PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS 



ON THE WORK OF THE JOHN HOWARD McFADDEN 

 RESEARCHES 



ON THE DETERMINATION OF A COEFFICIENT BY WHICH THE RATE OF 

 DIFFUSION OF STAIN AND OTHER SUBSTANCES INTO LIVING CELLS CAN 

 BE MEASURED. The Proceedings of the Royal Society, B, Vol. 81, 

 April 1909, contains the preliminary description of the jelly 

 method of staining living cells, together with the principles of 

 estimating the coefficient of diffusion, by which the subsequent 

 researches were made. 



INDUCED CELL-REPRODUCTION AND CANCER. London, John Murray ; 

 and Philadelphia, P. Blakeston's Sons & Co., December 1910. 

 This volume gives, in its first part, a full description of the jelly 

 method, with many photographs and examples of its application ; 

 in the second part it describes the action of chemical agents on the 

 stained living cells, and introduces the study of the action of 

 auxetics in causing the cell-division of human white blood cells. 

 The third part of the volume contains the details of a working 

 hypothesis regarding the cause of cancer and other tumours based 

 on the action of auxetics. 



RESEARCHES INTO INDUCED CELL-REPRODUCTION AND CANCER, Vol. I. 

 London, John Murray ; and Philadelphia, P. Blakeston's 

 Sons & Co., September 1911. Gives the chemical isolation of 

 auxetics and a complete list of them ; a method of fixing cells 

 after they have been stained alive with the jelly method ; a 

 preliminary note on the researches made into the question of pitch 

 cancer ; and some work done on granular red-blood corpuscles. 



RESEARCHES INTO INDUCED CELL-REPRODUCTION AND CANCER, Vol. II. 

 London, John Murray ; and Philadelphia, P. Blakeston's 

 Sons & Co., April 1912. A continuation of the researches with 

 auxetics by inoculation into animals with the artificial production 

 of benign tumours. There is a discussion about the division- 

 figures induced by auxetics, and a description of the action of the 

 latter on certain ova. The question of pitch cancer is further 

 described, with a review of the first official inquiry on the subject. 

 The first work with the jellies on protozoa is mentioned with the 

 discovery of Lymphocytozoon cobayce. 



RESEARCHES INTO INDUCED CELL-REPRODUCTION AND CANCER, Vol. III. 

 London, John Murray ; and Philadelphia, P. Blakeston's 

 Sons & Co., April 1913. This volume brings the researches on 

 pitch cancer up to the date of the second official inquiry. The 

 demonstration of the action of auxetics on leucocytes by precise 

 methods is described, and the production of adenomata in goat's 

 breasts mentioned. There is a suggestion for the treatment ot 

 wounds by auxetics. The second part of the volume deals with 

 the continuation of researches into protozoology by the jelly 

 method, and a demonstration of what appear to be intracellular 

 parasites in syphilis, scarlet fever, and measles. 



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