no means unusual for a Caucasian to contract the disease when dwelling among the natives where it is endemic; but it is extremely rare for him, on returning to his native country, to convey the malady to those with whom he associates. During the past several years there have been a large number of lepers who have passed months and sometimes years in the hospitals of New York, and yet not a single case of leprosy has developed in this city. Fox says: "The causes of propagation are mainly these:
As to intermarriage, little need be said. It sufficiently accounts for the occurrence of a large number of cases of leprosy in the offspring of lepers, and the continuous intermarriage of people of the same caste in India, enforced rigidly by custom and superstition, tends greatly to the spread of leprosy hereditarily. Secondly - As regards hereditary influence, this is most marked in children who are begotten by lepers far advanced in the disease. Thirdly. - As to cohabitation and inoculation. Of course, these are not such potent causes as intermarriage and hereditary tendency in spreading leprosy, but still it is probable that they may account for a certain number of cases. It has been said that leprosy may be communicated by vaccination, but if so it must be infinitely rare and scarcely worthy of being taken into account. |
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