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A suggestion from Dr Alan MacDonald, "Want to know about Lyme borreliosis? Learn everything you can about syphilis." 

See remarks ABOUT JOHN H STOKES BOOK ON ANOTHER SPIROCHETE SYPHILIS

or go directly to book below.

Book on Syphilis Published in 1917, find interesting similarities to Lyme borreliosis.

John H. Stokes' book, The Third Great Plague A Discussion of Syphilis for Everyday People is provided thanks to Project Gutenberg.

This eBook is free for anyone to use anywhere at with almost  no restrictions whatsoever, released May 6, 2006 [EBook #18324]

Produced by Audrey Longhurst, LN Yaddanapudi and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www. pg dp.net

The Third Great Plague

A Discussion of Syphilis for Everyday People by John H. Stokes, A.B., M.D.

Chief of the Section of Dermatology and Syphilology, The Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

Assistant Professor of Medicine, The Mayo Foundation Graduate School of the University of Minnesota

Philadelphia and London, W. B. Saunders Company 1920 Published, November, 1917 Copyright, 1917

by W. B. Saunders Company

Reprinted July, 1918 Reprinted February, 1920 PRINTED IN AMERICA [Pg 5]

PREFACE

The struggle of man against his unseen and silent enemies, the lower or bacterial forms of life, once one becomes

alive to it, has an irresistible fascination. More dramatic than any novel, more sombre and terrifying than a battle

fought in the dark, would be the intimate picture of the battle of our bodies against the hosts of disease. If we could

see with the eye of the microscope and feel and hear with the delicacy of chemical and physical interactions

between atoms, the heat and intensity and the savage relentlessness of that battle would blot out all perception of

anything but itself. Just as there are sounds we cannot hear, and light we cannot see, so there is a world of small

things, living in us and around us, which sways our destiny and carries astray the best laid schemes of our wills

and personalities. The gradual development of an awareness, a realization of the power of this world of minute

things, has been the index of progress in the bodily well-being of the human race through the centuries marking

the rebirth of medicine after the sleep of the Dark Ages.

In these days of sanitary measures and successful public health activity, it is becoming more and more difficult

for us to realize the terrors of the Black Plagues, the devastation, greater and more frightful than war, which

centuries ago swept over Europe and Asia time and again, scarcely leaving enough of the living to bury the dead.

Cholera, smallpox, bubonic plague, with terrifying suddenness fell upon a world of ignorance, and each in turn

humbled humanity to the dust before its invisible enemies. [Pg 6] Even within our own recollection, the germ of

influenza, gaining a foothold inside our defenses, took the world by storm, and beginning probably at Hongkong,

within the years 1889-90, swept the entire habitable earth, affecting hundreds of thousands of human beings, and

leaving a long train of debilitating and even crippling complications.

Here and there through the various silent battles between human beings and bacteria there stand out heroic

figures, men whose powers of mind and gifts of insight and observation have made them the generals in our fight

against the armies of disease. But their gifts would have been wasted had they lacked the one essential aid without

which leadership is futile. This is the force of enlightened public opinion, the backing of the every-day man. It is

the coöperation of every-day men, acting on the organized knowledge of leaders, which has made possible the

virtual extinction of the ancient scourges of smallpox, cholera, and bubonic plague.

Just as certain diseases are gradually passing into history through human effort, and the time is already in sight

when malaria and yellow fever, the latest objects of attack, will disappear before the campaign of preventive

medicine, so there are diseases, some of them ancient, others of more recent recognition, which are gradually

being brought into the light of public understanding. Conspicuous among them is a group of three, which, in

contrast to the spectacular course of great epidemics, pursue their work of destruction quietly, slowly

undermining, in their long-drawn course, the very foundations of human life. Tuberculosis, or consumption,

now the best known of the three, may perhaps be called the first of these great plagues, not because it is the

oldest or the most wide-spread necessarily, but because it has been the longest known and most widely

understood by the world at large. Cancer,[Pg 7] still of unknown cause, is the second great modern plague.

The third great plague is syphilis, a disease which, in these times of public enlightenment, is still shrouded in

obscurity, entrenched behind a barrier of silence, and armed, by our own ignorance and false shame, with a

thousand times its actual power to destroy. Against all of these three great plagues medicine has pitted the

choicest personalities, the highest attainments, and the uttermost resources of human knowledge. Against all

of them it has made headway. It is one of the ironies, the paradoxes, of fate that the disease against which the

most tremendous advances have been made, the most brilliant victories won, is the third great plague, syphilis

—the disease that still destroys us through our ignorance or our refusal to know the truth.

We have crippled the power of tuberculosis through knowledge,—wide-spread, universal knowledge,—rather

than through any miraculous discoveries other than that of the cause and the possibility of cure. We shall in time

obliterate cancer by the same means. Make a disease a household word, and its power is gone. We are still far

from that day with syphilis. The third great plague is just dawning upon us—a disease which in four centuries

has already cost a whole inferno of human misery and a heaven of human happiness. When we awake, we shall

in our turn destroy the destroyer—and the more swiftly because of the power now in the hands of medicine to

blot out the disease. To the day of that awakening books like this are dedicated. The facts here presented are

the common property of the medical profession, and it is impossible to claim originality for their substance.

Almost every sentence is written under the shadow of some advance in knowledge which cost a life-time of

some man's labor and self-sacrifice. The story of the conquest of syphilis is a fabric of great names, great

thoughts, [Pg 8] dazzling visions, epochal achievements. It is romance triumphant, not the tissue of

loathsomeness that common misconception makes it.

The purpose of this book is accordingly to put the accepted facts in such a form that they will the more readily

become matters of common knowledge. By an appeal to those who can read the newspapers intelligently and

remember a little of their high-school physiology, an immense body of interested citizens can be added to the

forces of a modern campaign against the third great plague. For such an awakening of public opinion and such

a movement for wider coöperation, the times are ready.

John H. Stokes. Rochester, Minn. [Pg 9]

CONTENTS

Page
Preface5
Contents9
CHAPTER I
The History of Syphilis11
CHAPTER II
Syphilis as a Social Problem15
CHAPTER III
The Nature and Course of Syphilis21
The Prevalence of Syphilis24
The Primary Stage26
CHAPTER IV
The Nature and Course of Syphilis (Continued)35
The Secondary Stage35
CHAPTER V
The Nature and Course of Syphilis (Continued)45
Late Syphilis (Tertiary Stage)45
CHAPTER VI
The Blood Test for Syphilis54
CHAPTER VII
The Treatment of Syphilis60
General Considerations60
Mercury62
CHAPTER VIII
The Treatment of Syphilis (Continued)70
Salvarsan70
CHAPTER IX
The Cure of Syphilis80
CHAPTER X
Hereditary Syphilis92[Pg 10]
CHAPTER XI
The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis109
CHAPTER XII
The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis (Continued)121
The Control of Infectiousness in Syphilis121
Syphilis and Marriage125
CHAPTER XIII
The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis (Continued)133
Syphilis and Prostitution133
Personal Hygiene of Syphilis136
CHAPTER XIV
Mental Attitudes in Their Relation to Syphilis141
CHAPTER XV
Moral and Personal Prophylaxis156
CHAPTER XVI
Public Effort Against Syphilis164
Index
187

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Paul Ehrlich [1854-1915]70

Fritz Schaudinn [1871-1906]112

E. Roux160

Élie Metchnikoff [1845-1916]160

[Pg 11]

The Third Great Plague

Chapter I The History of Syphilis

Syphilis has a remarkable history,[1] about which it is worth while to say a few words. Many people think

of the disease as at least as old as the Bible, and as having been one of the conditions included under the old

idea of leprosy. Our growing knowledge of medical history, however, and the finding of new records of the

disease, have shown this view to be in all probability a mistake. Syphilis was unknown in Europe until the

return of Columbus and his sailors from America, and its progress over the civilized world can be traced step

by step, or better, in leaps and bounds, from that date. It came from the island of Haiti, in which it was prevalent

at the time the discoverers of America landed there, and the return of Columbus's infected sailors to Europe

was the signal for a blasting epidemic, which in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries devastated Spain, Italy,

France, and England, and spread into India, Asia, China, and Japan.

[1] For a detailed account in Engl. see Pusey, W. A. "Syphilis as a Modern Problem," Amer. Med. Assoc.1915

It is a well-recognized fact that a disease which has never appeared among a people before, when it [Pg 12]

does attack them, spreads with terrifying rapidity and pursues a violent and destructive course on the new soil

which they offer. This was the course of syphilis in Europe in the years immediately following the return of

Columbus in 1493. Invading armies, always a fruitful means of spreading disease, carried syphilis with them

everywhere and left it to rage unchecked among the natives when the armies themselves went down to

destruction or defeat. Explorers and voyagers carried it with them into every corner of the earth, so that it is

safe to say that in this year of grace 1917 there probably does not exist a single race or people upon whom

syphilis has not set its mark. The disease, in four centuries, coming seemingly out of nowhere, has become

inseparably woven into the problems of civilization, and is part and parcel of the concerns of every human

being. The helpless fear caused by the violence of the disease in its earlier days, when the suddenness of its

attack on an unprepared people paralyzed comprehension, has given place to knowledge such as we can

scarcely duplicate for any of the other scourges of humanity. The disease has in its turn become more subtle

and deceiving, its course is seldom marked by the bold and glaring destructiveness, the melting away of

resistance, so familiar in its early history. The masses of sores, the literal falling to pieces of skeletons,

are replaced by the inconspicuous but no less real deaths from heart and brain and other internal diseases,

the losses to sight and hearing, the crippling and death of children, and all the insidious, quiet deterioration

and degeneration of our fiber which syphilis brings about. From[Pg 13] devouring a man alive on the street,

syphilis has taken to knifing him quietly in his bed.

Although syphilis sprang upon the world from ambush, so to speak, it did the world one great service—it

aroused Medicine from the sleep of the Middle Ages. Many of the greatest names in the history of the art are

inseparably associated with the progress of our knowledge of this disease. As Pusey points out, it required

the force of something wholly unprecedented to take men away from tradition and the old stock in trade of

ideas and formulas, and to make them grasp new things. Syphilis was the new thing of the time in the

sixteenth century and the study which it received went far toward putting us today in a position to control it.

Before the beginning of the twentieth century almost all that ordinary observation of the diseased person

could teach us was known of syphilis. It needed only laboratory study, such as has been given it during the

past fifteen years, to put us where we could appeal to every intelligent man and woman to enlist in a brilliantly

promising campaign. For a time syphilis was confused with gonorrhea, and there could be no better proof of

the need for separating the two in our minds today than to study the way in which this confusion set back

progress in our knowledge of syphilis. John Hunter, who fathered the idea of the identity of the two diseases,

sacrificed his life to his idea indirectly. Ricord, a Frenchman, whose name deserves to be immortal, set

Hunter's error right, and as the father of modern knowledge of syphilis, prepared us for the revolutionary

advances of the last ten years.

[Pg 14] There is something awe-inspiring in the quiet way in which one great victory has succeeded another

in the battle against syphilis in the last decade. If we are out of the current of these things, in the office or the

store, or in the field of industry and business, announcements from the great laboratories of the world seldom

reach us, and when they do, they have an impractical sound, an unreality for us. So one hears, as if in a

speaking-tube from a long distance, the words that Schaudinn and Hoffmann, on April 19, 1905, discovered

the germ that causes syphilis, not realizing that the fact contained in those few brief words can alter the

undercurrent of human history, and may, within the lives of our children and our children's children, remake

the destiny of man on the earth. A great spirit lives in the work of men like Metchnikoff and Roux and

Maisonneuve, who made possible the prophylaxis of syphilis, in that of Bordet and Wassermann, who devised

the remarkable blood test for the disease, and in that of Ehrlich and Hata, who built up by a combination of

chemical and biological reasoning, salvarsan, one of the most powerful weapons in existence against it.

Ehrlich conceived the whole make-up and properties of salvarsan when most of us find it a hardship to

pronounce its name. Schaudinn saw with the ordinary lenses of the microscope in the living, moving germ,

what dozens can scarcely see today with the germ glued to the spot and with all the aid of stains and dark-

field apparatus. After all, it is brain-power focused to a point that moves events, and to the immensity of that

power the history of our growing knowledge of syphilis bears the richest testimony. [Pg 15]

Chapter II

Syphilis as a Social Problem

The simple device of talking plain, matter-of-fact English about a thing has a value that we are growing to

appreciate more and more every day. It is only too easy for an undercurrent of ill to make headway under

cover of a false name, a false silence, or misleading speech. The fact that syphilis is a disease spread to a

considerable extent by sexual relations too often forces us into an attitude of veiled insinuation about it, a

mistaken delicacy which easily becomes prudish and insincere. It is a direct move in favor of vulgar

thinking to misname anything which involves the intimacies of life, or to do other than look it squarely in

the eye, when necessity demands, without shuffling or equivocation. On this principle it is worth while to

meet the problem of a disease like syphilis with an open countenance and straightforward honesty of

expression. It puts firm ground under our feet to talk about it in the impersonal way in which we talk about

colds and pneumonia and bunions and rheumatism, as unfortunate, but not necessarily indecent, facts in

human experience. Nothing in the past has done so much for the campaign against consumption as the

unloosing of tongues. There is only one way to understand syphilis, and that is to give it impartial,

discriminating discussion as an issue which concerns the[Pg 16] general health. To color it up and hang it

in a gallery of horrors, or to befog it with verbal turnings and twistings, are equally serious mistakes. The

simple facts of syphilis can appeal to intelligent men and women as worthy of their most serious attention,

without either stunning or disgusting them. It is in the unpretentious spirit of talking about a spade as a spade,

and not as "an agricultural implement for the trituration of the soil," that we should take stock of the situation

and of the resources we can muster to meet it.

The Confusion of the Problem of Syphilis with Other Issues.—Two points in our approach to the problem of

syphilis are important at the outset. The first of these is to separate our thought about syphilis from that of the

other two diseases, gonorrhea, or "clap," and chancroids, or "soft sores," which are conventionally linked

with it under the label of "venereal diseases."[2] The second is to separate [Pg 17] the question of syphilis

at least temporarily from our thought about morals, from the problem of prostitution, from the question as to

whether continence is possible or desirable, whether a man should be true to one woman, whether women

should be the victims of a double standard, and all the other complicated issues which we must in time

confront. Such a picking to pieces of the tangle is simply the method of scientific thought, and in this case,

at least, has the advantage of making it possible to begin to do something, rather than saw the air with vain

discussion.

[2] The three so-called venereal diseases are syphilis, gonorrhea, and chancroid or soft ulcer. Gonorrhea

is the commonest of the three, and is an exceedingly prevalent disease. In man its first symptom is a discharge

of pus from the canal through which the urine passes. Its later stages may involve the bladder, the testicles, and

other important glands. It may also produce crippling forms of rheumatism, and affect the heart. Gonorrhea may

recur, become latent, and persist for years, doing slow, insidious damage. It is transmitted largely by sexual

intercourse. Gonorrhea in women is frequently a serious and even fatal disease. It usually renders women

incapable of having children, and its treatment necessitates often the most serious operations. Gonorrhea of the

eyes, affecting especially newborn children, is one of the principal causes of blindness. Gonorrhea may be

transmitted to little girls innocently from infected toilet seats, and is all but incurable. Gonorrhea, wherever it

occurs, is an obstinate, treacherous, and resistant disease, one of the most serious of modern medical problems,

and fully deserves a place as the fourth great plague.

Chancroid is an infectious ulcer of the genitals, local in character, not affecting the body as a whole, but sometimes destroying considerable portions of the parts involved.

Let us think of syphilis, then, as a serious but by no means hopeless constitutional disease. Dismiss chancroid as a

relatively insignificant local affair, seldom a serious problem under a physician's care. Separate syphilis from

gonorrhea for the reason that gonorrhea is a problem in itself. Against its train of misfortune to innocence and guilt

alike, we are as yet not nearly so well equipped to secure results. Against syphilis, the astonishing progress of our

knowledge in the past ten years has armed us for triumph. When the fight against tuberculosis was brought to public

attention, we were not half so well equipped to down the disease as we are today to down syphilis. For syphilis

we now have reliable and practical methods of prevention, which have already proved their worth. The most

powerful and efficient of drugs is available for the cure of the disease in its earlier stages, and early recognition is

made possible by methods whose reliability is among the remarkable achievements of medicine. It is the[Pg 18]

sound opinion of conservative men that if the knowledge now in the hands of the medical profession could be put

to wide-spread use, syphilis would dwindle in two generations from the unenviable position of the third great

plague to the insignificance of malaria and yellow fever on the Isthmus of Panama. The influences that stand

between humanity and this achievement are the lack of general public enlightenment on the disease itself, and

public confusion of the problem with other sex issues for which no such clean-cut, satisfactory solution has been

found. Think of syphilis as the wages of sin, as well-earned disgrace, as filth, as the badge of immorality, as a

necessary defense against the loathesomeness of promiscuity, as a fearful warning against prostitution, and our

advantage slips from us. The disease continues to spread wholesale disaster and degeneration while we wrangle

over issues that were old when history began and are progressing with desperate slowness to a solution probably

many centuries distant. Think of syphilis as a medical and a sanitary problem, and its last line of defense crumbles

before our attack. It can and should be blotted out.

Syphilis, a Problem of Public Health Rather than of Morals.—Nothing that can be said about syphilis need make

us forget the importance of moral issues. The fact which so persistently distorts our point of view, that it is so

largely associated with our sexual life, is probably a mere incident, biologically speaking, due in no small part to

the almost absurdly simple circumstance that the germ of the disease cannot grow in the presence of air, and must

therefore[Pg 19] find refuge, in most cases, in the cavities and inlets from the surface of the body. History affords

little support to the lingering belief that if syphilis is done away with, licentiousness will overrun the world. Long

before syphilis appeared in Europe there was sexual immorality. In the five centuries in which it has had free play

over the civilized world, the most optimistic cannot successfully maintain that it has materially bettered conditions

or acted as a check on loose morals, though its relation to sexual intercourse has been known. As a morals

policeman, syphilis can be obliterated without material loss to the cause of sexual self-restraint, and with nothing

but gain to the human race.

It is easier to accept this point of view, that the stamping out of syphilis will not affect our ability to grapple with

moral problems, and that there is nothing to be gained by refusing to do what can so easily be done, when we

appreciate the immense amount of innocent suffering for which the disease is responsible. It must appeal to many

as a bigoted and narrow virtue, little better than vice itself, which can derive any consolation in the thought that the

sins of the fathers are being visited upon the children, as it watches a half-blind, groping child feel its way along

a wall with one hand while it shields its face from the sunlight with the other. There are better ways of paying the

wages of sin than this. Best of all, we can attack a sin at its source instead of at its fulfilment. How much better to

have kept the mother free from syphilis by giving the father the benefit of our knowledge. The child who reaped his

[Pg 20] sowing gained nothing morally, and lost its physical heritage. Its mother lost her health and perhaps her

self-respect. Neither one contributes anything through syphilis to the uplifting of the race. They are so much dead

loss. To teach us to avoid such losses is the legitimate field of preventive medicine.

