66 Henry B. Ward 



Specimen sent by Rev. Dr. Nassau, Hrst brought to U. S. A., 

 dried iji transit, description scanty, clinical notes by Dr. 

 Nassau valuable, as he had been infected personally. This 

 and the case of an English trader also mentioned are the first 

 records of infections among Caucasians. 



Nakaizumi, Y. 



1903. Ueber eine Filaria im Glaskorper des Menschen. Ophth. 

 Klin., Stuttgart, 7:116-22. 



Brief record of foreign body in vitreous humor which, on ac- 

 count of continued movement, the author regarded as a filaria. 

 The suggestion that it was an immature F. loa is inad- 

 missible ; if any species, it is more probably F. papulosa, or 

 F. equina. 



Neve, Arthur. 



1895. Filaria loa. [Letter from mission hospital, Kashmir, 

 Jan. 7, 1895.] Lancet, London, 1895, i -.^^6. 



Reports horse with "F. loa" in anterior chamber of eye. Speci- 

 men lost. More probably F. equina common in India. 



NoRDMANN, Alex. von. 



1832. Mikrographische Beitrage zur Naturgeschichte der 

 wirbellosen Thiere. Berlin, 4°, Heft, i, Erste Abhandl, 

 pp., 1-54. 



Gives (p. 7) the history of Filaria oculi huniani. Small nema- 

 tode in lens ; not F. loa. 



1843. Sur les helminthes dans I'oeil des anirnaux superieurs. 

 (Extrait du Nordmann, 1832.) Arch. med. comp., i :6y- 



113, Pl- 



Literal translation of Nordmann, 1832. 

 1843a. Ueber die Parasiten im Auge der hoheren Tiere. 

 Archiv der vergleichenden Medizin, i :6y. 



Cited by Kraemer 1899. Not found ; apparently an unwar- 

 ranted translation of the periodical name as well as the title 

 of Nordmann, 1843. 



Nordmann et Rayer. 



1843. Llelminthes dans I'oeil de I'homme. Annales d'oculist., 

 9:136-77. 



Reprint of so much of Nordmann (1S43) and Rayer (1843) 

 as concerns the human eye, with introduction, footnotes, and 

 summary by the editor, Cunier. 



336 



