﻿400 MUSGRAVE AND MARSHALL. 



It will require careful obervations on several eases under prolonged 

 treatment to justify a positive expression of opinion, as to the part played 

 by syphilis or yaws in the gangotie process. 



REFERENCES. 



(1) Fordyce and Arnold: J. of Cutaneous Diseases (1906). XXIV, 1. 



(2) Leys: J. Trop. Med. (1906), IX, 47. 



(3) Mink and McLean: J. Am. Med. Ass. (1906), XLVII, 1166. 



'Diseases of the skin: W. B. Saunders, 4th Ed. (1905), 687. 



"While this article was in press Stitt (U. S. Naval Med. Bull. (1907), I, 96) 

 reported a ease of gangosa, the first in a white man. The patient, a sailor, 

 had recently come from Guam, where he had exposed himself to gangosa, but he 

 also had a history of syphilis five years before. Antisyphilitic treatment did not 

 check the disease. 