On this simplified and practical basis, then, the remainder of this discussion will proceed. Syphilis is a preventable

disease, usually curable when handled in time, and its successful management will depend in large part upon the

coöperation, not only of those who are victims of it, but of those who are not. It is much more controllable than

tuberculosis, against which we are waging a war of increasing effectiveness, and its stamping out will rid humanity

of an even greater curse. To know about syphilis is in no sense incompatible with clean living or thinking, and

insofar as its removal from the world will rid us of a revolting scourge, it may even actually favor the solution of

the moral problems which it now obscures. [Pg 21]

Chapter III

The Nature and Course of Syphilis

The simplest and most direct definition of syphilis is that it is a contagious constitutional disease, due to a germ,

running a prolonged course, and at one time or another in that course is capable of affecting nearly every part of the

body. One of the most important parts of this rather abstract statement is that which relates to the germ. To be able to

put one's finger so definitely on the cause of syphilis is an advantage which cannot be overestimated. More than in

almost any other disease the identification of syphilis at its very outset depends upon the seeing of the germ that causes

it in the discharge from the sore or pimple which is the first evidence of syphilis on the body. On our ability to

recognize the disease as syphilis in the first few days of its course depends the greatest hope of cure. On the

recognition of the germ in the tissues and fluids of the body has depended our knowledge of the real extent and

ravages of the disease. With the knowledge that the germ was related to certain other more familiar forms, Ehrlich

set the trap for it that culminated in salvarsan, or "606," the powerful drug used in the modern treatment. By the

finding of this same germ in the nervous system in locomotor ataxia and general[Pg 22] paralysis of the insane, the

last lingering doubt of their syphilitic character was dispelled. Every day and hour the man who deals with syphilis

in accordance with the best modern practice brings to bear knowledge that arises from our knowledge of the germ

cause of syphilis. No single fact except perhaps the knowledge that certain animals (monkeys and rabbits especially)

could be infected with it has been of such immense practical utility in developing our power to deal with it.

The germ of syphilis,[3] discovered by Schaudinn and Hoffmann in 1905, is an extremely minute spiral or

corkscrew-shaped filament, visible under only the highest powers of the microscope, which increase the area of the

object looked at hundreds of thousands of times, and sometimes more than a million of times. Even under such intense

magnifications, it can be seen only with great difficulty, since it is colorless in life, and it is hard to color or stain it

with dyes. Its spiral form and faint staining have led to its being called the Spirochæta pallida.[4] It is best seen

by the use of a special device, called a dark-field illuminator, which shows the germ, like a floating particle in a

sunbeam, as a brilliant white spiral against a black background, floating and moving in the secretions taken from the

sore in which it is found. Some means of showing the germ should be in the hands of every physician, hospital, or

dispensary which makes a claim to recognize and treat syphilis.

[3] See frontispiece.

[4] Pronounced spi-ro-kee'-ta.

Syphilis a Concealed Disease.—Syphilis is not a grossly conspicuous figure in our every-day life, as[Pg 23] leprosy

was in the life of the Middle Ages, for example. To the casually minded, therefore, it is not at all unreasonable to ask

why there should be so much agitation about it when so little of it is in evidence. It takes a good deal out of the graphic

quality of the thing to say that most syphilis is concealed, that most syphilitics, during a long period of their disease,

are socially presentable. Of course, when we hear that they may serve lunch to us, collect our carfare, manicure our

nails, dance with us most enchantingly, or eat at our tables, it seems a little more real, but still a little too much to

believe. Conviction seems to require that we see the damaged goods, the scars, the sores, the eaten bones, the

hobbling cripples, the maimed, the halt, and the blind. There is no accurate estimate of its prevalence based on a

census, because, as will appear later, even an actual impulse to self-betrayal would not disclose 30 to 40 per cent

of the victims of the disease. Approximately this percentage would either have forgotten the trivial beginnings of it,

or with the germs of it still in their brains or the walls of their arteries or other out-of-the-way corners of their bodies,

would think themselves free of the disease—long since "cured" and out of danger.

How Much Syphilis is There?—Our entire lack of a tangible idea of how much syphilis there really is among us is,

of course, due to the absence of any form of registration or reporting of the disease to authorities such as health officers,

whose duty it is to collect such statistics, and forms the principal argument in favor of dealing with syphilis legally as

a contagious[Pg 24] disease. Such conceptions of its prevalence as we have are based on individual opinions and data

collected by men of large experience.

Earlier Estimates of the Prevalence of Syphilis.—It is generally conceded that there is more syphilis among men than

women, although it should not be forgotten that low figures in women may be due to some extent to the milder and less

outspoken course of the disease in them. Five times more syphilis in men than women conservatively summarizes our

present conceptions. The importance of distinguishing between syphilis among the sick and among the well is often

overlooked. For example, Landouzy, in the Laënnec clinic in Paris, estimated recently that in the patients of this clinic,

which deals with general medicine, 15 to 18 per cent of the women and 21 to 28 per cent of the men had syphilis. It is

fair to presume, then, that such a percentage would be rather high for the general run of every-day people. This accords

with the estimates, based on large experience, of such men as Lenoir and Fournier, that 13 to 15 per cent of all adult

males in Paris have syphilis. Erb estimated 12 per cent for Berlin, and other estimates give 12 per cent for London.

Collie's survey of British working men gives 9.2 per cent in those who, in spite of having passed a general health

examination, showed the disease by a blood test. A large body of figures, covering thirty years, and dating back beyond

the time when the most sensitive tests of the disease came into use, gives about 8 per cent of more than a million patients

in the United States Public Health and Marine Hospital Service[Pg 25] as having syphilis. It should be recalled that this

includes essentially active rather than quiescent cases, and is therefore probably too low.

Current Estimates of the Prevalence of Syphilis.—The constant upward tendency of recent estimates of the amount of

syphilis in the general population, as a result of the application of tests which will detect even concealed or quiescent

cases, is a matter for grave thought. The opinion of such an authority as Blaschko, while apparently extreme, cannot be

too lightly dismissed, when he rates the percentage of syphilitics in clerks and merchants in Berlin between the ages of

18 and 28 as 45 per cent. Pinkus estimated that one man in five in Germany has had syphilis. Recently published data by

Vedder, covering the condition of recruits drawn to the army from country and city populations, estimate 20 per cent

syphilitics among young men who apply for enlistment, and 5 per cent among the type of young men who enter West

Point and our colleges. It can be pointed out also with justice that the percentage of syphilis in any class grouped by age

increases with the age, since so few of the cases are cured, and the number is simply added to up to a certain point as

time elapses. Even the army, which represents in many ways a filtered group of men, passing a rigorous examination,

and protected by an elaborate system of preventions which probably keeps the infection rate below that of the civil

population, is conceded by careful observers (Nichols and others) to show from 5 to 7 per cent syphilitics. Attention

should be called to the difference between the percentage[Pg 26] of syphilis in a population and the percentage of

venereal disease. The inclusion of gonorrhea with syphilis increases the percentages enormously, since it is not

infrequently estimated that as high as 70 per cent of adult males have gonorrhea at least once in a lifetime.

On the whole, then, it is conservative to estimate that one man in ten has syphilis. Taking men and women together on

the basis of one of the latter to five of the former, and excluding those under fifteen years of age from consideration,

this country, with a population of 91,972,266,[5] should be able to muster a very considerable army of 3,842,526,

whose influence can give a little appreciated but very undesirable degree of hyphenation to our American public health.

In taking stock of ourselves for the future, and in all movements for national solidarity, efficiency, and defense, we must

reckon this force of syphilo-Americans among our debits. [5] Figures based on 1910 census.

The Primary Stage of Syphilis

The So-called Stages of Syphilis.—The division of the course of syphilis into definite stages is an older and more

arbitrary conception than the one now developing, and was based on outward signs of the disease rather than on a

real understanding of what goes on in the body during these periods. The primary stage was supposed to extend from

the appearance of the first sore or chancre to the time when an eruption appeared over the whole body. Since the

discovery of the Spirochæta pallida, the germ of the disease, our knowledge of what the germ does in[Pg 27] the body,

where it goes, and what influence it has upon the infected individual, has rapidly extended. We now appreciate much

more fully than formerly that at the very beginning of the disease there is a time when it is almost purely local, confined

to the first sore itself, and perhaps to the glands or kernels in its immediate neighborhood. Thorough and prompt

treatment with the new and powerful aid of salvarsan ("606") at this stage of the disease can kill all the germs and

prevent the disease from getting a foothold in the body which only years of treatment subsequently can break. This

is the critical moment of syphilis for the individual and for society, and its importance and the value of treatment

at this time cannot be too widely understood.

Peculiarities of the Germ.—Many interesting facts about the Spirochæta pallida explain peculiarities in the disease of

which it is the cause. Many germs can be grown artificially, some in the presence of air, others only when air is removed.

The germ of syphilis belongs in the latter class. The germ that causes tuberculosis, a rod-like organism or bacillus, can

stand drying without losing its power to produce the disease, and has a very appreciable ability to resist antiseptic agents.

If the germ of syphilis were equally hard to kill, syphilis would be an almost universal disease. Fortunately it dies at once

on drying, and is easily destroyed by the weaker antiseptics provided it has not gained a foothold on favorable ground. Its

inability to live long in the presence of air confines the source of infection largely to those parts of the body which are

moist and protected,[Pg 28] and especially to secretions and discharges which contain it. Its contagiousness is, therefore,

more readily controlled than that of tuberculosis. It is impossible for a syphilitic to leave a room or a house infected for

the next occupants, and it is not necessary to do more than disinfect objects that come in contact with open lesions or

their secretions, to prevent its spread by indirect means. Such details will be considered more fully under the transmission

and hygiene of the disease.

Mode of Entry of the Germ.—The germ of the disease probably gains entrance to the body through a break or abrasion

in the skin or the moist red mucous surfaces of the body, such as those which line the mouth and the genital tract. The break

in the surface need not be visible as a chafe or scratch, but may be microscopic in size, so that the first sore seems to

develop on what is, to all appearances, healthy surface. It should not be forgotten that this surface need not be confined

to the genital organs, since syphilis may and often does begin at any part of the body where the germ finds favorable

conditions for growth.

Incubation or Quiescent Period.—Almost all germ diseases have what is called a period of incubation, in which the

germ, after it has gained entrance to the body, multiplies with varying rapidity until the conditions are such that the body

begins to show signs of the injury which their presence is causing. The germ of syphilis is no exception to this rule. Its

entry into the body is followed by a period in which there is no external sign of its presence to warn the[Pg 29] infected

person of what is coming. This period of quiescence between the moment of infection with syphilis and the appearance

of the first signs of the disease in the form of the chancre may vary from a week to six weeks or even two months or

more, with an average of about two or three weeks.

In the length of the incubation period and the comparatively trifling character of the early signs, the germ of syphilis

betrays one of its most dangerous characteristics. The germ of pneumonia, for example, may be present on the surface

of the body, in the mouth or elsewhere, for a long time, but the moment it gets a real foothold, there is an immediate and

severe reaction, the body puts up a fight, and in ten days or so has either lost or won. The germ of syphilis, on the other

hand, secures its place in the body without exciting very strenuous or wide-spread opposition. The body does not come

to its own defense so well as with a more active enemy. The fitness of the germ of syphilis for long-continued life in the

body, and the difficulty of marshaling a sufficient defense against it, is what makes it impossible to cure the disease by

any short and easy method.

The First Sore or Chancre.—The primary lesion, first sore or chancre,[6] is the earliest sign of reaction which the

body makes to the presence of the growing germs of syphilis. This always develops at the point where the germs

entered the body. The incubation period ends with the appearance of a small hard knot or lump under the skin, which

may remain[Pg 30] relatively insignificant in some cases and in others grow to a considerable size. Primary lesions

show the greatest variety in their appearance and degree of development. If the base of the knot widens and flattens so

that it feels and looks like a button under the skin, and the top rubs off, leaving an exposed raw surface, we may have

the typical hard chancre, easily recognized by the experienced physician, and perhaps even by the layman as well. On

the other hand, no such typical lesion may develop. The chancre may be small and hidden in some out-of-the-way fold

or cleft, and because it is apt to be painless, escape recognition entirely. In women the opportunity for concealment of

a primary sore itself is especially good, since it may occur inside the vagina or on the neck of the womb. In men it may

even occur inside the canal through which the urine passes (urethra). The name "sore" is deceptive and often misleads

laymen, since there may be no actual sore—merely a pinhead-sized pimple, a hard place, or a slight chafe. The

development of a syphilitic infection can also be completely concealed by the occurrence of some other infection in the

same place at the same time, as in the case of a mixed infection with syphilis and soft ulcers or chancroids. Even a cold-

sore on the mouth or genitals may become the seat of a syphilitic infection which will be misunderstood or escape notice.

[6] Pronounced shan'-ker.

Syphilis and Gonorrhea may Coexist.—It is a not uncommon thing for gonorrhea in men to hide the development of a

chancre at the same time or later. In fact, it was in an experimental inoculation from[Pg 31] such a case that the great

John Hunter acquired the syphilis which cost him his life, and which led him to declare that because he had inoculated

himself with pus from a gonorrhea and developed syphilis, the two diseases were identical. Just how common such

cases are is not known, but the newer tests for syphilis are showing increasing numbers of men who never to their

knowledge had anything but gonorrhea, yet who have syphilis, too.

Serious Misconceptions About the Chancre.—Misconceptions about the primary lesion or chancre of syphilis are

numerous and serious, and are not infrequently the cause for ignoring or misunderstanding later signs of the disease.

A patient who has gotten a fixed conception of a chancre into his head will argue insistently that he never had a hard

sore, that his was soft, or painful instead of painless, or that it was only a pimple or a chafe. All these forms are easily

within the ordinary limits of variation of the chancre from the typical form described in books, and an expert has them

all in mind as possibilities. But the layman who has gathered a little hearsay knowledge will maintain his opinion as if

it were the product of lifelong experience, and will only too often pay for his folly and presumption accordingly.

Importance of Prompt and Expert Medical Advice.—The recognition of syphilis in the primary stage does not follow

any rule of thumb, and is as much an affair for expert judgment as a strictly engineering or legal problem. In the great

majority of cases a correct decision of the matter can be reached in the primary stage by careful study and examination,

but not by[Pg 32] any slipshod or guesswork means. To secure the benefit of modern methods for the early recognition

of syphilis those who expose themselves, or are exposed knowingly, to the risk of getting the disease by any of the

commoner sources of infection, should seek expert medical advice at once on the appearance of anything out of the

ordinary, no matter how trivial, on the parts exposed. The commoner sources of infection may be taken to be the

kissing of strangers, the careless use of common personal and toilet articles which come in contact with the mouth

especially,—all of which are explained later,—and illicit sexual relations. While this by no means includes all the

means for the transmission of the disease, those who do these things are in direct danger, and should be warned

accordingly.

Modern Methods of Identifying an Early Syphilitic Infection.—The practice of tampering with sores, chafes, etc.,

which are open to suspicion, whether done by the patient himself or by the doctor before reaching a decision as to

the nature of the trouble, is unwise. An attempt to "burn it out" with caustic or otherwise, which is the first impulse

of the layman with a half-way knowledge and even of some doctors, promptly makes impossible a real decision as

to whether or not syphilis is present. Even a salve, a wash, or a powder may spoil the best efforts to find out what

the matter is. A patient seeking advice should go to his doctor at once, and absolutely untreated. Then, again,

irritating treatment applied unwisely to even a harmless sore may make a mere chafe look like a hard chancre,

and result in the patient's[Pg 33] being treated for months or longer for syphilis. Nowadays our first effort after

studying the appearance of the suspected lesion is to try to find the germs, with the dark-field microscope or a

stain. Having found them, the question is largely settled, although we also take a blood test. If we fail to find the

germs, it is no proof that syphilis is absent, and we reëxamine and take blood tests at intervals for some months

to come, to be sure that the infection has not escaped our vigilance, as it sometimes does if we relax our precautions.

In recognizing syphilis, the wise layman is the one who knows he does not know. The clever one who is familiar

with everything "they say" about the disease, and has read about the matter in medical books into the bargain, is the

best sort of target for trouble. Such men are about as well armed as the man who attacks a lion with a toothpick. He

may stop him with his eye, but it is a safer bet he will be eaten.

Enlargement of Neighboring Glands.—Nearly every one is familiar with the kernels or knots that can be felt in the

neck, often after tonsillitis, or with eruptions in the scalp. These are lymph-glands, which are numerous in different

parts of the body, and their duty is, among other things, to help fight off any infection which tries to get beyond the

point at which it started. The lymph-glands in the neighborhood of the chancre, on whatever part of the body it is

situated, take an early part in the fight against syphilis. If, for example, the chancre is on the genitals, the glands in

the groin will be the first ones affected. If it is on the lip, the neck glands become[Pg 34] swollen. The affected glands

actually contain the germs which have made their way to them through lymph channels under the skin. When the glands

begin to swell, the critical period of limitation of the disease to the starting-point will soon be over and the last chances

for a quick cure will soon be gone. At any moment they may gain entrance to the blood stream in large numbers. While

the swelling of these glands occurs in other conditions, there are peculiarities about their enlargement which the

physician looking for signs of the disease may recognize. Especially in case of a doubtful lesion about the neck or face,

when a bunch of large swollen glands develops under the jaw in the course of a few days or a couple of weeks, the

question of syphilis should be thoroughly investigated.

Vital Significance of Early Recognition.—The critical period of localization of an early infection will be brought up

again in subsequent pages. As Pusey says, it is the "golden opportunity" of syphilis. It seldom lasts more than two

weeks from the first appearance of the primary sore or chancre, and its duration is more often only a matter of four or

five days before the disease is in the blood, the blood test becomes positive, and the prospect of what we call abortive

cure is past. Nothing can justify or make up for delay in identifying the trouble in this early period, and the person who

does not take the matter seriously often pays the price of his indifference many times over.

[Pg 35]

Chapter IV The Nature and Course of Syphilis (Continued) The Secondary Stage

The Spread of the Germs Over the Body.—The secondary stage of syphilis, like the primary stage, is an arbitrary

division whose beginning and ending can scarcely be sharply defined. Broadly speaking, the secondary stage of syphilis

is the one in which the infection ceases to be confined to the neighborhood of the chancre and affects the entire body. The

spread of the germs of the disease to the lymph-glands in the neighborhood of the primary sore is followed by their

invasion of the blood itself. While this may begin some time before the body shows signs of it, the serious outburst usually

occurs suddenly in the course of a few days, and fills the circulating blood with the little corkscrew filaments, sending

showers of them to every corner of the body and involving every organ and tissue to a greater or less extent. This explosion

marks the beginning of the active secondary stage of syphilis. The germs are now everywhere, and the effect on the patient

begins to suggest such infectious diseases as measles, chickenpox, etc., which are associated with eruptions on the skin.

But there can be no more serious mistake than to suppose that the eruptions which usually[Pg 36] break out on the skin at

this time represent the whole, or even a very important part, of the story. They may be the most conspicuous sign to the

patient and to others, but the changes which are to affect the future of the syphilitic are going on just at this time, not in

his skin, but in his internal organs, and especially in his heart and blood-vessels and in his nervous system.

