Table of Contents, xiii 



PAGES 



Chapter III. — The ingredients in the water-supply of Delhi ichich appear to favour the 

 development of sores 414 — 417 



Chapter IV. — Clinical features of the Oriental sore as seen at Delhi .... 4U — 419 



Chapter V. — The pathology of the Oriental sore. — Examination of the sore in situ — Exami- 

 nation of extirpated sores 419 — 429 



Chapter VI. — Megarding the probable nature of the Oriental sore, and its relation to 

 recognised skir afftctions in JSurope . 430 — 432 



SumuMvy 433 — 434 



Leprosy in Ini^ia. 'iy Drs. T. R. Lewis and D. D. Cunningham. 1877. 



Intkodul on : — The Distribut:^;. op Leprosy in British India. — Total number 

 of lepers in the three Presidencies — Tabular statements giving the details of distribution — The 

 localities in which leprosy is specially prevalent— The forms of leprosy encountered in India, 

 and the various names by which it is known to the people — Leprosy in ancient India . . 435 — 443 



Leprosy, as observed in Kumaon. — Sir Henry Ramsay, on the necessity for the 

 special investigation of leprosy in his division — The Army Sanitary Commission's and Dr. Gavin 

 Milroy's suggestions — Nature of the present series of investigations 444 — 445 



A. Analysis of the statistical records regarding leprosy in Kumaon. — (1) The extent 

 to which the disease prevails in the district — (2) Is the disease exceptionally prevalent here ? 

 — (3) The geographical distribution of the disease in the district — (4) The main features in 

 connection with the localities in which leprosy is most prevalent 446 — 454 



B. Observations conducted at the Almorah Leper Asylum. — (1) A summary of the 

 statistical records of the asylum — (2) Analysis of the cases in the asylum affected with 

 the " anaesthetic " form of leprosy — (3) Analysis of the cases in the asylum affected with the 

 " tuberculated " form of leprosy — (4) Analysis of the cases in the asylum affected equally with 

 the two forms — "mixed " leprosy— (5) Analysis of the cases in the Asylum in which the eruption 

 was the most marked feature — " eruptive " leprosy — (6) Analysis of the features common to all 

 the forms of the disease — (7) The evidence which the asylum affords on contagion — (8) The 

 evidence which the histories of the inmates aflEord on the influence of heredity — (9) The number 

 of children bom in the asylum in connection with the statistics of the disease in the district — 



(10) Practical suggestions 454 — 488 



Summary ................ 483 — 486 



Enteric Fever Pathology. 188L 



Extracts from Dr. Lewis's Journal, describing process of photographing specimens of enteric 

 fever intestines 487 



Descriptions of Autotype reproductions of the photographs 488 



PART III, 

 H^MATOZOA AND OTHER PARASITES. 



The Bladder Worms pound in Beef and Pork. A Report by Dr. T. R. Lewis. 1872. 



Difficulty in obtaining samples of cyst-infected beef and pork— Cold sirloin at dinner 

 and breakfast containing cysts— "All sold "—" Measly " beef and pork— " Bladder worms," 

 " cystieerciis celluloses," "tela celUdosce'" — Generic connection of the cysts with tape- worms 

 — Descriptive anatomy of the cysts —Anatomical description of the encysted bladder- worm 

 — Experimental development of tape-worms— Recognition of " measle " in pigs and cattle 

 — Proper cooking of meat essential — Definite amount of heat required to kill the cysticercus — 

 General deductions 491—502 



