6o Henry B. Ward 



Cites theories of Manson and Robertson regarding Calabar 

 swellings. Records cases of Habershon, Wurtz, and Han- 

 ley. Thinks this evidence demonstrates relation of F. loa 

 and its embryonic form F. diurna to the trouble. 



1905. [Abstract] Arch. f. Schiffs u. Tropen-Hyg., 9:181. 

 1905a, Kalabarbeulen und ihre Beziehungen zn Filaria loa und 



diurna. Miinch. med, Wochenschr., 52 :474. 



Review of Kerr, T. S., 1904. 

 KiNGSLEY, Mary H. 



1897. Travels in West Africa, Congo Francais, Corisco, and 



Cameroons. Macmillan & Co., London, 8°. 



Under diseases the author notes "lastly, a peculiar abomination,, 

 a filaria. ... I have seen the eyes of natives simply 

 swarming with these filariae. ... A similar but not iden- 

 tical worm is fairly common on the Ogowe and is liable to 

 get under the epidermis of any part of the body." 



Kraemer, a. * 



1899. Die tierischen Schmarotzer des Auges. IV. Die Faden- 

 wiirmer (Filariae) des Auges. Grafe-Samisch Hand- 

 buch, II Theil, X Band, 10 und 11 Lief., xviii Kapitel: 

 64-87, figs. 7-9, 182 pp., .17 figs. Rev. CB. Bakt. u. Par., 

 28:517-18. 



Full record of earlier cases with unfortunate misprints in 

 names and dates ; includes under F. loa doubtful cases and 

 also Addario, determined by Grassi as F. inermis. Says 

 F. loa occurs in eyelids and fingers, though Morton, the au- 

 thority cited, only gives this as the opinion of Nassau ; be- 

 lieves F. loa and also the Guinea worm maj"- wander back 

 into tissue of orbit. 



KUHNT, H. 



1888. Extraction eines Fadenwurms (Filaria) aus der Regio 



macularis des menschlichen Glaskorpers. Corr. Bl. allg. 



arztl. Ver. Thiiringen, 17:541-55. 

 Original not seen. Cited thus by Kraemer, 1899. 

 1892. Extraction eines neuen Entozoon aus dem Glaskorper 



des Menschen. Archiv. f. Augenheilk., 24 :205-29. 



2 figs. 



Peculiar small nematode, not identified by Leuckart, not F. loo. 

 Removed by operation from the vitreous body. 



330 • ■ 



