Ringworm: its diagnosis and treatment, by A. Smith

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˹éÒ 83 - Edition. A Handbook of the Theory and Practice of Medicine. By Frederick T. Roberts, MD ; MRCP, Professor of Clinical Medicine and Therapeutics in University College Hospital, London.
˹éÒ 19 - ... family will be affected in this way, while all the others are suffering from ringworm presenting the usual features. After a time the hair grows again on these patches ; they must not therefore be confounded with the permanently bald patches which result from acute inflammation of the hair follicles. It is the occasional development of these temporary, smooth, bald patches in common ringworm which has given rise to the erroneous belief that there is a parasitic disease called tinea decalvans,...
˹éÒ 8 - I call disseminated ringworm— one rarely diagnosed, and the most chronic and difficult to cure. The hair is growing freely and firmly all over the head ; there are no patches to be seen now, although probably they have existed at an earlier stage of the disease ; the skin appears generally healthy, and perhaps almost free from scurf: but numerous isolated stumps, or groups of stumps, are seen here and there, often scattered all over the scalp. This variety is almost always overlooked, and can only...

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