Constitutional Symptoms.—It is surprising how mild a thing secondary syphilis is in many persons. A considerable

proportion experience little or nothing at this time in the way of disturbances of the general health to suggest that they

have a serious illness. A fair percentage of them lose 5 or 10 pounds in weight, have severe or mild headaches, usually

worse at night, with pains in the bones and joints that may suggest rheumatism. Nervous disturbances of the most varied

character may appear. Painful points on the bones or skull may develop, and there may be serious disturbances of eye-

sight and hearing. A few are severely ill, lose a great deal of weight, endure excruciating pains, pass sleepless nights, and

suffer with symptoms suggesting that their nervous systems have been profoundly affected. As a general thing, however, the constitutional symptoms are mild compared with those of the severe infectious fevers, such as typhoid or malaria.

The Secondary Eruption or Rash.—The eruption of secondary syphilis is generally the feature which most alarms the

average patient. It is usually rather abundant, in keeping with the wide-spread character of the infection, and is especially

noticeable[Pg 37] on the chest and abdomen, the face, palms, and soles. It is apt to appear in the scalp in the severer forms.

The eruption may consist of almost anything, from faint pink spots to small lumps and nodules, pimples and pustules, or

large ulcerating or crusted sores. The eruption is not necessarily conspicuous, and may be entirely overlooked by the

patient himself, or it may be so disfiguring as to attract attention.

Common Misconceptions Regarding Syphilitic Rashes.—Laymen should be warned against the temptation to call an

eruption syphilitic. The commonest error is for the ordinary person to mistake a severe case of acne, the common

"pimples" of early manhood, for syphilis. Psoriasis, another harmless, non-contagious, and very common skin disease,

is often mistaken for syphilis. Gross injustice and often much mental distress are inflicted on unfortunates who have some

skin trouble by the readiness with which persons who know nothing about the matter insist on thinking that any conspicuous

eruption is syphilis, and telling others about it. Even with an eye trained to recognize such things on sight, in the crowds of

a large city, one very seldom sees any skin condition which even suggests syphilis. It usually requires more than a passing

glance at the whole body to identify the disease. If, under such circumstances, one becomes concerned for the health of a

friend, he would much better frankly ask what is the matter, than make him the victim of a layman's speculations. It is

always well to remember that profuse eruptions of a conspicuous nature,[Pg 38] which have been present for months or

years, are less likely to be syphilitic.

The Contagious Sores in the Mouth, Throat, and Genitals.—Accompanying the outbreaks of syphilis on the skin, in the

secondary period, a soreness may appear in the mouth and throat, and peculiar patches seen on the tongue and lips, and

flat growths be noticed around the moist surfaces, such as those of the genitals. These throat, mouth, and genital eruptions

are the most dangerous signs of the disease from the standpoint of contagiousness. Just as the chancre swarms with the germs

of syphilis, so every secondary spot, pimple, and lump contains them in enormous numbers. But so long as the skin is not

broken or rubbed off over them, they are securely shut in. There is no danger of infection from the dry, unbroken skin, even

over the eruption itself. But in the mouth and throat and about the genitals, where the surface is moist and thin, the covering

quickly rubs or dissolves off, leaving the gray or pinkish patches and the flattened raised growths from which the germs

escape in immense numbers and in the most active condition. Such patches may occur under the breasts and in the armpits,

as well as in the places mentioned. The saliva of a person in this condition may be filled with the germs, and the person

have only to cough in one's face to make one a target for them.

Distribution of the Germs in the Body.—The germs of syphilis have in the past few years been found in every part of the

body and in every lesion of syphilis. While the secondary stage is at its[Pg 39] height, they are in the blood in considerable

numbers, so that the blood may at these times be infectious to a slight degree. They are present, of course, in large numbers

in the secretions from open sores and under the skin in closed sores. The nervous system, the walls of the blood-vessels,

the internal organs, such as the liver and spleen, the bones and the bone-marrow, contain them. They are not, however,

apparently found in the secretions of the sweat glands, but, on the other hand, they have been shown to be present in the

breast milk of nursing mothers who have active syphilis. The seminal fluid may contain the germs, but they have not been

shown to be present either in the egg cells of the female or in the sperm cells of the male.

Fate of the Germs.—The fate of all these vast numbers of syphilitic germs, distributed over the whole body at the height

of the disease, is one of the most remarkable imaginable. As the acute secondary stage passes, whether the patient is treated

or not, by far the larger number of the spirochetes in the body is destroyed by the body's own power of resistance. This

explains the statement, that cannot be too often repeated, that the outward evidences of secondary syphilis tend to disappear

of themselves, whether or not the patient is treated. Of the hordes of germs present in the beginning of the trouble, only a few

persist until the later stages, scattered about in the parts which were subject to the overwhelming invasion. Yet because of

some change which the disease brought about in the parts thus affected, these few germs are able to produce much[Pg 40]

more dangerous changes than the armies which preceded them. In some way the body has become sensitive to them, and a

handful of them in course of time are able to do damage which billions could not earlier in the disease. The man in whom

the few remaining germs are confined largely to the skin is fortunate. The unfortunates are those who, with the spirochetes

in their artery walls, heart muscle, brain, and spinal cord, develop the destructive arterial and nervous changes which lead

to the crippling of life at its root and premature death.

Variations in the Behavior of the Germ of Syphilis.—Differences in the behavior of the same germ in different people are

very familiar in medicine and are of importance in syphilis. As an example, the germ of pneumonia may be responsible for

a trifling cold in one person, for an attack of grippe in the next, and may hurry the next person out of the world within forty-

eight hours with pneumonia. Part of this difference in the behavior of a given germ may be due to differences among the

various strains or families of germs in the same general group. Another part is due to the habit which germs have, of

singling out for attack the weakest spot in a person's body. The germ that causes rheumatism has strains which produce

simply tonsillitis, and others which, instead of attacking joints, tend to attack the valves of the heart. Our recent knowledge

suggests that somewhat the same thing is at work in syphilis. Certain strains of Spirochæta pallida tend to thrive in the

nervous system, others perhaps in the skin. On the other hand, in certain persons, for example, [Pg 41] heavy drinkers, the

nervous system is most open to attack, in others the bones may be most affected, in still others, the skin.

Variations in the Course of Syphilis in Different Persons.—So it comes about that in the secondary stage there may be wide

differences in the amount and the location of the damage done by syphilis. One patient may have a violent eruption, and very

little else. Another will scarcely show an outward sign of the disease and yet will be riddled by one destructive internal

change after another. In such a case the secondary stage of the disease may pass with half a dozen red spots on the body and

no constitutional symptoms, and the patient go to pieces a few years later with locomotor ataxia or general paralysis of the

insane. On the other hand, a patient may have a stormy time in the secondary period and have abundant reason to realize he

has syphilis, and under only moderate treatment recover entirely. Still another will have a bad infection from the start, and

run a severe course in spite of good treatment, to end in an early wreck. The last type is fortunately not common, but the

first type is entirely too abundant. It cannot be said too forcibly that in the secondary as in the primary stage, syphilis may

entirely escape the notice of the infected person, and he may not realize what ails him until years after it is too late to do

anything for him. Here, as in the primary stage, the lucky person is the one who shows his condition so plainly that he

cannot overlook it, and who has an opportunity to realize the seriousness of his disease. It used to be an old[Pg 42] rule

not to treat people who seemed careless and indifferent until their secondary eruption appeared, in the hope that this flare-up

would bring them to their senses. The necessity for such a rule shows plainly how serious a matter a mild early syphilis may be.

The Dangerous Contagious Relapses.—Secondary syphilis does not begin like a race, at the drop of a hat, or end with the

breaking of a tape. When the first outburst has subsided, a series of lesser outbreaks, often covering a series of years, may

follow. These minor relapses or recurrences are mainly what make the syphilitic a danger to his fellows. They are to a large

extent preventable by thorough modern treatment. Few people are so reckless as wholly to disregard precautions when the

severe outburst is on. But the lesser outbreaks, if they occur on the skin, attract little or no attention or are entirely

misunderstood by the patient. Only too often they occur as the flat, grayish patches in the mouth and genital tract, such as are

seen in the secondary stage, where, because they are out of sight and not painful, they pass unnoticed. The tonsils, the under

side and edges of the tongue, and the angles of the mouth just inside the lips are favorite places for these recurrent mucous

patches. They are thus ideally placed to spread infection, for, as in the secondary stage, each of these grayish patches swarms

with the germs of syphilis. Similar recurrences about the genitals often grow, because of the moisture, into buttons and flat,

cauliflower-like warts from which millions of the germs can be squeezed. Sometimes [Pg 43] they are mistaken for

hemorrhoids or "piles." With all the opportunities that these sores offer for infection, it is surprising that the disease is not

universal.  Irritation from friction, dirt, and discharges, and in the mouth the use of tobacco, are the principal influences acting

to encourage these recurrences.

Relapses in the Nervous System and Elsewhere.—Mucous patches are, of course, not the only recurrences, though they are

very common. At any time a little patch of secondary eruption may appear and disappear in the course of a short time.

Recurrences are not confined to the skin, and those which take place in the nervous system may result in temporary or

permanent paralysis of important nerves, including those of the eyes and ears. Again, recurrences may show themselves in

the form of a general running down of the patient from time to time, with loss of weight and general symptoms like those

of the active secondary period.

The secondary period as a whole is not in itself the serious stage of syphilis. Most of the symptoms are easily controlled by

treatment if they are recognized. Now and then instances of serious damage to sight, hearing, or important organs elsewhere

occur, but these are relatively few in spite of the enormous numbers and wide distribution of the germs. Accordingly, the

problems that the secondary stage offers the physician and society at large must center around the recognition of mild and

obscure cases and adequate treatment for all cases. The identification of the former is vital because of the recurrence of

extremely infectious periods throughout [Pg 44] this stage of the disease, and the latter is essential because vigorous

treatment, carried out for a long enough time, prevents not only the late complications which destroy the syphilitic himself,

but does away with the menace to society that arises through his infecting others, whether in marriage and sexual contact or

in the less intimate relations of life.

[Pg 45]

Chapter V The Nature and Course of Syphilis Late Syphilis (Tertiary Stage)

The Seriousness of Late Syphilis.—While we recognize a group of symptoms in syphilis which we call late or tertiary, there

is no definite or sharp boundary of time separating secondary from tertiary periods. The man who calculates that he will have

had his fling in the ten or twenty years before tertiary troubles appear may be astonished to find that he can develop tertiary complications in his brain almost before he is well rid of his chancre. "Late accidents," as we call them, are the serious

complications of syphilis. They are, as has been said, brought about by relatively few germs, the left-overs from the flooding

of the body during the secondary period. There is still a good deal of uncertainty as to just what the distribution of the germs

which takes place in the secondary period foreshadows in the way of prospects for trouble when we come to the tertiary

period. It may well be that the man who had many germs in his skin and a blazing eruption when he was in the second stage,

may have all his trouble in the skin when he comes to the late stage. It is the verdict of experience, however, that people who

have never noticed their secondary eruption because it was so mild are more likely to be affected in the nervous [Pg 46]

system later on. But this may be merely because the condition, being unrecognized, escapes treatment. It is at least safe to say

that those whose skins are the most affected early in the disease are the fortunate ones, because their recognition and treatment

in the secondary stage help them to escape locomotor ataxia and softening of the brain. Conversely the victim who judges the

extent and severity of his syphilis by the presence or absence of a "breaking out" is just the one to think himself well for ten or

twenty years because his skin is clean, and then to wake up some fine morning to find that he cannot keep his feet because his

concealed syphilis is beginning to affect his nervous system.

Nature of the Tissue Change in Late Syphilis—Gummatous Infiltration.—The essential happening in late syphilis is that body

tissue in which the germs are present is replaced by an abnormal tissue, not unlike a tumor growth. The process is usually

painless. This material is shoddy, so to speak, and goes to pieces soon after it grows. The shoddy tissue is called "gummatous infiltration," and the tumor, if one is formed, is called a "gumma." The syphilitic process at the edge of the gumma shuts off

the blood supply and the tissue dies, as a finger would if a tight band were wound around it, cutting off the blood supply.

Gumma can develop almost anywhere, and where it does, there is a loss of tissue that can be replaced only by a scar. In this

way gummas can eat holes in bone, or leave ulcerating sores in the skin where the gumma formed and died, or take the roof

out of a mouth, or weaken the wall of a blood-vessel [Pg 47] so that it bulges and bursts. The sunken noses and roofless

mouths are usually syphilitic—yet if they are recognized in time and put under treatment, all these horrible things yield as

by magic. There are few greater satisfactions open to the physician than to see a tertiary sore which has refused to heal for

months or years disappear under the influence of mercury and iodids within a few weeks. Still better, if treatment had been

begun early in the disease, and efficiently and completely carried out, none of these conditions need ever have been.

Destructive Effects of Late Syphilis.—Late syphilis is, therefore, destructive, and the harm that it does cannot, except within

narrow limits, be repaired. It is responsible for the kind of damaged goods which gives the disease its reality for the every-

day person. It is a matter of desperate importance where the damage is done. Late syphilis in the skin and bones, while

horrible enough to look at, and disfiguring for life, is not the most serious syphilis, because we can put up with considerable

loss of tissue and scarring in these quarters and still keep on living. But when late syphilis gets at the base of the aorta, the

great vessel by which the blood leaves the heart, and damages the valves there, the numbering of the syphilitic's days begins.

Few can afford to replace much brain substance by tertiary growths and expect to maintain their front against the world. Few

are so young that they can meet the handicap that old age and hardening of the arteries, brought on prematurely by late syphilis,

put upon them. When late syphilis affects the vital structures and gains headway, the victim goes to the[Pg 48] wall. This is

the really dangerous syphilis—the kind of syphilis that shortens and cripples life.

There are few good estimates of the extent of late accidents, as we often call the serious later complications in syphilis, or of

the part that they play in medicine as a whole. Too many of them are inconspicuous, or confused with other internal troubles

that result from them. Deaths from syphilis are all the time being hidden under the general terms "Bright's disease," or "heart

disease," or "paralysis," or "apoplexy." It is a hopeful fact that, even under unfavorable conditions, only a comparatively small percentage, from 10 to 20 per cent, seem to develop obvious late accidents. On the other hand, it must not be forgotten that the

obscure costs of syphilis are becoming more apparent all the time, and the influence of the disease in shortening the life of our

arteries and of other vital structures is more and more evident. There is still good reason for avoiding the effects of syphilis by

every means at our disposal—by avoiding syphilis itself in the first place, and by early recognition of the disease and efficient treatment, in the second.

Late Syphilis of the Nervous System—Locomotor Ataxia.—The ways in which late syphilis can attack the nervous system form

the real terrors of the disease to most people. Locomotor ataxia and general paralysis of the insane (or softening of the brain)

are the best known to the laity, though only two of many ways in which syphilis can attack the nervous system. Though their

relation to the disease was long suspected, the final touch of proof came only as recently as 1913, when Noguchi and Moore,

of the [Pg 49] Rockefeller Institute, found the germs of the disease in the spinal cords of patients who had died of locomotor

ataxia, and in the brains of those who had died of paresis. The way in which the damage is done can scarcely be explained in

ordinary terms, but, as in all late syphilis, a certain amount of the damage once done is beyond repair. Locomotor ataxia begins

to affect the lower part of the spinal cord first, so that the earliest symptoms often come from the legs and from the bladder and

rectum, whose nerves are injured. Other parts higher up may be affected, and changes resulting in total blindness and deafness

not infrequently occur. Through the nervous system, various organs, especially the stomach, may be seriously affected, and

excruciating attacks of pain with unmanageable attacks of vomiting (gastric crises) are apt to follow. This does not, of course,

mean that all pain in the stomach with vomiting means locomotor ataxia. All sorts of obscure symptoms may develop in this

disease, but the signs in the eyes and elsewhere are such that a decision as to what is the matter can usually be made without

considering how the patient feels, and by evidence which is beyond his control.

Late Syphilis of the Nervous System—General Paralysis.—General paralysis, or paresis, is a progressive mental degeneration,

with relapses and periods of improvement which reduce the patient by successive stages to a jibbering idiocy ending invariably

in death. Such patients may, in the course of their decline, have delusions which lead them to acts of violence. The only place

for a paretic [Pg 50] is in an asylum, since the changes in judgment, will-power, and moral control which occur early in the

disease are such that, before the patient gets unmanageable, he may have pretty effectually wrecked his business and the

happiness of his family and associates. When the condition is recognized, the family must at least be forewarned, so that they

can take action when it seems necessary. Both locomotor ataxia and paresis may develop in the same person, producing a

combined form known as taboparesis.

The importance of locomotor ataxia and paresis in persons who carry heavy responsibilities is very great. In railroad men, for

example, the harm that can be done in the early stages of paresis is as great as or even greater than the harm that an epileptic

can do. A surgeon with beginning taboparesis may commit the gravest errors of judgment before his condition is discovered.

Men of high ability, on whom great responsibilities are placed, may bring down with them, in their collapse, great industrial

and financial structures dependent on the integrity of their judgment. The extent of such damage to the welfare of society by

syphilis is unknown, though here and there some investigation scratches the surface of it. It will remain for the future to show

us more clearly the cost of syphilis in this direction.

Syphilis and Mental Disease.—Williams,[7] before the American Public Health Association, has recently carefully

summarized the rôle of syphilis in the production of insanity, and the cost of the disease to the State from the standpoint of '

mental disease alone.

[Pg 51] He estimates that 10 per cent of the patients who enter the Massachusetts State hospitals for the insane are suffering

from syphilitic insanity. Fifteen per cent of those at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital have syphilis. In New York State

hospitals, 12.7 per cent of those admitted have syphilitic mental diseases. In Ohio, 12 per cent were admitted to hospitals for

the same reason. An economic study undertaken by Williams of 100 men who died at the Boston State Hospital of syphilitic

mental disease, the cases being taken at random, showed that the shortening of life in the individual cases ranged from eight

to thirty-eight years, and the total life loss was 2259 years. Of ten of these men the earning capacity was definitely known,

and through their premature death there was an estimated financial loss of $212,248. It cost the State of Massachusetts

$39,312 to care for the 100 men until their death. Seventy-eight were married and left dependent wives at the time of their

commission to the hospital. In addition to the 100 men who became public charges, 109 children were thrown upon society

without the protection of a wage-earner. Williams estimates, on the basis of published admission figures to Massachusetts

hospitals, that there are now in active life, in that state alone, 1500 persons who will, within the next five years, be taken to

state hospitals with syphilitic insanity.

[7] Williams, F. E.: "Preaching Health," Amer. Jour. Pub. Health, 1917, vi, 1273.

Frequency of Locomotor Ataxia and General Paralysis.—The percentage of all syphilitic patients who develop either

locomotor ataxia or paresis varies in different estimates from 1 to 6 per cent of the total number who acquire syphilis. The susceptibility[Pg 52] to any syphilitic disease of the nervous system is hastened by the use of alcohol and by overwork or

dissipation, so that the prevalence of them depends on the class of patients considered. It is evident, though, that only a

relatively small proportion of the total number of syphilitics are doomed to either of these fates. Taking the population as

a whole, the percentage of syphilitics who develop this form of late involvement probably does not greatly exceed 1 per

cent.  Treatment and Prevention of Late Syphilis of the Nervous System.—Locomotor ataxia and paresis, even more than

other syphilitic diseases of the nervous system, are extremely hard to affect by medicines circulating in the blood, and for

that reason do not respond to treatment with the ease that syphilis does in many other parts of the body. Early locomotor

ataxia can often be benefited or kept from getting any worse by the proper treatment. For paresis, in our present state of

knowledge, nothing can be done once the disease passes its earliest stages. In both these diseases only too often the

physician is called upon to lock the stable door after the horse is stolen. The problem of what to do for the victims of these

two conditions is the same as the problem in other serious complications of syphilis—keep the disease from ever reaching

such a stage by recognizing every case early, and treating it thoroughly from the very beginning.

