REFERENCES 



1355 



Diarrhoea is rare, but pulmonary complications are not unusual, 

 and albuminuria is generally present. The blood shows an increase 

 in the white cells, particularly the lymphocytes, while the eosino- 

 philes are diminished. 



No organisms could be found in the blood, and there were no 

 reactions to serum tests for the enteric fevers, nor could monkeys be 

 infected by inoculation. 



KOREAN CONTINUED FEVER. 



A somewhat similar fever to the Sumatra fever is described by 

 Weir. It occurs in spring and early summer. No bite is mentioned, 

 but there is the rash; no diarrhoea, but frequent pulmonary com- 

 plications and the nervous symptoms. The course of the fever is 

 often short and terminates by lysis. 



MALAY STATES FEVER. 



Dowden in 19 15 described a somewhat similar fever in the 

 Federated Malay States, but gave no setiological information. 



REFERENCES. 



Tsutsugamushi Disease. 



AsHBURN AND Craig (1908). A Comparative Study of Tsutsugamushi 



Disease and Spotted or Tick Fever of Montana. Philippine Journal of 



Science, B, vol.iii., p. i. 

 Baelz and Mawakami (1878). Die Japanische Fluss oder Ueberschwem- 



mungsfieber. Archiv fur Path. Anat. Berlin. Virch. Archiv, Ixxviii. 



373. 



Katishima and Miyajima (1918). Kitasato Archives of Experimental 

 Medicine, vol. ii., No. 2. 



Miyajima and Okumura (1917). Kitasato Archives of Experimental Medi- 

 cine, vol. i., No. I. 



Ogata (1906). Vorlaufige Mitteilung liber die ^tiologie der Tsutsugamushi 



(Kedani) Krankheit. Deutsche Med. Wochensch., xlvi. 1868. 

 Palm (1878). Some Account of a Disease called Shima Mushi or Island 



Insect Disease by Natives of Japan. Edinburgh Medical Journal, p. 128. 

 ScHEUBE (1885). Klinische Beobachtungen iiber die Krankheiten Japan. 



Virch. Archiv, xcix. 368. 

 ScHEUBE (1910). Die Krankheiten der Warmen Lander, p. 488. Jena. 

 Tanaka (1899). Ueber ^Etiologie und Pathogenic der Kedani Krankheit. 



Centralb. f. BakterioL, p. 432. 



Allied Fevers. 



SchSffner (191 4). Proceedings of the Far Eastern Association of Tropical 



Medicine for 1913, 309-315. 

 Weir {191 5). China Medical Missionary Association, 



