JOURNALS WHICH HAVE CEASED PUBLICATION 



JOURNALS WHICH HAVE CEASED PUBLICATION. 



Since the appearance of the second edition of this book the following 

 j ournals have either ceased to be published as separate entities or have stopped 

 publication altogether: — 



1. American Journal oj Tropical Diseases and Preventive Medicine. This is 



now included in the New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal, 

 Three volumes were issued 1913-1916. 



2. Journal oJ the London School oJ Tropical Medicine. Two .volumes were 



issued igTi-1913. 



3. Journal oJ Tropical Veterinary Science, Calcutta. Seven volumes appeared 



1906-1912. 



4. Paludism, Simla. There are five numbers only, 1910-1912. 



5. Scientijic Memoirs by Officers of the Medical and Sanitary Departments of 



the Government of India. New Series, Calcutta. These are exceedingly 

 valuable publications, and numbered some sixty volumes from 1902- 

 191 3. Their place and that of Paludism is taken by the Indian 

 Journal of Medical Research. 



6. Yellow Fever Bureau Bulletin, Liverpool. There are three interesting 



volumes in existence which appeared from 1911 to 1915. Its work is 

 carried on by the Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology. 



No Reports of the Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum, have 

 appeared since 191 1. In the meanwhile much of the original work performed 

 during the last five years has been published in medical, chemical, and 

 entomological journals. Up to date four reports and two reviews of tropical 

 literature have appealed between 1904 and 191 1, 



SPECIAL WORKS ON TROPICAL MEDICINE. 



{In Chronological Sequence.)] 



De Oviedo, F. (1526), Hysteria Natural de las Indias (Toledo). (1547). 

 Coronica de las Indias (Madrid). (Accounts of Yaws and Jiggers.) 



Thevet, F. a. (1558). Les Singularitiez de la France Antartique autrement 

 nommee Amerique. (Jiggers, Yaws, and Native Practice.) 



Da Orta, G. (1563). Coloquious dos Simples e Drogas da India. (This 

 book is the first European work published in India, and contains descrip- 

 tions of many Indian plants and their application to the treatment of 

 Cholera, Dysentery, etc.) Garcia da Orta was physician to Dom Marten 

 da Sousa, Governor of Goa, with whom he travelled in India and Ceylon 

 in 1534. Antwerp, 1567, translation by Cluscus into Latin. The 

 English translation (191 3). 



W, G. (1598). The Cures of the Diseased in Remote Regions (London). 

 Heat stroke, Typhus, Yellow Fever (?), Erysipelas (Filariasis ?), 

 Espindas, Dysentery, and Scurvy. (1916) Reprinted at Oxford. 



BoNTius, J. (1642). De Medicina Indorum (Lugduni, Batavia). (Remarks 

 on drugs, preservation of health, treatment, and morbid anatomy.) 



Alpinus, p. (1645). De Medicina ^gyptorum (Parisiis). (The first book 

 contains articles on the state of Egyptian medicine, on diseases endemic 

 and epidemic, including plague; the second on blood-letting; the third 

 on scarification, extraction of stone from the bladder, baths, and friction; 

 the fourth on medicines.) 



PisoN, G. (1648). Historia Medica Brasilise (Lugduni, Batavia). (This work 

 is divided into two parts, of which the first treats of Brazilian climato- 

 logy; the second, of Brazilian diseases — catarrhs, diseases of the eyes, 

 spasm, stupor of the members, obstructions of the viscera, hydropsy, 

 fluxes, tenesmus, colic, dysentery, liver troubles, worms, syphilis, ulcers, 

 etc.) 



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