Summary

Summing up briefly the main points to bear in mind about the course of syphilis—there is a time,[Pg 53] at the very

beginning of the disease, even after the first sore appears, when the condition is still at or near the place where it entered

the body. At this time it can be permanently cured by quick recognition and thorough treatment. There are no fixed

characteristics of the early stages of the disease, and it often escapes attention entirely or is regarded as a trifle. The

symptoms that follow the spread of the disease over the body may be severe or mild, but they seldom endanger life, and

again often escape notice, leaving the victim for some years a danger to other people from relapses about which he may

know nothing whatever. Serious syphilis is the late syphilis which overtakes those whose earlier symptoms passed

unrecognized or were insufficiently treated. Late syphilis of the skin and bones, disfiguring and horrible to look at, is

less dangerous than the hidden syphilis of the blood-vessels, the nerves, and the internal organs, which, under cover of

a whole skin and apparent health, maims and destroys its victims. Locomotor ataxia and softening of the brain, early

apoplexy, blindness and deafness, paralysis, chronic fatal kidney and liver disease, heart failure, hardening of the blood-

vessels early in life, with sudden or lingering death from any of these causes, are among the ways in which syphilis

destroys innocent and guilty alike. And yet, for all its destructive power, it is one of the easiest of diseases to hold in

check, and if intelligently treated at almost any but the last stages, can, in the great majority of cases, be kept from

endangering life. [Pg 54]

Chapter VI

The Blood Test for Syphilis

It seems desirable at this point, while we are trying to fix in mind the great value of recognizing syphilis in a person in

order to treat it and thus prevent dangerous complications, to say something about the blood test for syphilis, the second

great advance in our means of recognizing doubtful or hidden forms of the disease. The first, it will be recalled, is the

identification of the germ in the secretions from the early sores.

Antibodies in the Blood in Disease.—It is part of the new understanding we have of many diseases that we are able to

recognize them by finding in the blood of the sick person substances which the body makes to neutralize or destroy the

poisons made by the invading germs, even when we cannot find the germs themselves. These substances are called

antibodies, and the search for antibodies in different diseases has been an enthusiastic one. If we can by any scheme

teach the body to make antibodies for a germ, we can teach it to cure for itself the disease caused by that germ. So, for

example, by injecting dead germs as a vaccine in typhoid fever and certain other diseases, we are able to teach the body

to form protective substances which will kill any of the [Pg 55] living germs of that particular kind which gain entrance

to the body. Conversely, if the body is invaded by a particular kind of germ, and we are in doubt as to just which one it

is, we can identify it by finding in the blood of the sick person the antibody which we know by certain tests will kill or

injure a certain germ. This sort of medical detective work was first applied to syphilis successfully by Wassermann,

Neisser, and Bruck in 1904, and for that reason the test for these antibodies in the blood in syphilis is called the

Wassermann reaction. To be sure, it is now known that in syphilis it is not a true antibody for the poisons of the

Spirochæta pallida for which we are testing, but rather a physical-chemical change in the serum of patients with syphilis,

which can be produced by other things besides this one disease. But this fact has not impaired the practical value of the

test, since the other conditions which give it are not likely to be confused with syphilis in this part of the world. The fact

that no true antibody is formed simply makes it unlikely that we shall ever have a vaccine for syphilis.

Difficulties of the Test.—The Wassermann blood test for syphilis is one of the most complex tests in medicine. The theory

of it is beyond the average man's comprehension. A large number of factors enter into the production of a correct result, and

the attaining of that result involves a high degree of technical skill and a large experience. It is no affair for the amateur.

The test should be made by a specialist of recognized standing, and this term does not include many of the commercial

laboratories [Pg 56] which spring up like mushrooms in these days of laboratory methods.

The Recognition of Syphilis by the Blood Test.—When the Wassermann test shows the presence of syphilis, we speak of it

as "positive." Granted that the test is properly done, a strong positive reaction means syphilis, unless it is covered by the

limited list of exceptions. After the first few weeks of the disease, and through the early secondary period, the blood test is

positive in practically all cases. Its reliability is, therefore, greatest at this time. Before the infection has spread beyond the

first sore, however, the Wassermann test is negative, and this fact makes it of little value in recognizing early primary

lesions. In about 20 to 30 per cent of syphilitic individuals the test returns to negative after the active secondary stage is

passed. This does not necessarily mean that the person is recovering. It is even possible to have the roof fall out of the

mouth from gummatous changes and the Wassermann test yet be negative. It is equally possible, though unusual, for a

negative Wassermann test to be coincident with contagious sores in the mouth or on the genitals. So it is apparent that as

an infallible test for syphilis it is not an unqualified success. But infallibility is a rare thing in medicine, and must be

replaced in most cases by skilful interpretation of a test based on a knowledge of the sources of error. We understand

pretty clearly now that the Wassermann test is only one of the signs of syphilis and that it has quite well-understood

limitations. It has revealed an immense [Pg 57] amount of hidden syphilis, and in its proper field has had a value past all

counting. Experience has shown, however, that it should be checked up by a medical examination to give it its greatest

value. Just as all syphilis does not show a positive blood test, so a single negative test is not sufficient to establish the

absence of syphilis without a medical examination. In a syphilitic, least of all, is a single negative Wassermann test

proof that his syphilis has left him. In spite of these rather important exceptions, the Wassermann test, skilfully done and

well interpreted, is one of the most valuable of modern medical discoveries.

The Blood Test in the Treatment and Cure of Syphilis.—In addition to its value in recognizing the disease, the

Wassermann test has a second field of usefulness in determining when a person is cured of syphilis, and is an excellent

guide to the effect of treatment. Good treatment early in a case of syphilis usually makes the Wassermann test negative in a comparatively short time, and even a little treatment will do it in some cases. But will it stay negative if treatment is then

stopped? In the high percentage of cases it will not. It will become positive again after a variable interval, showing that the

disease has been suppressed but not destroyed. For that reason, if we wish to be sure of cure, we must continue treatment

until the blood test has become negative and stays negative. This usually means repeated tests, over a period of several

years, in connection with such a course of treatment as will be described later. During a large part of this time [Pg 58] the

blood test will be the only means of finding out how the disease is being affected by the treatment. To all outward

appearance the patient will be well. He may even have been negative in repeated tests, and yet we know by experience

that if treatment is stopped too soon, he will become positive again. There is no set rule for the number of negative tests

necessary to indicate a cure. The whole thing is a matter of judgment on the part of an experienced physician, and to that

judgment the patient should commit himself unhesitatingly. If a patient could once have displayed before him in visible

form the immense amount of knowledge, experience, and labor which has gone into the devising and goes into the

performing of this test, he would be more content to leave the decision of such questions to his physician than he

sometimes is, and would be more alive to its reality and importance. The average man thinks it a rather shadowy and

indefinite affair on which to insist that he shall keep on doctoring, especially after the test has been negative once or twice.

Just as a negative test may occur while syphilis is still actively present and doing damage in the body, so a positive

Wassermann test may persist long after all outward and even inward signs of the disease have disappeared. These fixed

positives are still a puzzle to physicians. But many patients with fixed positives, if well treated regardless of their blood

test, do not seem to develop the late accidents of the disease. If their nervous systems, on careful examination, are found

not to be affected, they are[Pg 59] reasonably safe as far as our present knowledge goes. People with fixed positives

should accept the judgment of their physicians and follow their recommendations for treatment without worrying

themselves gray over complications which may never develop.

Practical Points About the Test.—Certain practical details about this test are of interest to every one. Blood for it is

usually drawn from a small vein in the arm. The discomfort is insignificant—no more than that of a sharp pin-prick.

Blood is drawn in the same way for other kinds of blood tests, so that a needle-prick in the arm is not necessarily for

a Wassermann test. There is no cutting and no scar remains. The amount of blood drawn is small and does not weaken

one in the least. The test is done on the serum or fluid part of the blood, after the corpuscles are removed. It can also be

done on the clear fluid taken from around the spinal cord, and this is necessary in certain syphilitic nervous diseases.

There is nothing about the test that need make anybody hesitate in taking it, and it is safe to say that, when properly done,

the information that it gives is more than worth the trouble, especially to those who have at any time been exposed, even

remotely, to the risk of infection. But the test must be well done, by a large hospital or through a competent physician or

specialist, and the results interpreted to the patient by the physician and not by the laboratory that does the test, or in the

light of the patient's own half-knowledge of the matter.

[Pg 60]

Chapter VII The Treatment of Syphilis

General Considerations

Scientific Methods of Treating Disease.—In trying to treat diseases caused by germs, the physician finds himself confronted

by several different problems. Certain of these diseases run their course and the patient gets well or dies, pretty much

regardless of anything that can be done for him. In certain others, because of our knowledge of the way in which the body

makes its fight against the germ, we are able either to prepare it against attack, as in the case of protective vaccination, or

we are able to help it to come to its own defense after the disease has developed. This can be done either by supplying it

with antitoxin from an outside source, or helping it to make its own antitoxin by giving it dead germs to practise on. In the

third group, the smallest of the three, we are fortunate enough to know of some substance which will kill the germ in the

body without killing the patient. For such diseases we are said to have a "specific" method of treatment. Syphilis is one

of these diseases. It is not to be understood that there is a sharp line of division between these three groups, since in every

disease we try as far as possible to use all the methods we can bring to bear.[Pg 61] In pneumonia we have to let the body

largely make its own fight, and simply help it to clear out the poisons formed by the germ, and keep the heart going until the

crisis is past. In diphtheria, nowadays, we help the body out promptly by supplying it with antitoxin from an outside source,

before it has time to make any for itself. We do the same thing for lockjaw if we are early enough. We practise the body on

dead typhoid germs by vaccination until it is able to fight the living ones and destroy them before they get a foothold. The

diseases for which we have specific methods of treatment are few in number, and each has associated with it the name of a

particular drug. Quinin kills the germ of malaria, sodium salicylate cures inflammatory rheumatism, and mercury cures

syphilis. To mercury in the case of syphilis must now be added salvarsan or arsenobenzol ("606"), the substance devised

by Ehrlich in 1910, which will be considered in the next chapter.

The action of a specific is, of course, not infallible, but the failures are exceptional, so that one feels in attacking one of

these diseases with its specific remedy as a man called upon to resist a savage beast would feel if he were armed with a

powerful rifle instead of a stick. The situation in syphilis, for which there is a specific, as compared with tuberculosis, for

which there is no specific, is incomparably in favor of the former. If we had as powerful weapons against tuberculosis as

we have against syphilis, the disease would now be a rarity instead of the disastrous plague it is. Comparing the situation

[Pg 62] in two diseases for which we have specifics, such as syphilis and malaria, malaria has lost most of its seriousness

as a problem in any part of the world, while syphilis is rampant everywhere. Malaria has, of course, been extinguished not

only through the efficiency of quinin, but also through preventive measures directed at mosquitos, which are the carriers of

the disease from person to person. But allowing for this, if it becomes possible to apply mercury and salvarsan as

thoroughly to the prevention and treatment of syphilis as quinin can be applied to malaria, syphilis will soon be a rarity

over the larger part of the civilized world. To bring the specific remedies for syphilis and the patient together constitutes,

then, one of the greatest problems which confronts us in the control of the disease at the present day.

Mercury

Mercury in the Treatment of Syphilis.—Mercury is, of course, familiar to every one, and there is nothing peculiar about the

mercury used in the treatment of syphilis. The fluid metallic mercury itself may be used in the form of salves, in which the

mercury is mixed with fatty substances and rubbed into the skin. Mercury can be vaporized and the vapor inhaled, and

probably the efficiency of mercury when rubbed into the skin depends to no small extent on the inhalation of the vapor which

is driven off by the warmth of the body. Mercury in the form of chemical salts or compounds with other substances can be

given as pills or as liquid medicine.[Pg 63] Similarly, the metal itself or some of its compounds can be injected in oil with a hypodermic needle into the muscles, and the drug absorbed in this way.

Misconceptions Concerning Mercury.—The use of mercury in syphilis is nearly as old, in Europe at least, as the disease

itself. The drug was in common use in the fifteenth century for other conditions, and was promptly tried in the new and

terrible disease as it spread over Europe, with remarkable results. But doses in the old days were anything but homeopathic,

and overdoses of mercury did so much damage that for a time the drug fell into undeserved disfavor. Many of the

superstitions and popular notions about mercury originated at this period in its history. It was supposed to make the bones

"rot" and the teeth fall out, an idea which one patient in every ten still entertains and offers as an objection when told he

must take mercury. Insufficiently treated syphilis is, of course, what makes the bones "rot," and not the mercury used in

treating the disease. Mercury apparently has no effect on the bones whatever. The influence of the drug on the teeth is more

direct and refers to the symptoms caused by overdoses. No physician who knows his business ever gives mercury at the

present time to the point where the teeth are in any danger of falling out.

The Action of Mercury.—The action of mercury on syphilis is not entirely clear. The probabilities are that the drug, carried

to all parts of the body by the blood, helps to build up the body's resistance and stimulates it to produce substances which kill

the [Pg 64] germs. In addition, of course, it kills the germs by its own poisonous qualities. Its action is somewhat slow, and

it is even possible for syphilitic sores containing the germs to appear, especially in the mouth and throat and about the genitals,

while the person is taking mercury. Just as quinin must be used in malaria for some time after all signs of chill and fever have disappeared, to kill off all germs lurking in out-of-the-way corners of the body, or especially resistant to the drug, so it is

necessary to continue the use of mercury long after it has disposed of all the obvious signs of the disease, like the eruption,

headaches, and other symptoms, in order to prevent a relapse. No matter in what form it is used, the action of mercury on

syphilis is one of the marvels of medicine. It can clear up the most terrific eruption with scarcely a scar, and transform a

bed-ridden patient into a seemingly healthy man or woman, able to work, in the course of a few weeks or months. Symptoms

often vanish before it like snow in a thaw. This naturally makes a decided impression, and often an unfavorable one, on the

patient. It is only too easy to think that a disease which vanishes under the magic influence of a few pills is a trifle, and that

outwardly cured means the same thing as inwardly cured. Mercury therefore carries its disadvantages with its advantages,

and by its marvelous but transient effect only too often gives the patient a false idea of his progress toward cure.

Methods of Administering Mercury.—As has been said, mercury is given principally in three ways at the present time. It can

be given by the mouth, in[Pg 65] the form of pills and liquids, and in this form is not infrequently incorporated into patent

medicine blood purifiers. Mercury in pills and liquid medicine has the advantage for the patient of being an easy and

inconspicuous way of taking the drug, and for that reason patients usually take it willingly or even insist on it if they know

no better. Even small doses taken in this way will hide the evidences of syphilis so completely that only a blood test will

show that it exists. If it were true that large doses taken by mouth could always be relied on to cure the disease, there

would be little need for other ways of giving it. But there is a considerable proportion of persons with syphilis treated with

pills who do not get rid of the disease even though the dose is as large as the stomach can stand. Such patients often have all

the serious late complications which befall untreated patients. It seems almost impossible to give enough mercury by mouth

to effect a cure. Thus pill treatment has come to be a second-best method, and suitable only in those instances in which we

simply expect to control the outward signs rather than effect a cure.

The mercury rub or inunction, under ideal conditions, all things considered, is the best method of administering mercury to

a patient with the hope of securing a permanent result. In this form of treatment the mercury made up with a salve is rubbed

into the skin. The effectiveness of the mercurial rub is reduced considerably by its obvious disadvantages. It requires time

to do the rubbing, and the ointment used seems uncleanly because of its [Pg 66] color and because it is necessary to leave

what is not rubbed in on the skin so that it discolors the underwear. The mercurial rub is at its best when it is given by some

one else, since few patients have the needed combination of conscientiousness, energy, and determination to carry through a

long course. The advantages of the method properly carried out cannot be overestimated. It is entirely possible in a given

case of syphilis to accomplish by a sufficient number of inunctions everything that mercury can accomplish, and with the

least possible damage to the body. Treatment by mouth cannot compare with inunctions and cannot be made to replace them,

when the only objection to the rubs is the patient's unwillingness to be bothered by them. The patient who is determined,

therefore, to do the best thing by himself will take rubs conscientiously as long as his physician wishes him to do so, even

though it means, as it usually does, not a dozen or two, but several hundreds of them, extending over a period of two or three

years, and given at the rate of four to six rubs a week.

The giving of mercury by injections is a very powerful method of using the drug for the cure of syphilis. It reduces the

inconvenience of effective treatment to a minimum and has all the other advantages of secrecy and convenience. It keeps the

patient, moreover, in close touch with his physician and under careful observation. Injections by some methods are given

daily, by others once or twice a week. The main disadvantage is the discomfort which follows each injection for a few hours.

For [Pg 67] any one who has one of the serious complications of syphilis, injections may be a life and death necessity.

Mercurial injections are a difficult form of treatment and should be given only by experts and physicians who are thoroughly

familiar with their use.

Like every important drug in medicine, mercury is a poison if it is abused. Its earliest effect is on the mouth and teeth, and

for that reason the physician, in treating syphilis by vigorous methods, has his patients give special attention to the care of

their mouths and teeth and of their digestions as well. Mercury also affects the kidneys and the blood, if not properly given,

and for that reason the person who is taking it must be under the care and observation of a physician from time to time. Only

the ignorant undertake to treat themselves for syphilis, though how many of these there are can be inferred from the amount

of patent medicine and quack treatment there is in these fields. Properly given, mercury has no harmful effects, and there is

no ground whatever for the notion some people have, that mercury will do them more harm than a syphilitic infection.

Improperly used, either as too much or too little, it is capable of doing great harm, not only directly, but indirectly, by

making it impossible later for the patient to take enough to cure the disease. The extent to which some overconfident persons

fail in their efforts to treat and cure themselves explains the necessity for such a warning.

Effect of Mercurial Treatment on the Blood Test.—The effect of mercury on the Wassermann blood test for syphilis should

also be generally understood.[Pg 68] In many cases it is possible, especially early in the disease, by a few rubs of mercurial

ointment, or a few injections of mercury, or even in some cases by the use of pills or liquid medicine, to make a positive

blood test for syphilis negative. But this negative test is only temporary. Within a short time, usually after treatment is stopped,

the test becomes positive again, showing that the mercury has not yet cured, but simply checked, the disease, and that it may at

any time break out again or do internal damage. It must be understood that a negative blood test just after a patient has been

taking mercury has no meaning, so far as guaranteeing a cure is concerned. It is only the blood test that is repeatedly negative

after the effect of mercury wears off, which shows the disease is cured. Yet many a syphilitic may and does think himself cured,

and may marry in good faith, or be allowed a health certificate, only to become positive again. He may then develop new sores

without his knowledge even, and perhaps infect his wife, or may himself in later years develop some of the serious

consequences of the disease.

Whenever one talks to a person who knows something about the advances in knowledge in the past few years about the

treatment of syphilis, and goes into detail about mercury, the odds are two to one that he will be interrupted by the question,

"But what about '606'?" Before talking about salvarsan, or "606," it is well to say here that this new drug, wonderful though

it is, has in no sense done away with the necessity for the use of mercury in the[Pg 69] treatment of syphilis. Mercury has as

high a reputation and is as indispensable in the cure of syphilis today as it was four centuries ago. It has as yet no substitutes.

We appreciate every day, more and more, how thoroughly it can be depended on to do the work we ask of it.[8]

[8] A drug known as the iodid of potash (or soda) is widely used in the treatment of syphilis, and especially of the late

forms of the disease, such as gummas and gummatous sores. It has a peculiar effect on gummatous tissue, causing it to melt

away, so to speak, and greatly hastening the healing process. So remarkable is this effect that it gives the impression that

iodids are really curing the syphilis itself. It has been shown, however, that iodids have no effect on the germs of syphilis,

and therefore on the cause of the disease, although they can promote the healing of the sores in the late stages. For this reason

iodids must always be used in connection with mercury or salvarsan if the disease itself is to be influenced. It is occasionally

difficult to get patients to understand this after they have once taken "drops," as the medicine is often called. Otherwise the

use of iodids in syphilis is of medical rather than general interest.

[Pg 70]

Chapter VIII The Treatment of Syphilis (Continued)

Salvarsan

The Discovery of Salvarsan ("606").—Salvarsan, or "606," is a chemical compound used in the modern treatment of

syphilis. It was announced to the world by Paul Ehrlich, its brilliant discoverer, in December, 1910. Ehrlich and his

Japanese co-worker, Hata, had some years before been impressed with the remarkable effect certain dyes had on the

parasites infesting certain animals and which resemble the germs that cause the African sleeping sickness in man. When

one of these dyes was dissolved and injected into the blood of the sick animal, the dye promptly picked out and killed

all the parasites, but did not kill the animal. Dyes are very complex chemical substances and certain of them seem to have

an affinity for germs. It occurred to Ehrlich that if a substance could be devised which was poisonous for the germ and not

for the patient it might be possible to prepare a specific for a given disease, acting as quinin does in malaria. By

combining a poison with a dye it might be made to pick out the germs and leave the body unharmed.

Paul Ehrlich [1854-1915]

Paul Ehrlich [1854-1915] (From "Year Book of Skin and Venereal Diseases," 1916, vol. ix. "Practical Medicine Series," Year Book

Publishers, Chicago.)

The poison which had already been shown to be especially effective in killing germs like those of [Pg 71] syphilis was

arsenic. The problem was to get arsenic into such a combination with other chemical substances that it would lose its

poisonous quality for man, but still be poisonous for the spirochete of syphilis. Ehrlich and Hata began to make chemical

compounds of arsenic in the laboratory with chemical substances like the dyes. As the compounds grew more complex

they were tested on animals and some of them found to have the qualities for which their inventors were searching. Some

of them are even used at the present time in the treatment of certain diseases. The six hundred and sixth compound in this

series, when tested on syphilitic animals, was found to be extraordinarily efficient in killing the germ of syphilis, even

when used in quantities so small as not to injure the animal. Among other things, there could be no better example of the

importance of animal experiment in medicine. If the cause of syphilis had not been known, and the disease not given to

animals, the discovery of salvarsan might never have been made. After extensive experiments on syphilitic rabbits, which

showed that the drug could be given safely in amounts large enough to cure the animal at a single dose, it was tried on man,

two physicians, Drs. Hoppe and Wittneben, volunteering for the test. When it was found that the drug did them no harm,

it was used on syphilitic patients for the first time. As soon as its remarkable effect on the disease in them was fully

established, Ehrlich announced the discovery before the medical society of Magdeburg, and the results were published in

one of the most[Pg 72] important of the German medical journals. Ehrlich then sent out from his own laboratory several

thousands of doses of the new drug to all the principal clinics and large hospitals of the world for an extended trial. It was

not until the results of this trial became apparent that he permitted its manufacture on a commercial scale. There could

scarcely be a more ideal way of introducing a new form of treatment than the one adopted by Ehrlich, or one better

surrounded by all the safeguards that conservatism could suggest.

The Mistaken Conception of "Single Dose Cure."—In the light of his experience with salvarsan in animals, Ehrlich hoped

to accomplish the cure of syphilis in man by a single dose of the new drug, as he had been able to cure it in rabbits. All the

earlier use of salvarsan in the treatment of syphilis was carried out with this idea in view, and the remarkable way in

which the symptoms vanished before the large doses used encouraged the belief that Ehrlich's ideal for it had been

fulfilled. But it was not long before it was found that syphilis had a stronger hold on the human body than on animals, and

that patients relapsed after a single dose, either as shown by the blood test or by the reappearance, after varying intervals,

of the eruption or other symptoms of the disease. Unfortunately, the news of the discovery of salvarsan, and with it

Ehrlich's original idea that it would cure syphilis by a single dose, had gotten into the newspapers. Numbers of

syphilitics treated with it have been deceived by this notion into believing themselves cured. In those whose symptoms

[Pg 73] came back in severe form, the trouble was, of course, found out. But there are at the present time, undoubtedly,

many persons who received a single dose of salvarsan for a syphilis contracted at this time, and who today, having never

seen any further outward signs of the disease, believe themselves cured, when in reality they are not. In the next twenty

years the introduction of salvarsan will probably result in a wave of serious late syphilis, the result of cases insufficiently

treated in the early days of its use. It was not long before it was found that not one but several doses of salvarsan were

necessary in the treatment of syphilis, and soon many physicians of wide experience began to call in mercury again for

help when salvarsan proved insufficient for cure. At the present time the use of both mercury and salvarsan in the

treatment of the disease is the most widely accepted practice, and seems to offer the greatest assurance of cure.

The Value of Salvarsan.—Salvarsan has done for the treatment of syphilis certain things of the most far-reaching

importance from the standpoint of the interests of society at large. It has first of all made possible the control of the

contagious lesions of the disease. Secondly, as was said before, it has made possible the cure of the infection in the

primary stage, before it has spread from the starting-point in the chancre to the rest of the body. To understand how it

accomplishes these results it is important to understand its mode of action.

The Action of Salvarsan.—It will be recalled that Ehrlich planned salvarsan to kill the germs of syphilis, [Pg 74] just as

quinin kills the germs of malaria. It was intended that when the drug entered the blood it should be carried to every part

of the body, and fastening itself on the spirochetes, kill them without hurting the body. This is seemingly exactly what the

drug does, and it does it so well that within twenty-four hours after a dose of it is given into the blood there is not a living

germ of syphilis, apparently, in any sore on the body. If the same thing happened in all the out-of-the-way corners of the

body, the cure would be complete. The natural result of removing the cause of the disease in this fashion is that the sores

produced by it heal up. They heal with a speed and completeness that is an even greater marvel than the action of mercury.

The more superficial the eruption, the quicker it vanishes, so that in the course of a few days all evidence of the disease

may disappear. This is especially true of the grayish patches in the mouth and about the genitals, which have already been

described as the most dangerously contagious lesions of syphilis. It is evident, therefore, that to give salvarsan in a case

of contagious syphilis is to do away with the risk of spreading the disease in the quickest and most effective fashion. It is

as if a person with scarlet fever could be dipped in a disinfecting bath and then turned loose in the community without the

slightest danger of his infecting others. How much scarlet fever would there be if every case of the disease could be treated

in this way? There would be as little of it as there now is of smallpox, compared to the wholesale plagues of that disease

which used to kill[Pg 75] off the population of whole towns and counties in the old days. If we could head off the crops of

contagious sores in every syphilitic by the use of "606," syphilis in the same way would take a long step toward its

disappearance. It is not a question, in this connection, of curing the disease with salvarsan, but of preventing its spread, and

in doing that, salvarsan is one of the things we have been looking for for centuries.

The Treatment of Syphilis With Salvarsan.—Salvarsan, the original "606," was improved on by Ehrlich in certain ways,

which make it easier for the ordinary physician to use it. The improved salvarsan is called neosalvarsan ("914") and has

no decided advantages over the older preparation except on the score of convenience. Both salvarsan and neosalvarsan

are yellow powders, which must be manufactured under the most exacting precautions, to prevent their being intensely

poisonous, and must be sealed up in glass tubes to prevent their spoiling in the air. They were formerly administered by

dissolving them or by mixing with oil and then injecting them into the muscles, much as mercury is given by injection. At

the present time, however, the majority of experts prefer to dissolve the drug in water or salt solution and to inject it into

the blood directly, through one of the arm veins. There is very little discomfort in the method, as a rule—no more than

there is to the taking of blood for a blood test. At the present time the quantity of the drug injected is relatively small for

the first injection, growing larger with each following injection. The[Pg 76] intervals between injections vary a good deal,

but a week is an average. The number of injections that should be given depends largely on the purpose in view. If the

salvarsan is relied on to produce a cure, the number may be large—as high as twenty or more. If it is used only to clear up

a contagious sore, a single injection may be enough for the time being. But when only a few injections are used, mercury

becomes the main reliance, and a patient who cannot have all the salvarsan he needs should not expect two or three doses

of it to produce a cure. The publicity which has been given to this form of treatment has led many patients to take matters

into their own hands and to go to a physician and ask him to give them a dose of salvarsan, much as they might order a

highball on a cold day. The physician who is put in a position like this is at a disadvantage in caring for his patient, and

the patient in the end pays for his mistaken idea that he knows what is good for himself. The only judge of the necessity of

giving salvarsan, and the amount and the frequency with which to give it, is the expert physician, and no patient who is

wise will try to take the thing into his own hands. There are even good reasons for believing that the patient who is

insufficiently treated with salvarsan is at times worse off than the patient who, unable to afford the drug at all, has had to

depend for his cure entirely on mercury.

It is one of the tragedies of the modern private practice of medicine that the physician has so often to consult the patient's

purse in giving or withholding salvarsan, and for that reason, except in the well-to-do,[Pg 77] it is seldom used to the

best advantage. Such a drug, so powerful an agent in the conservation of the public health, should be available to all who

need it in as large amounts as necessary, without a moment's hesitation as to whether the patient can afford it or not. It is

not too much to urge that private patent rights should not be allowed to control the price and distribution of such a

commodity to the public. Upon the payment of suitable royalties to the inventor the manufacture of such a drug should be

thrown open to properly supervised competition, as in the case of diphtheria antitoxin, or be taken over by the

Government and distributed at cost, at least to hospitals. To bring about such a revision of our patent law every thinking

man and woman may well devote a share of personal energy and influence.

The manner of giving salvarsan is as important for the patient as the correct performance of an operation, and the safeguards

which surround it are essentially the same. The drug is an extremely powerful one, more powerful than any other known, and

in the usual doses it carries with it into the body for the destruction of the germs of syphilis many times the amount of arsenic

needed to kill a human being. If something should go astray, the patient might lose his life as promptly as if the surgeon or the

anesthetist should make a slip during an operation. To make the giving of salvarsan safe, the judgment, experience, and

training of the specialist are not too much to ask.

The dangers of salvarsan are easily exaggerated, [Pg 78] and some people have a foolish fear of it. The wonderful thing

about the drug is that, with all the possibility for harm that one might expect in it, it so seldom makes any trouble. It is, of

course, first carefully tested on animals when it is manufactured, so that no poisonous product is placed on the market. It

is as safe to take salvarsan at the hands of an expert as it is to take ether for an operation or to take antitoxin for diphtheria,

and that is saying a good deal. Most of the stories of accidents that go the rounds among laymen date back to the days when

first doses were too large and made the patients rather sick for a time. Present methods and cautions about administering

the drug are such that, except for the improvement in their condition, patients seldom know they have received it. The first

dose may light the eruption up a little, but this is only because the drug stirs the germs up before it kills them, and

improvement begins promptly within a few hours or a day or two.

The first characteristic of salvarsan which we should bear in mind especially, in our interest in the social aspects of syphilis,

is then the rapidity rather than the thoroughness of its action. It is a social asset to us because it protects us from the infected

person, and it is an asset to the patient because it will set him on his feet, able to work and go about his business, in a fraction

of the time that mercury can do it.

The efficiency of salvarsan in the cure of syphilis in the early stages is due, first, to the large amount of it that can be

introduced into the body without [Pg 79] killing the patient, and second, to the promptness with which it gets to the source

of trouble. In the old days, while we were laboriously getting enough mercury into the patient to help him to stop the

invading infection, the germs marched on into his blood and through his body. With salvarsan, the first dose, given into the

blood, reaches the germs forthwith and destroys them. There is enough of it and to spare. Twenty-four hours later scarcely

a living germ remains. The few stragglers who escape the fate of the main army are picked up by subsequent doses of

salvarsan and mercury, and a cure is assured. There is all the difference between stopping a charge with a machine gun

and stopping it with a single-shot rifle, in the relative effectiveness of salvarsan and mercury at the beginning of a

syphilitic infection.

In syphilis affecting the central nervous system, salvarsan, modified in various ways, may be injected into the spinal canal

in an effort to reach the trouble more directly. The method, which is known as intradural therapy, has had considerable

vogue, but a growing experience with it seems to indicate that it has less value than was supposed, and is a last resort

more often than anything else. It involves some risk, and is no substitute for efficient treatment by the more familiar

methods. If necessary, a patient can have the benefit of both.

The luetin test was devised by Noguchi for the presence of syphilis, and is performed by injecting into the skin an

emulsion of dead germs. A pustule forms if the test is positive. It is of practical value only in late syphilis, and a negative

test is no proof of the absence of the disease. Positive tests are sometimes obtained when syphilis is not present. For these

reasons the test is not as valuable as was at first thought.

[Pg 80]

Chapter IX The Cure of Syphilis

There are few things about our situation with regard to syphilis that deserve more urgent attention than questions connected

with the cure of the disease, and few things in which it is harder to get the necessary coöperation. On the one hand, syphilis

is one of the most curable of diseases, and on the other, it is one of the most incurable. At the one extreme we have the

situation in our own hands, at our own terms—at the other, we have a record of disappointing failure. As matters stand now,

we do not cure syphilis. We simply cloak it, gloss it over, keep it under the surface. Nobody knows how much syphilis is

cured, partly because nobody knows how much syphilis there really is, and partly because it is almost an axiom that few,

except persons of high intelligence and sufficient means, stick to treatment until they can be discharged as cured. Take into consideration, too, the fact that the older methods of treating syphilis were scarcely equal to the task of curing the disease,

and it is easy to see why the idea has arisen, even among physicians, that once a syphilitic means always a syphilitic, and

that the disease is incurable.

Radical or Complete Cure.—In speaking of the [Pg 81] cure of syphilis, it is worth while to define the terms we use rather

clearly. It is worth while to speak in connection with this disease of radical as distinguished from symptomatic cure. In a

radical cure we clear up the patient so completely that he never suffers a relapse. In symptomatic cure, which is not really

cure at all, we simply clear up the symptoms for which he seeks medical advice, without thought for what he may develop

next. Theoretically, the radical cure of syphilis should mean ridding the body of every single germ of the disease.

Practically speaking, we have no means of telling with certainty when this has been done, or as yet, whether it ever can be

done. It may well be that further study of the disease will show that, especially in fully developed cases, we simply reduce

the infection to harmlessness, or suppress it, without eradicating the last few germs. Recent work by Warthin tends to

substantiate this idea. So we are compelled in practice to limit our conception of radical cure to the condition in which we

have not only gotten rid of every single symptom of active syphilis in the patient, but have carried the treatment to the point

where, so far as we can detect in life, he never develops any further evidence of the disease. He lives out his normal span

of years in the normal way, and without having his efficiency as a human being affected by it. In interpreting this ideal for a

given case we should not forget that radical methods of treating syphilis are new. Only time can pass full verdict upon them.

Yet the efficiency of older methods was sufficient to control the disease in a [Pg 82] considerable percentage of those

affected. There is, therefore, every reason to believe that radical cure under the newer methods is a practical and attainable

ideal in an even higher percentage of cases and offers all the assurance that any reasonable person need ask for the conduct

of life. It should, therefore, be sought for in every case in which expert judgment deems it worth while. It cannot be said too

often that prospect of radical cure depends first and foremost upon the stage of the disease at which treatment is begun, and

that it is unreasonable to judge it by what it fails to accomplish in persons upon whom the infection has once thoroughly

fastened itself.

Symptomatic or Incomplete Cure.—Symptomatic "cure" is essentially a process of cloaking or glossing over the infection.

It is easy to obtain in the early stages of the disease, and in a certain sense, the earlier in the course of the disease such half-

way methods are applied, the worse it is for patient and public. In the late stages of the disease symptomatic cure of certain

lesions is sometimes justifiable on the score that damage already done cannot be repaired, the risk of infecting others is over,

and all that can be hoped for is to make some improvement in the condition. But applied early, symptomatic methods whisk

the outward evidences temporarily out of sight, create a false sense of security, and leave the disease to proceed quietly

below the surface, to the undoing of its victim. Such patients get an entirely false idea of their condition, and may refuse to

believe that they are not really cured, or may have[Pg 83] no occasion even to wonder whether they are or not until they are

beyond help. Every statement that can be made about the danger of syphilis to the public health applies with full force to the symptomatically treated early case. Trifling relapses, highly contagious sores in the mouth, or elsewhere, are not prevented

by symptomatic treatment and pass unnoticed the more readily because the patient feels himself secure in what has been done

for him. In the first five years of an inefficiently treated infection, and sometimes longer, this danger is a very near and

terrible one, to which thousands fall victims every year, and among them, perhaps, some of your friends and mine. Dangerous

syphilis is imperfectly treated syphilis, and at any moment it may confront us in our drawing rooms, in the swimming pool,

across the counter of the store, or in the milkman, the waitress, the barber. It confronts thousands of wives and children in

the person of half-cured fathers, infected nurse-maids, and others intimately associated with their personal life. These

dangers can be effectively removed from our midst by the substitution of radical for symptomatic methods and ideals of cure.

A person under vigorous treatment with a view to radical cure, with the observation of his condition by a physician which

that implies, is nearly harmless. In a reasonable time he can be made fit even for marriage. The whole contagious period of

syphilis would lose its contagiousness if every patient and physician refused to think of anything but radical cure.

In such a demand as this for the highest ideals in[Pg 84] the treatment of a disease like syphilis, the medical profession must,

of course, stand prepared to do its share toward securing the best results. No one concedes more freely than the physician

himself that, in the recognition and radical treatment of syphilis, not all the members of the medical profession are abreast of

the most advanced knowledge of the subject. Syphilis, almost up to the present day, has never been adequately taught as part

of a medical training. Those who obtained a smattering of knowledge about it from half a dozen sources in their school days

were fortunate. Thorough knowledge of the disease, of the infinite variety of its forms, of the surest means of recognizing it,

and the best methods of treating it, is only beginning to be available for medical students at the hands of expert teachers of the

subject. The profession, by the great advances in the medical teaching of syphilis in the past ten years, and the greater

advances yet to come, is, however, doing its best to meet its share of responsibility in preparation for a successful campaign.

The combination of the physician who insists on curing syphilis, with the patient who insists on being cured, may well be

irresistible.

Factors Influencing the Cure of Syphilis.—Cost.—We must admit that, as matters stand now, few patients are interested in

more than a symptomatic cure. Yet the increasing demand for blood tests, for example, shows that they are waking up.

Ignorance of the possibility and necessity for radical cure, and of the means of obtaining it, explains much of the indifference

which leads patients to disappear from[Pg 85] their physician's care just as the goal is in sight. But there is another reason

why syphilis is so seldom cured, and this is one which every forward-looking man and woman should heed. The cure of

syphilis means from two to four years of medical care. All of us know the cost of such services for even a brief illness.

A prolonged one often sets the victim farther back in purse than forward in health. The better the services which we wish

to command in these days, usually, the greater the cost, and expert supervision, at least, is desirable in syphilis. It is a

financial impossibility for many of the victims of syphilis to meet the cost of a radical cure. It is all they can do to pay for

symptomatic care in order to get themselves back into condition to work. We cannot then reasonably demand of these

patients that they shall be cured, in the interest of others, unless we provide them with the means. In talking about public

effort against syphilis, this matter will be taken up again. We have recognized the obligation in tuberculosis. Let us now

provide for it in syphilis.

Factors Controlling the Cure of Syphilis—Stage, Time, Effective Treatment.—Three factors enter into the radical cure of

syphilis, upon which the possibility of accomplishing it absolutely depends. The first of these concerns the stage of the

disease at which treatment is begun; the second is the time for which it is kept up; and the third is the coöperation of doctor

and patient in the use of effective methods of treatment.

Cure in the Primary Stage.—It goes almost without[Pg 86] saying that the prospect of curing a disease is better the earlier

treatment is begun. This is peculiarly so in syphilis. In the earliest days of the disease, while the infection is still local and

the blood test negative, the prospects of radical cure are practically 100 per cent. This is the so-called abortive cure, the

greatest gift which salvarsan has made to our power to fight syphilis. It depends on immediate recognition of the chancre

and immediate and strenuous treatment. So valuable is it that several physicians of large experience have expressed the

belief that even in cases in which we are not entirely sure the first sore is syphilitic, we should undertake an abortive

treatment for syphilis. This view may be extreme, but it illustrates how enormously worth while the early treatment of

syphilis is.

Cure in the Secondary Stage.—The estimation of the prospect of recovery when the secondary symptoms have appeared

and the germs are in the blood is difficult, owing to the rapid changes in our knowledge of the disease, which are taking

place almost from day to day. The patient usually presses his physician for an estimate of his chances, and in such cases,

after carefully explaining why our knowledge is fallible and subject to change, I usually estimate that for a patient who

will absolutely follow the advice of an expert, the prospects are well over 90 per cent good.

The Outlook in Late Syphilis.—After the first year of the infection is passed, or even six months after the appearance of

the secondary rash, the outlook for permanent cure begins to diminish and falls rapidly[Pg 87] from this point on. That means

that we are less and less able to tell where we stand by the tests we now have.

In the later stages of the disease we are gradually forced back to symptomatic measures, and are often rather glad to be

able to say to the patient that we can clear up his immediate trouble without mentioning anything about his future.

The gist of the first essential, then, is to treat syphilis early rather than late. If this is done, the prospect of recovery is better

than in many of the acute fevers, such as scarlet fever, a matter of every day familiarity, and better, on the whole, than in

such a disease as tuberculosis. Yet this does not mean that the men or women whose syphilis is discovered only after a

lapse of years, must be abandoned to a hopeless fate. For them, too, excellent prospects still exist, and careful,

persistent treatment may, in a high percentage of cases, keep their symptoms under control for years, if not for the

ordinary life-time.

The Time Required for Cure.—Time is the second vital essential for cure. Here we stand on less certain ground than in

the matter of the stage of the disease. The time necessary for cure is not a fixed one, and depends on the individual case.

Long experience has taught us that the cure of syphilis is not a matter of weeks or months, as patients so often expect, but

of years. For the cure of early primary syphilis ("abortive" cure) not the most enthusiastic will discharge a patient short of

a year, and the conservative insist on two years or more of observation at least. In the fully developed infection in the

[Pg 88] secondary stage, three years is a minimum and four years an average for treatment to produce a cure. Five years

of treatment and observation is not an uncommon period. In the later stages of the disease, when we are compelled to give

up the ideal of radical cure, our best advice to syphilitic patients, as to those with old tuberculosis, is that after they have

had two years of good treatment, they should submit to examination once or twice a year, and not grumble if they are called

upon to carry life insurance in the form of occasional short courses of treatment for the rest of their days.

Efficient Treatment.—The third essential is efficient treatment, about the nature of which there is still some dispute. The

controversy, however, is mainly about details. In the modern methods for treatment of syphilis both salvarsan and mercury

are used, as a rule, and keep the patient decidedly busy for the first year taking rubs and injections, and pretty busy for the

second. The patient is not incapacitated for carrying on his usual work. The intervals of rest between courses of salvarsan

and mercury are short. In the third year the intervals of rest grow longer, and in the absence of symptoms the patient has more

chance to forget the trouble. Here the doctor's difficulties begin, for after two or three negative blood tests with a clear skin,

all but the most conscientious patients disappear from observation. These are the ones who may pay later for the folly of

their earlier years.

The aim in syphilis, then, is to crush the disease at its outset by a vigorous campaign. Not until[Pg 89] an amount of treatment

which experience has shown to be an average requirement has been given, is it safe to draw breath and wait to see what the

effect on the enemy has been. Dilatory tactics and compromises are often more dangerous than giving a little more than the

least amount of treatment possible, for good measure. This is, of course, always provided the behavior of the body under

the ordeal of treatment is closely studied and observed by an expert and that it is not blindly pushed to the point where injury

is done by the medicine rather than the disease.

The Importance of Salvarsan.—Salvarsan is an absolute essential in the treatment of those early infections in which an

abortive cure can be hoped for, and in them it must be begun without a day's delay. To some extent, the abortive cure of the

disease, with its 100 per cent certainty, will therefore remain a luxury until the public is aroused to the necessity of providing

it under safe conditions and without restrictions for all who need it. At all stages of the disease after the earliest it is an aid,

and a powerful one, but it cannot do the work alone, as mercury usually can. But though mercury is efficient, it is slow, and

the greater rapidity of action of salvarsan and its power to control infectious lesions give it a unique place. The combination

of the two is powerful enough to fully justify the statement that none of the great scourges of the human race offers its victim

a better prospect of recovery than does syphilis.

Is a cure worth while? There is only one thing[Pg 90] that is more so, and that is never to have had syphilis at all. The

uncured syphilitic has a sword hanging over his head. At any day or hour the disease which he scorned or ignored may crush

him, or what is worse, may crush what is nearest and dearest to him in the world. It does it with a certainty which not even

the physician who sees syphilis all the time as his life-work can get callous to. It is gambling with the cards stacked against

one to let a syphilitic infection go untreated, or treated short of cure. It is criminal to force on others the risks to which an

untreated syphilitic subjects those in intimate contact with him.

The Meaning of "You are Cured."—How do we judge whether a patient is radically cured or not? Here again we confront

the problem of what constitutes the eradication of the disease. In part we reckon from long experience, and in part depend

upon the refinement of our modern tests. Repeated negative Wassermann tests on the blood over several years, especially

after treatment is stopped, are an essential sign of cure. This must be reinforced, as a rule, by a searching examination of the

nervous system, including a test on the fluid of the spinal cord. This is especially necessary when we have used some of the

quick methods of cure, like the abortive treatment. When we have used the old reliable course, it is less essential, but

desirable. Can we ever say to a patient in so many words, "Go! you are cured"? This is the gravest question before experts

on syphilis today, and in all frankness it must be said that the conservative man will not [Pg 91] answer with an unqualified

"Yes." He will reserve the right to say to the patient that he must from time to time, in his own interest, be reëxamined for

signs of recurrence, and perhaps from time to time reinforce his immunity by a course of rubs or a few mercurial injections.

Such a statement is not pessimism, but merely the same deliberate recognition of the fallibility of human judgment and the

uncertainty of life which we show when we sleep out-of-doors after we have been suspected of having tuberculosis, or when

we take out accident or life insurance.

[Pg 92]

Chapter X Hereditary Syphilis

It seems desirable, at this point, to take up the hereditary transmission of syphilis in advance of the other modes of

transmitting the disease, since it is practically a problem all to itself.

Syphilis is one of the diseases whose transmission from parent to child is frequent enough to make it a matter of grave

concern. It is, in fact, the great example of a disease which may be acquired before birth. Just as syphilis is caused only

by a particular germ, so hereditary syphilis is also due to the same germ, and occurs as a result of the passage of that germ

from the mother's body through the membranes and parts connecting the mother and child, into the child. Hereditary syphilis

is not some vague, indefinite constitutional tendency, but syphilis, as definite as if gotten from a chancre, though differing in

some of its outward signs.

Transmission of Syphilis From Mother to Child.—It is a well-known fact that the mothers of syphilitic children often seem conspicuously healthy. For a long time it was believed that the child could have syphilis and the mother escape infection.

The child's infection was supposed to occur through the infection of the sperm cells of the father with the[Pg 93] germ of

syphilis. When the sperm and the egg united in the mother's body, and the child developed, it was supposed to have syphilis

contracted from the father, and the mother was supposed to escape it entirely in the majority of such cases. This older idea

has been largely given up, chiefly as a result of the enormous mass of evidence which the Wassermann test has brought to

light about the condition of mothers who bear syphilitic children, but themselves show no outward sign of the disease. It is

now generally believed that there is no transmission of syphilis to the child by its father, the father's share of responsibility

for the syphilis lying in his having infected the mother. None the less, it must be conceded that this is still debatable ground,

and that quite recently the belief that syphilis can be transmitted by the father has been supported on theoretical grounds by

good observers.

Absence of Outward Signs in Syphilitic Mothers.—The discovery that the mother of a syphilitic child has syphilis is of

great importance in teaching us how hereditary syphilis can be avoided by preventing infection of the mother. It is even

more important to understand because of the difficulty of convincing the seemingly healthy mother of a syphilitic child

that she herself has the disease and should be treated for it, or she will have other syphilitic children. Just why the mother

may never have shown an outward sign of syphilis and yet have the disease and bear syphilitic children is a question we

cannot entirely answer, any more than we can explain why all obvious signs of syphilis are absent [Pg 94] in some patients

even without treatment, while others have one outbreak after another, and are never without evidence of their infection,

unless it is suppressed by treatment. Probably at least a part of the explanation lies in the fact, already mentioned, that

syphilis is a milder disease in women than in men, and has more opportunities for concealing its identity.

Healthy Children of Syphilitic Mothers.—If the mother of a syphilitic child has the disease, is it equally true that a

syphilitic mother can never bear a healthy child? It certainly is not, especially in the late years of the disease, after it has

spent much of its force. When the multitudes of germs present in the secondary period have died out, whether as a result

of treatment or in the normal course of the disease, a woman who still has syphilis latent in her or even in active tertiary

form, may bear a healthy child. Such a child may be perfectly healthy in every particular, and not only not have syphilis,

but show no sign that the mother had the disease. It is in the period of active syphilis, the three, four, or five years following

her infection, that the syphilitic mother is most likely to bear syphilitic children.

Non-hereditary Syphilis in Children.—Syphilis in children is not always hereditary, even though the signs of it appear

only a short time after birth. A woman who at the beginning of her pregnancy was free from the disease, may acquire it

while she is still carrying the child as a result of her husband's becoming infected from some outside source. The limitation

which pregnancy may put on sexual indulgence [Pg 95] leads some men to seek sexual gratification elsewhere than with their

wives. The husband becoming infected, then infects his pregnant wife. There are no absolute rules about the matter, but if the

mother is not infected until the seventh month of her pregnancy, the child is likely to escape the hereditary form of the

disease. On the other hand, imagine the prospects for infection when the child is born through a birth-canal filled with

mucous patches or with a chancre on the neck of the womb. Children infected in this way at birth do not develop the true

hereditary form of the disease, but get the acquired form with a chancre and secondary period, just as in later life.

Effect of Syphilis on the Child-bearing Woman.—What does syphilis mean for the woman who is in the child-bearing

period? In the first place, unlike gonorrhea, which is apt to make women sterile, syphilis does not materially reduce the

power to conceive in most cases. A woman with active syphilis alone may conceive with great frequency, but she cannot

carry her children through to normal birth. The syphilitic woman usually has a series of abortions or miscarriages, in

which she loses the child at any time from the first to the seventh or eighth month. Of course, there are other causes of

repeated miscarriages, but syphilis is one of the commonest, and the occurrence of several miscarriages in a woman

should usually be carefully investigated. The miscarriage or abortion occurs because the unborn child is killed by the

germs of the disease, and is cast out by the womb as if it were a foreign body.[Pg 96] Usually the more active the

mother's syphilis, the sooner the child is infected and killed, and the earlier in her pregnancy will she abort. Later in the

disease the child may not be infected until well along, and may die only at the ninth month or just as it is born. In other

words, the rule is that the abortions are followed later by one or more still births. This is by no means invariable. The

mother may abort once at the third month, and with the next pregnancy bear a living syphilitic child. The living syphilitic

children are usually the results of infection in the later months of the child's life inside its mother, or are the result of higher

resistance to the disease on the part of the child or of the efficient treatment of the mother's syphilis.

Variations on the Rule.—It should never be forgotten that all these rules are subject to variation, and that where one woman

may have a series of miscarriages so close together that she mistakes them for heavy, irregular menstrual flows, and never

realizes she is pregnant, another may bear a living child the first time after her infection, or still another woman after one

miscarriage may have a child so nearly normal that it may attain the age of twenty or older, before it is suspected that it has

hereditary syphilis. Again a woman with syphilis may remain childless through all the years of her active infection, and

finally, in her first pregnancy, give birth to a healthy child, even though she still has the disease in latent form herself. Still

another may have a miscarriage or two and then bear one or two healthy children, only to have the last child, years after

her [Pg 97] infection, be stillborn and syphilitic. The series of abortions, followed by stillborn or syphilitic children, and

finally by healthy ones, is only the general and by no means the invariable rule.

Treatment of the Mother.—For the mother, then, syphilis may mean all the disappointments of a thwarted and defeated

maternity, and the horrors of bearing diseased and malformed children. She is herself subject to the risk of death from

blood poisoning which may follow abortion. But here, as in all syphilis, early recognition and thorough treatment of the

disease may totally transform the situation. In the old days of giving mercury by mouth and without salvarsan, there was

little hope of doing anything for the children during the active infectious period in the mother. Now we are realizing that

even while the child is in the womb the vigorous treatment of the mother may save the day for it, and bring it into the world

with a fair chance for useful and efficient life. More especially is this true when the mother has been infected while

carrying the child, or just before or as conception occurred. In these cases, salvarsan and mercury, carefully given, seem

not only not harmful to mother and child, but may entirely prevent the child's getting the disease. For this reason every

maternity hospital or ward should be in a position to make good Wassermann blood tests, conduct expert examinations, and

give thorough treatment to women who are found to have syphilis. There does not seem to be any good reason why a

Wassermann test should not be made part of the examination which every[Pg 98] intelligent mother expects a physician to

make at the beginning of her pregnancy. Such a test would bring to light some otherwise undiscovered syphilis, and protect

the lives of numbers of mothers and children whose health and happiness, not to say life, are now sacrificed to blind

ignorance.

Effect of Hereditary Syphilis on the Unborn Child.—In the effect of hereditary syphilis on the child, we see the most direct

illustration of the deteriorating influence of the disease on the race. Here again we must allow for wide variation, dependent

on circumstances and on differences in the course of the disease. This does not, however, conceal the tragedy expressed in

the statement that, under anything but the most expert care, more than 75 per cent of the children born with syphilis die within

the first year of life. Good estimates show that more often 95 per cent than fewer of untreated children die. Such figures as

those of Still are not at all exceptional—of 187 children of syphilitic parents, born or unborn, 113 were lost, whether by

miscarriage, still-birth, or in spite of treatment after they were born. It is estimated that not more than 28 per cent of

syphilitic children survive their first year. Those that survive the first year seem to have a fighting chance for life. Statistics

based on over 100,000 cases show that about one child in every 148 from two to twelve years of age has hereditary

syphilis. Realizing the difficulty in recognizing the disease by examination alone, it is entirely safe to suppose that the actual

figures are probably higher. The statistics[Pg 99] given at least illustrate how few syphilitic children survive to be included

in such an estimate.

Moral Effect on the Parents.—The real extent of the damage done by the disease as a cause of death in infancy is scarcely

appreciated from figures alone. There is something more to be reckoned with, which comes home to every man or woman

who has ever watched for the birth of a child and planned and worked to make a place for it in the world. The loss or

crippling of the new-born child jars the character and morale of the father and mother to the root. When the object of these

ideals dies, something precious and irreplaceable is taken from the life of the world. The toll of syphilis in misery, in

desolation, in heart-breakings, in broken bonds and defeated ideals can never be estimated in numbers or in words.

Course of Hereditary Syphilis in the Infant.—The course of syphilis in the child tends to follow certain general lines. The

disease, being contracted before birth, shows its most active manifestations early in life. The stillborn child is dead of its

disease. The living child may be born with an eruption, or it may not develop it for several weeks or months. It is thought

by some that these delayed eruptions represent infections at birth. Hereditarily syphilitic children are filled with the

spirochetes, the germs of the disease. They are in every tissue and organ; the child is literally riddled with them. In spite

of this it may for a time seem well. The typical syphilitic child, however, is thin, weak, and wasted. Syphilis hastens old

age even in the strong. It turns the young child into an old man or woman at birth.[Pg 100] The skin is wrinkled, the flesh

flabby. The face is that of an old man—weazened, pinched, pathetic, with watery, bleary eyes, and snuffling nose. The

mother often says that all the baby's trouble started with a bad cold. The disease attacks the throat, and turns the normal

robust cry of a healthy infant into a feeble squawk. The belly may become enormously distended from enlargement of the

internal organs, and the rest of the child dwindle to a skeleton. The eruptions are only a part of the picture and may be

absent, but when they occur, are quite characteristic, as a rule, especially about the mouth and buttocks, and do not usually

resemble the commoner skin complaints of infants. It is important to remember here that a badly nourished, sickly child

with a distressing eczema is not necessarily syphilitic, and that only a physician is competent to pass an opinion on the

matter. Syphilitic children in a contagious state are usually too sick to be around much, so that the risk to the general

public is small. On the other hand, the risk to some woman who tries to mother or care for some one else's syphilitic

child, if the disease is active, should be thoroughly appreciated. Women who are not specially trained or under the

direction of a physician should not attempt the personal care of other people's sick children.

The Wet Nurse.—This is also the proper place to introduce a warning about the wet nurse. Women who must have the

assistance of a wet nurse to feed their babies should, under no circumstances, make such arrangements without the full

supervision of their physicians. There is no better method for[Pg 101] transmitting syphilis to a healthy woman than for

her to nurse a syphilitic child. Conversely, the healthy child who is nursed by a syphilitic woman stands an excellent

chance of contracting the disease, since the woman may have sores about the nipples and since the germs of syphilis

have been found in the milk of syphilitic women. The only person who should nurse a syphilitic child is its own

mother, who has syphilis and, therefore, cannot be infected. A Wassermann blood test with a thorough examination

is the least that should be expected where any exchanges are to take place. Nothing whatever should be taken for

granted in such cases, and the necessary examinations and questions should not give offense to either party to the

bargain. Syphilis is not a respecter of persons, and exists among the rich as well as among the poor.

Hereditary Syphilis in Older Children.—Hereditary syphilis may become a latent or concealed disease, just as acquired

syphilis does. None the less, it leaves certain traces of its existence which can be recognized on examination. These are

chiefly changes in the bones, which do not grow normally. The shin bones are apt to be bowed forward, not sideways, as

in rickets. The skull sometimes develops a peculiar shape, the joints are apt to be large, and so on. Syphilis may affect the

mental development of children in various ways. Perhaps 5 per cent of children are idiots as a result of syphilis. Certain

forms of epilepsy are due to syphilitic changes in the brain. On the other hand, syphilitic children may be extraordinarily

bright and capable for their [Pg 102] years. Some are stunted in their growth and develop their sexual characteristics very

late or imperfectly. It is one of the wonders of medicine to see a sickly runt of a child at fifteen or sixteen develop in a few

months into a very presentable young man or girl under the influence of salvarsan and mercury. A few syphilitic children

seem robust and healthy from the start. The signs of the disease may be very slight, and pass unrecognized even by the

majority of physicians. Some of them may be splendid specimens of physical and mental development, but they are

exceptional. The majority are apt to be below par, and nothing shows more plainly the insidious injury done by the disease

than the way in which they thrive and change under treatment. Even those who are mentally affected often show surprising

benefits.

Destructive Changes, Bones, Teeth, Etc.—Syphilis in children, since it is essentially late syphilis, may produce gummatous

changes of the most disfiguring type, fully as extreme as those in acquired syphilis and resulting in the destruction or injury

of important organs, and the loss of parts of bones, especially about the mouth and nose. Certain changes in the teeth,

especially the upper incisors in the second set, are frequent in hereditarily syphilitic children, but do not always occur.

These peg-shaped teeth are called Hutchinson's teeth. Individuals with hereditary syphilis who survive the early years of

life are less likely to develop trouble with the heart, blood vessels, or nervous system than are those with acquired syphilis.

Eye Trouble—Interstitial Keratitis.—Two manifestations[Pg 103] of hereditary syphilis are of obvious social importance.

One of these is the peculiar form of eye trouble which such children may develop. It is known as interstitial keratitis, and

takes the form of a gradual, slow clouding of the clear, transparent convex surface of the eyeball, the cornea, through which

the light passes to reach the lens. While the process is active, the child is made miserable by an extreme sensitiveness to

light, the eye is reddened, and there is pain and a burning sensation. When the condition passes off, the child may scarcely

be able to distinguish light from dark, to say nothing of reading, finding its way about, or doing fine work. A certain amount

of the damage, once done, cannot be repaired, although cases improve surprisingly if the process is still active and is

properly treated. The course is slow, often a matter of years, and only too many patients do very poorly on the sort of care

they can get at home. One eye case in every 180 has interstitial keratitis, according to reliable figures.[9] Of 152 with

this trouble, only 60 per cent recovered useful eye-sight and the remaining 40 per cent were disabled partly or completely.

Forty-three out of 71 persons lost more or less of their capacity for earning a living. In practically all cases it means the

of months or years of school between the ages of five and ten and a permanent handicap in later life. These patients would

belong in school-hospitals, if such things existed, where they could get the elaborate treatment that might save their [Pg 104]

eyes, and at the same time not come to a stand-still mentally. Any chronic inflammatory eye disease in children urgently

needs early medical attention, and those who know of such cases should do what they can to secure it for them.

[9] Iglesheimer, quoted by Derby.

Blindness in hereditary syphilis may, of course, take the same form that it does in the acquired disease, resulting from

changes in the nerve of sight (optic nerve). This form is entirely beyond help by treatment.

Ear Trouble—Nerve Deafness.—The second important complication of hereditary syphilis is deafness. This occurs from

changes in the nerve of hearing and may be present at birth or may come on many years later. The deaf infant is usually

recognized by its failure to learn to talk, although it may seem perfectly normal in every other way. Again, the child may

hear well at birth and deafness may come on in later life,—as late as the twentieth year,—suddenly or gradually, and

become complete and permanent. It is often ascribed to colds or to falls and accidents that happen to occur at the same time.

If syphilitic deafness comes on before the age of ten years, it is very apt to result in the child's forgetting how to talk, and

becoming dumb as well. It goes without saying that children whose syphilis made them deaf at birth never learn to talk at

all, and are therefore deaf and dumb. Very little is known about how many of the inmates of asylums for the deaf are

hereditary syphilitics, but there is reason to suspect the percentage to be rather large. Deafness in [Pg 105] hereditary

syphilis is practically uninfluenced by treatment.

Accident and Injury in Hereditary Syphilis.—It is a matter of great importance to realize the large part played by accidents,

injury, poor health, or lowered resistance in bringing a hidden hereditary syphilis to the surface. A child may show no

special signs of the disease until some time during its childhood it has a fall which injures or bruises a bone or breaks a

limb. Then suddenly at the place where the injury was done a gumma or tertiary syphilitic change will take place and the

bone refuses to heal or unite or a large sore may develop which may be operated on before the nature of the condition is

realized. In the same way a woman with hereditary syphilis may seem in perfect health, marry, and suddenly after the birth

of her first child, even as late as her twenty-fifth year, may develop syphilitic eye trouble. It must be realized that hereditary

syphilis is as treacherous as the acquired disease, and can show as little outward signs before a serious outbreak. It is part

of the duty of every person who suspects syphilis in his family or who has it himself to let his physician know of it, for the

sake of the help which it may give in recognizing obscure conditions in himself or his children.

Marriage and Contagion in Hereditary Syphilis.—In general it may be said that, in the matter of marriage, persons who have

hereditary syphilis and live to adult life with good general health can, after reasonable treatment, marry without fear of

passing on the disease. Hereditary syphilis apparently is[Pg 106] not transmitted to the children as acquired syphilis is.

Hereditary syphilis practically is not contagious except during the eruptions and active manifestations in infancy, such as

the nasal discharge and the other sores in the mouth and about the genitals. As adults they can enter into the intimate

relations of life without risk. Many of them, while perhaps having positive blood tests while the disease is active, later

become negative without treatment. Some of them even recover from the disease to the extent that they can acquire it

again, since there is no absolute immunity.

Syphilis in Adopted Children.—A word might well be said at this point on the adoption of children with hereditary

syphilis. In all probability this is not a common occurrence, certain factors tending to diminish the risk. A child adopted

after its second year will not be so likely to have the disease, since most syphilitic children die before this age is reached.

Agencies which arrange for the adoption of children are now much more careful about the matter than formerly, and a

Wassermann test on the mother and also on the child, as well as a careful history in the case of the mother, is frequently

available. The information in regard to the mother is quite as important as that about the child, since the child may have a

negative test while the mother's may be positive. Children who have hereditary syphilis, even in latent form, should not be

offered for adoption, and should become a charge upon the state. Families in which it later develops that an adopted child

was syphilitic should not, however, be needlessly[Pg 107] alarmed for their own safety, since, from the standpoint of

infectiousness, the late forms of hereditary syphilis are not dangerous to others. The agency from which the child was

adopted should assume responsibility for the child if the family cannot meet the situation. The state of Michigan has been

a pioneer in this country in legislation which provides for the welfare of these children among others. A law has been

enacted making it possible to provide for their medical treatment for an indefinite period in the state hospital at Ann

Arbor, at the cost of the state.

Treatment of Hereditary Syphilis.—The question of the treatment and cure of a person with hereditary syphilis is in many

respects a different one from that in an acquired case. The foothold which the germ has in the body in hereditary syphilis is

stronger even than in an untreated acquired case. Many of the changes produced by it are permanent, and the prospects of

completely eradicating it are correspondingly small. On the other hand, the child who survives hereditary syphilis has

probably an enormous resistance to the disease, which in a measure compensates for the hold which it has on him.

Treatment in hereditary syphilis becomes an extremely difficult problem because it must in many cases be carried out

during infancy, and for that reason the coöperation of the patient cannot be secured. By treating the mother, we now know

that we can accomplish a great deal for the unborn child. Once the child is born, its salvation will depend on unremitting

care and labor. If it is skilfully treated[Pg 108] and kept at the breast, it is estimated that it has even as high as ninety

chances in one hundred of surviving to a useful life. Salvarsan can be given to even very small babies, and mercury

also is employed with excellent results. Persistence and skill are essential, and for that reason, if possible, hereditary

syphilis in active form in later childhood should have the advantage of occasional or prolonged treatment in special

hospitals or sanitariums where the child could go to school while he is being built up and cared for. This is not like

trying to salvage wreckage. Many syphilitic children are brilliant, and if treated before they are crippled by the disease,

give every sign of capacity and great usefulness to the world. Welander, who was one of the greatest of European

experts on syphilis, has left himself an enduring monument in the form of the so-called Welander homes, which have been

established by cities like Copenhagen, Berlin, and Vienna to provide for such children the combined benefits of the school

and the hospital. We cannot be too prompt in adopting similar provision for such cases in this country. There can be little
excuse, eugenic or otherwise, for not doing the utmost that modern medical science is capable of for their benefit.

[Pg 109]

Chapter XI

The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis

The problem of the control of syphilis as a contagious disease is the least appreciated and the most important one in the

whole field. It should be the key to our whole attitude toward the disease, and once given its rightful place in our minds, will revolutionize our situation with regard to it. For that reason, while some repetition of what has gone before may be

unavoidable, it will be worth while to gather in one chapter the details relating to the question of how the disease is spread

about.

Two bed-rock facts stand out as the basis for the whole discussion. First, for practical purposes syphilis is contagious only

in the primary and secondary stages. Second, syphilis is transmitted only by open sores or lesions whose discharges contain

the germs, or by objects which are contaminated by those discharges. Infection with syphilis by such fluids as the blood,

milk, or spermatic fluid uncontaminated by contact with active lesions is at least unusual.

Contagiousness in the Primary Stage.—The chancre is always contagious. If it is covered with a dry crust, it is, of course,

less so, but as soon as the crust is rubbed off, the germ-infested surface is exposed and the thin, watery discharge contains

immense [Pg 110] numbers of the organisms, especially in the first two or three weeks. This is just as true of a chancre on

the lip or chin as on the genitals. Chancres which are in moist places, as in the mouth, or on the neck of the womb, or under

the foreskin, are especially dangerous, because the moisture keeps the germs on the surface.

Contagiousness in the Secondary Stage.—In the secondary period, when the body is simply filled with germs, one would

expect the risk to be even greater than in the primary stage. As a matter of fact, however, no matter how many germs there

are in the body, the only ones that are dangerous to others are those that are able to get to the surface. A syphilitic nodule or

hard pimple on the hand or face is not contagious so long as the skin is dry and unbroken over it. The sores which occur in

the moist, warm, protected places, like the mouth, on the lips, about the genitals, and in the folds of the body, such as the

thighs, groins, armpits, and under the breasts in women, are, like the chancre, the real sources of danger in the spread of the

disease.

Relatively Non-contagious Character of Late Syphilis.—The older a syphilis is, the less dangerous it becomes. It is the fresh

infection and the early years which are a menace to others. It will be recalled that the germs die out in the body in immense

numbers after the active secondary period is over, so that when the tertiary stage is reached, there is only a handful left, so to

speak. The germs in a tertiary sore are so few in number that for practical purposes it is safe to say they may be disregarded,

and that [Pg 111] for that reason late syphilis is practically harmless for others. Just as every syphilitic runs a gradual course

to a tertiary period, so every syphilitic in time becomes non-contagious, almost regardless of treatment.

The Time Element in Contagiousness.—It is the time that it takes an untreated case to reach a non-infectious stage and the

events or conditions which can occur in the interval, that perpetuate syphilis among us. The chancre is contagious for several

weeks, and few syphilitics escape having some contagious secondary lesions the first year. These are often inconspicuous

and misunderstood. They may be mistaken for cold sores or the lesions about the opening of the rectum may be mistaken for hemorrhoids, or piles. The recurrence of these same kinds of sores may make the patient dangerous from time to time to those

about him, without his knowledge. It is an unfortunate thing that the most contagious lesions of syphilis often give the patient

least warning of their presence in the form of pain or discomfort. While they can often be recognized on sight by a physician,

it is sometimes necessary to examine them with a dark-field microscope to prove their character by finding the germs. It is a

safer rule to regard every open sore or suspicious patch in a syphilitic as infectious until it is proved not to be so.

Contagious Recurrences or Relapses.—The duration of the infectious period in untreated cases and the proportion of

infectious lesions in a given case vary a good deal and both may be matters of the utmost importance. Some persons with

syphilis[Pg 112] may have almost no recognizable lesions after the chancre has disappeared. Others under the same

conditions may have crop after crop of them. There is a kind of case in which recurrences are especially common on the

mucous or moist surfaces of the mouth and throat, and such patients may hardly be free from them or from warty and moist

growths about the genitals during the first five years of the disease, unless they are continuously and thoroughly treated.

Irritation about the genitals and the use of tobacco in the mouth encourage the appearance of contagious patches. Smokers,

chewers, persons with foul mouths and bad teeth, and prostitutes are especially dangerous for these reasons.

Average Contagious Period.—It is a safe general rule, the product of long experience, to consider a person with an untreated

[10] syphilis as decidedly infectious for the first three years of his disease, and somewhat so the next two years. The

duration of infectiousness may be longer, although it is not the rule. It must be said, however, that more exact study of this

matter since the germ of syphilis was discovered has tended to show that the contagious period is apt to be longer than was

at first supposed, and has taught us the importance of hidden sores in such places as the throat and vagina.

[10] The control of infectiousness in syphilis through treatment is considered in the next chapter.

Fritz Schaudinn [1871-1906]

Fritz Schaudinn [1871-1906] (From "Galerie hervorragender Aerzte und Naturforscher." Supplement to the Münchener med. Wochenschrift, 1906. J. F. Lehmann, Munich.)

Individual Resistance to Infection.—The contagiousness of untreated syphilis is influenced by two other factors besides

the mere lapse of time. The first of these is the resistance or opposition[Pg 113] offered to the germ by the person to whom

the infection is carried. The second is the feebleness of the germ itself, and the ease with which it dies when removed from

the body. In regard to the first of these factors, while natural resistance to the disease in uninfected persons is an uncertain

quantity, it is very probable that it exists. It is certain that the absence of any break in the skin on which the germs are

deposited makes a decided difference if it does not entirely remove the risk of infection. A favorable place for the germ to

get a foothold is a matter of the greatest importance. When, however, it is remembered that such a break may exist and not

be visible, it is evident that little reliance should be placed on this factor in estimating the risk or possibility of infection.

Transmission by Infected Articles.—The feebleness of the germ and the ease with which it is destroyed are its redeeming

qualities. This is of special importance in considering transmission by contact with infected articles. Nothing which is

absolutely dry will transmit syphilis. Moisture is necessary to infection with it, and only articles which have been moistened,

such as dressings containing the discharges, and objects, such as cups, eating utensils, pipes, common towels, and

instruments which come in contact with open sores or their discharges, are likely to be dangerous. Moreover, even though

these objects remain moist, the spirochetes are likely to die out within six or seven hours, and may lose their infectiousness

before this. Smooth, non-absorbent surfaces, especially of metal, are unfavorable[Pg 114] for the germ. Wash-basins, dishes, silverware, and toilet articles are usually satisfactorily disinfected by hot soapsuds, followed by drying. Barbers, dentists,

nurses, and physicians who take care at least to disinfect instruments and other objects brought into contact with patients

with carbolic acid and alcohol will never transmit syphilitic infection to others. Toilet-seats, bath-tubs, and door-knobs,

although theoretically dangerous, are practically never so, and syphilitic infection transmitted by them can be dismissed as

all but unknown. This is in marked contrast to gonorrhea, which in the case of little girls can be transmitted apparently by

toilet-seats. Much depends, as has been said, on placing the germ on a favorable ground for inoculation, and the bare skin,

unless the virus is massaged or rubbed in, is certainly not a favorable situation. Many experts do not hesitate to handle

infectious lesions with the fingers provided the skin is not broken, relying simply on the immediate use of soap and water,

and perhaps alcohol, to remove the germ. While this may be a risk, it should, none the less, reassure those who are inclined

to an unreasoning terror of infection whenever they encounter the disease.

Transmission Under the Conditions of Every-day Life.—The question of just how dangerous the worker with foodstuffs

may be to others when he has active contagious lesions is unsettled. Recent surveys of various types of workers have tended

to show that syphilis in transmissible form is not especially prevalent among them. The same general principle applies here

as elsewhere. The risk of infection [Pg 115] with syphilis increases with dirty and unsanitary conditions, and becomes serious

when there is opportunity for moist materials to be transferred to sensitive surfaces, like the mouth, sufficiently soon after they

have left the syphilitic person for the germs to be still alive. That the real extent of the risk is not known does not make it any

the less important that persons who have opportunity to handle materials in which this may occur should be subject to frequent
sanitary inspection. Restaurants in which the silverware is not properly cleaned, and is used over and over at frequent

intervals, and in which there is a careless and unsanitary type of personal service, can hardly be regarded as safe. While

there is no need for hysterical alarm over such possibilities, it is just as well to provide for them. Crowding, close quarters,

and insufficient sanitary conveniences in stores and offices, in restaurants or tenements, provide just the conditions in which

accidental infection may occur. A gang of men with a common bucket and drinking cup may be at the mercy of syphilis if one

member is in a contagious condition. A syphilitic might cough into the air with little risk, since the germs would die before

they could find a favorable place to infect. But a syphilitic who coughs directly into one's face with a mouth full of spirochetes multiplies the risk considerably. The public towel is certainly dangerous—almost as much so as the common drinking cup.

The possibility of syphilitic infection by cutting the knuckle of the hand against the teeth of an opponent in striking a blow

upon his mouth should not be overlooked, and the occurrence [Pg 116] is common enough for this type of chancre to have

received the special name of brawl, or fist, chancre.

Accidental Syphilis in Physicians and Nurses.—Another type of infection ought not to go unmentioned—that to which

physicians and nurses are exposed in operating on or handling patients with active syphilis. Before the day of rubber gloves

such things were much more common perhaps than they are now, yet they are common enough at the present time. Most of the

risk occurs in exploring or working in cavities of the body containing infected discharges. The blood may become infected in

passing over active sores. The risk from all these sources is so considerable that it is justifiable as a measure of protection to

a hospital staff to take a blood test on every patient who applies for treatment in a hospital, to say nothing of the advantage

which this would be to the patient.

Transmission by Intimate Contacts—Kissing.—As we pass from the less to the more intimate means of contact between the

syphilitic person and others, the risk of transmitting syphilis may be said to increase enormously. The fundamental conditions

of moisture, a susceptible surface, protection of the germ from drying and from air, and possibly also massage or rubbing, are

here better satisfied than in the risks thus far considered. Kissing, caresses, and sexual relations make up the origin of an

overwhelming proportion of syphilitic infection. Infections are, of course, traceable to the nursing of syphilitic infants. It is

through these sources of contact that syphilis invades the family especially. Many a[Pg 117] syphilitic who realizes that he

should not have sexual relations with his wife while he has the disease in active form will thoughtlessly infect her or his

children by kissing. Kissing games are potentially dangerous, and a classical example of this danger is that of a reported

case[11] in which a young man in Philadelphia infected seven young girls in one game, all of whom developed chancres

on the lips or cheeks. It is no great rarity to find a syphilis dating from a sore on the lip that developed while a young couple

were engaged. Certainly the indiscriminate kissing of strangers is as dangerous an indulgence as can be imagined. Syphilis

does not by any means invariably follow a syphilitic's kiss, but the risk, although not computable in figures, is large enough

to make even the impulsive pause. The combination of a cold sore or a small crack on the lip of the one and a mucous patch

inside the lip of the other brings disaster very near. Children are sometimes the unhappy victims of this sort of thing, and it

should be resented as an insult for a stranger to attempt to kiss another's child, no matter on what part of the body. It would be

to multiply instances of the ways in which syphilis may be spread by the careless or ignorant in the close associations of

family life, but little would be accomplished by such elaboration that would not occur to one who took the trouble to

acquaint himself with the principles already discussed.

[11] Schamberg, J. F.: "An Epidemic of Chancres of the Lip from Kissing," Jour. Amer. Med. Assoc., 1911, lvii, 783.

The Sexual Transmission of Syphilis.—The sexual[Pg 118] transmission of syphilis is beyond question the most important

factor in the spread of the disease. Here all the essential conditions for giving the germ a foothold on the body are satisfied.

The genitals are especially fitted to keep the germs in an active condition because of the ease with which air is excluded

from the numerous folds about these parts. It is remarkable what trifling lesions can harbor them by the million, and how

completely, especially in the case of women, syphilitic persons may be ignorant of the danger for others. Sexual transmission

of syphilis is simply a physiologic fact, and in no sense to be confounded with questions of innocence and guilt in relation to

the acquiring of the disease. A chancre acquired from a drinking cup or pipe may be transmitted to husband or wife through

a mucous patch on the genitals and to children through an infected mother, without the question of innocence or guilt ever

having arisen. On the other hand, chancres on parts other than the genitals may be acquired in any but innocent ways. It is

impossible to be fair or to think clearly so long as we allow the question of innocence or guilt to color our thought about the

genital transmission of syphilis. That syphilis is so largely a sexually transmitted disease is an incidental rather than the

essential fact from the broadly social point of view. We should recognize it only to the extent that is necessary to give us

control over it—not allow it to hold us helplessly in its grip because we cannot separate it from the idea of sexual

indiscretion. There is a form of narrow-minded self-righteousness about these things that [Pg 119] sets the stamp of vice on

innocent and guilty alike simply on the strength of the sexual transmission of syphilis. In the effort to avoid so mistaken and

heartless a view, we cannot remind ourselves too often that syphilis is a disease and not a crime, and as such must be

approached with the impulse to heal and make whole, and not to heap further misfortune on its victim or take vengeance on

him.

Extragenital and Marital Syphilis.—Estimates of the ratio of genital to non-genital or so-called extra-genital infection in

syphilis vary a good deal, and are largely the products of the clinical period in the history of the disease before the days of

more exact methods of detecting its presence. The older statistics estimate from 5 to 10 per cent of all syphilitic infections to

be of non-genital origin, while the remaining 90 per cent are genital. As we become better able to recognize hidden syphilis,

we shall probably find that the percentage of non-genital infections will increase.

The physician's suspicions are easily aroused by a genital sore, less so by one on the lip or the tonsil, for example. The same

thing is true of the layman. Syphilis which starts from a chancre elsewhere than on the genitals runs the same course and may

conceal itself quite as effectively as syphilis from the usual sources, and for that reason may even more easily escape notice

because misinterpreted at the start. It is my personal impression that careful study of patients with syphilis, and of those who

live with them, would bring to light many overlooked extragenital infections, especially among those who [Pg 120] are the

victims of crowding, poor living conditions, and ignorance. Estimates on the amount of syphilis which is contracted in

marriage are apt to be largely guesswork in the absence of reliable vital statistics on the disease. Fournier believed that 20

per cent of syphilis in women was contracted in marriage. So much syphilis in married women is unsuspected, and so little

of what is recognized is traceable to outside sources, that 50 per cent seems a nearer estimate than twenty.  [Pg 121]

Chapter XII The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis (Continued) The Control of Infectiousness in Syphilis

Syphilis and Marriage

Means for Controlling Infectiousness.—The usual method of controlling a very contagious disease, such as scarlet fever or

measles, is to put the patient off by himself with those who have to care for him and to keep others away—that is, to

quarantine them. This works very well for diseases which run a reasonably short course, and in which contagious periods

are not apt to recur after the patient has been released. But in diseases such as tuberculosis and syphilis, in which

contagiousness may extend over months and years, such a procedure is evidently out of the question. We cannot deprive

a patient of his power to earn a living, to say nothing of his liberty, without providing for his support and for that of those

who are dependent on him. To do this in so common a disease as syphilis would involve an expenditure of money and an

amount of machinery that is unthinkable. Accordingly, as a practical scheme for preventing its spread, the quarantine of

syphilis throughout the infectious period is out of the question. We must, therefore, consider the other [Pg 122] two means

available for diminishing the risk to others. The first of these, and the most important, is to treat the disease efficiently right

from the start, so that contagious sores and patches will be as few in number as possible, and will recur as little as possible

in the course of the disease. This will be in effect a shortening of the contagious period, and should be recognized as one of

the great aims of treatment. The second means will be to teach the syphilitic and the general public those things which one

who has the disease can do to make himself as harmless as possible to others. This demands the education of the patient if

we hope for his coöperation, and demands also the coöperation of those around him in order that the pressure of public

sentiment may oblige him to do his part in case he does not do it of his own free will.

Control of Infectiousness by Treatment—Importance of Salvarsan.—In a disease which yields so exceptionally well to

treatment as syphilis, a great deal can be done to shorten the contagious period. Especially is this so when we are able to

employ an agent such as salvarsan, which kills off the germs on the surface within twenty-four hours after its injection. When

a patient is discovered to be in a contagious state, in a large majority of cases the risk to the community which he represents

can be quickly eliminated, at least for the time being. Combining the use of mercury and salvarsan in accordance with the

best modern standards, the actively contagious period as a whole can be reduced in average cases from a matter of years to

one of a few weeks or[Pg 123] months. Certainly, so far as recognizable dangerous sores are concerned, periodic

examination, with salvarsan whenever necessary, would seem to dispose of much of the difficulty.

Obstacles to Control by Treatment.—There are, however, obstacles in the way of complete control of infectiousness by

treatment. For example, one might ask whether a single negative blood test would not be sufficient assurance that the patient

was free from contagious sores. It is, however, a well-recognized fact that a person with syphilis may develop infectious

sores about the mouth and the genitals even while the blood test is negative. An examination, moreover, is not invariably

sufficient to determine if a patient is in a contagious state. The value of an examination depends, of course, entirely on its

thoroughness and on the experience of the physician who makes it. It is only too easy to overlook one of the faint grayish

patches in the mouth or a trifling pimple on the genitals. The time and special apparatus for a microscopic examination are

not always available. Moreover, contagious lesions come and go. One may appear on the genitals one day and a few days

later be gone, without the patient's ever realizing that it was there—yet in this interval a married man might infect his wife

by sexual contact. The patient with a concealed syphilis often lacks even the incentive to seek examination by a doctor. It is

important also to realize that when mercury has to be the only reliance, the risk of infection cannot be entirely controlled by

 treatment. Contagious sores may develop even[Pg 124] during a course of mercurial injections, especially in early cases.

It requires the combination of mercury and salvarsan to secure the highest percentage of good results.

The Five-year Rule.—The truth of the matter is that, as Hoffmann says, no treatment can guarantee the non-infectiousness

of a syphilitic in the first five years of his disease. Time is thus an essential element in pronouncing a person non-infectious

and hence in deciding his fitness for marriage, for example. The person with active syphilis who has intimate relations with

uninfected persons, who will not abandon smoking or take special precautions about articles of personal use which are likely

to transmit the disease, is unsafe no matter what is done for him. In spite of this qualifying statement it may be reiterated,

however, that good treatment with salvarsan and mercury reduces the risk of infecting others in the ordinary relations of life

practically to the vanishing point, and of course reduces, but not entirely eliminates, the dangers of the intimate contacts.

Personal Responsibility of the Patient.—If we are compelled then to fall back to some extent upon the personal sense of

responsibility of the patient himself to fill in the gap where treatment does not entirely control the situation, it becomes

increasingly important that in the irresponsible and ignorant, when the patient fails to meet his obligation, we should push

treatment to the uttermost in our effort to prevent the spread of the disease. To supply this necessary treatment to every

syphilitic who [Pg 125] cannot afford it for himself, and make it obligatory, if need be, will be a long step forward in the

control of the disease. The educational campaign for it is well under way all over the world, and the money and the

practical machinery will inevitably follow. We have the precedents of the control of tuberculosis, smallpox, malaria, and

yellow fever to guide us, to say nothing of a practical system against sexual disease already in operation in Norway,

Sweden, Denmark, and Italy.

Syphilis and Marriage.—The problem of the relation of syphilis to marriage is simply an aspect of the transmission of an

infectious disease. The infection of one party to the marriage by the other and the transmission of that infection to children

summarizes the social problem. Through the intimate contacts of family life, syphilis attacks the future of the human race.

Estimated Risk of Infecting the Wife.—How serious is the risk of infecting the wife if a man should marry during the

contagious period of syphilis? This will depend a good deal on the frequency of relapses after the active secondary stage.

On this point Sperk estimated that in 1518 patients, only ten escaped relapses entirely. These were, however, not patients

that had been specially well treated. Keyes, quoted by Pusey, estimated, on the basis of his private records, that the chances

taken by a syphilitic husband who used no special precautions to prevent infecting his wife were twelve to one the first year

in favor of infection, five to two the second[Pg 126] year, and one to four the third year, being negligible after the fourth year.

Syphilis in the Father.—Even while we recognize the infection of women and children as the greatest risk in marriage we

should not lose sight of the cost to society which syphilis in the father of the family himself may entail. For such a man to be

stricken by some of the serious accidents of late syphilis throws his family as well as himself upon society. A syphilitic

infection which has not been cured not only makes a man a poor risk to an insurance company, but a poor risk to the family

which has to look to him for support and for his share and influence in the bringing up of the children. A sufficient number of

men and women in the thirties and forties are crippled, made dependent, or lost to the world entirely, to make the

responsibilities of the family when assumed by persons with untreated or poorly treated syphilis a matter of some concern,

whether or not they are still able to transmit the disease to others.

The Time-treatment Principle and the Five-year Rule.—In setting a modern standard for the fitness of syphilitics for marriage

it may be said at the outset that there is little justification for making the mere fact of a previous syphilitic infection a

permanent bar in the majority of cases. The risk of economic disaster to the parent and wage-earner, and the risk of transmission

of the disease to the partner and the children, are both controllable by a combination of efficient treatment and time. The man

who has conformed to the best practice in both particulars[Pg 127] may usually marry and have healthy children. The woman

under the same circumstances need not fear that the risk of having offspring injured by her disease is any greater than the risk

that they will be injured by any other of the unforeseen risks that surround the bringing of a child into the world. A vast

experience underlies what might be called the time-treatment principle on which permission to marry after syphilis should be

based. It has recently been ably summarized again, and with commendable conservatism, by Hoffmann in the rule that a

syphilitic who has been efficiently treated by modern standards, with mercury and salvarsan, over a period of two to three

years, and who has remained free from all symptoms and signs of the disease for two years after all treatment was stopped,

including negative blood and spinal fluid tests, may marry in from four to five years from the beginning of his infection.

Variations of this rule must be allowed only with great conservatism, since salvarsan, on whose efficiency many pleas for

a shortening of probation have been based, is still too recent an addition to our implements of warfare to justify a rash

dependence upon it. The abortive cure in relation to marriage is a problem in itself, and the shortening of time allowed in

such cases must be individually determined by an expert who has had the case in charge from the beginning, and not, at least

as yet, by the average doctor.

Such a standard as this for the marriage of persons who have had syphilis steers essentially a middle course between those

who condemn syphilitics to an unreasonable and needless[Pg 128] deprivation of all the joys of family life, and those who

are too ready to take our conquest of syphilis for granted and to cast to the winds centuries of experience with the treachery

of the disease.

Even while we concede the value of generations of experience with syphilis in determining the probable risk of infection, it

is a duty to investigate thoroughly by the modern methods, such as the Wassermann blood test, the condition of all members

of a family in which syphilis has appeared. This means, for example, that even though the husband with syphilis may have

married years after the usual period of infectiousness has passed, his wife, though outwardly healthy, should have a

Wassermann test, and his children would be none the worse for an examination, even though they seem normal. Syphilis is

an insidious disease, a consummate master of deceit, able to strike from what seems a clear sky. The latest means for its

recognition have already revolutionized some of our conceptions of its dangers and its transmission. It is only common

prudence to take advantage of them in every case, to forestall even the remotest possibility of mistake or oversight.

Where both husband and wife have had syphilis, even though both are past the infectious stage, both should be treated, and

a complete cure for the wife is advisable before they undertake to have children. This must mean an added burden of

responsibility on both physician and patient, and one extremely difficult to meet under existing conditions. A reliable means

of birth control used in such cases would place the problem in women on a par with that in[Pg 129] men, and give the

physician's insistence on a complete cure for the woman a reasonable prospect of being needed. Where his advice is

disregarded and a pregnancy results, the woman should be efficiently treated while she is carrying the child.

Syphilis and Engagements to Marry.—If a five-year rule is to be applied to marriage, a similar rule should cover the

engagement of a syphilitic to marry, and it should cover the sexual relations of married people who acquire syphilis.

It is not too much to expect that an engaged person who contracts syphilis shall break his engagement, and not renew it

or contract another until by the five-year rule he would be able to marry with safety.

Engagements nowadays may well be thought of as equivalent to marriage when the question of syphilis is considered.

They not infrequently offer innumerable opportunities for intimacies which may or may not fall short of actual sexual

relations. Attention has been called to this situation by social workers among wage-earning girls. It has been a

distressingly frequent experience in my special practice to find that the young man, overwrought by the excitement of

wooing, has exposed himself elsewhere to infection and unwittingly punished the trustfulness of his fiancée by infecting

her with syphilis through a subsequent kiss. The publication of banns before marriage is worth while, and unmistakable

testimony as to the character and health of the parties concerned might well be exchanged before a wooing is permitted

to assume the character of an engagement. It is of little use to say that a Wassermann [Pg 130] and a medical examination

should be made before marriage, when the damage may be done long before that point is reached.

Medical Examination for Syphilis before Marriage.—How shall we recognize syphilis in a candidate for marriage? The

prevailing idea is to demand a negative Wassermann test. Assuredly this is good as far as it goes, but it is not so reliable

as to deserve incorporation into law as sole sufficient evidence of the absence of syphilis, as has been done in one state.

From what has been said, it is plain that a single negative Wassermann is no proof of the absence of syphilis. The subject

must be approached from other angles, and when syphilis may be suspected, the question should be decided by an expert.

A thorough general or physical examination is desirable, and if this reveals suspicious signs, such as scars, enlarged glands,

etc., it is then possible to investigate the Wassermann report more thoroughly by repeating the test, sending it to another

expert for confirmation. In some cases it may even be necessary to insist that the patient submit to a special test, called the

provocative test, in which a small injection of salvarsan is used to bring out a positive blood test if there is a concealed

syphilis. These are, of course, measures which are seldom necessary except in patients who have had the disease. Much

depends on the attitude of the patient toward the examination and his willingness to coöperate. A resourceful physician

can usually settle the question of a person's fitness for marriage, and [Pg 131] the result of a reliable examination offers a

reasonable assurance of safety.

Laws Crippling Physicians in Such Matters.—What shall the physician do when confronted with positive evidence that a

patient who is about to marry has an active syphilis? It is important for laymen to understand that the law relating to

professional confidence between physician and patient ties the hands of the physician in such a situation. For the doctor to

tell the relatives of the healthy party to such an intended marriage that the other has active syphilis would make him subject

to severe penalties in many states for a violation of professional confidence, or to suit for libel. Of course, if the patient has

agreed to submit to examination to determine his fitness for marriage, the physician's path is clear, but if the condition is

discovered in ordinary professional relations, there is nothing to be done except to try to persuade the patient not to marry—

advice he usually rejects. To this blind policy of protecting the guilty at the expense of the innocent an immeasurable

amount of human efficiency and happiness has been sacrificed. Fortunately there are signs of an awakening. For example,

Ohio has recently amended the law so as to permit a physician to disclose to the parties concerned that a person about to be

married has a venereal disease (Amendment to Section 1275, General Code, page 177). This is preventive legislation, as

distinguished from the old policy of locking the stable door after the horse was stolen by laws punishing one who infects

another with a venereal[Pg 132] disease after marriage has been contracted. Recent Supreme Court decisions (Wisconsin)

have also taken the ground that a venereal disease existing at the time of marriage and concealed from the other party is

ground for annulment of the marriage, provided the uninfected party ceases to have marital relations as soon as the fact is

discovered.

The problem of syphilis in its relation to marriage is, of course, a serious one. It is safe to say that it will never be completely

met except by a vigorous general public program against syphilis as a sanitary problem. It is by no means so serious, however,

that it need lead clean young men and women to remain single for fear they will encounter it. The medical examination of

both parties before marriage, efficiently carried out by disinterested experts, each perhaps of the other's appointing, is the

best insurance a man and woman can secure at the present day against the risk that syphilis will mar their happiness.[12]

[12] The problem of gonorrhea is not considered in the framing of this statement. [Pg 133]

Chapter XIII The Transmission and Hygiene of Syphilis (Continued)

Syphilis and Prostitution

In taking up the consideration of the relation of syphilis to illicit sexual relations, we must again remind ourselves that we

are approaching this subject, not as moralists, important though their point of view may be, but for the time being as

sanitarians, considering it from the standpoint of a method of transmission of a contagious disease.

Genital and Non-genital Syphilis in Lax Individuals.—The prevalence of syphilis among women who receive promiscuous

attentions is enormous. It is practically an axiom that no woman who is lax in her relations with men is safe from the danger

of the disease, or can long remain free from it. The type of man who is a Light o' Love does not go far before he meets the

partner who has been infected by some one else. Becoming infected himself, he passes on his infection to his next partner.

Syphilis is not so often transmitted in prostitution, open or secret, as gonorrhea, but it is sufficiently so to make the odds

overwhelmingly against even the knowing ones who hope to indulge and yet escape. The acquiring of syphilis from loose

men or women is[Pg 134] usually thought of as entirely an affair of genital contacts. Yet it is notable that extra-genital

chancres are the not uncommon result of liberties taken with light women which do not go to the extent of sexual relation.

Women who accept intimacies of men who, while unwilling to commit an outright breach of decency, will take liberties

with a woman who will accept them have only themselves to blame if it suddenly develops that the infection has been

transmitted from one to the other by kisses or other supposedly mild offenses against the proprieties.

Syphilis Among Prostitutes.—As to the prevalence of syphilis among both public and clandestine or secret prostitutes,

several notable surveys of more or less typical conditions have been made. With the aid of the Wassermann test much

heretofore undiscovered syphilis has been revealed. Eighty to 85 per cent of prostitutes at some time in their careers

acquire the disease.[13] About half this number are likely to have active evidence of the disease. Thirty per cent of

the prostitutes investigated by Papee in Lemberg were in the most dangerous period—the first to the third year of the

disease. Three-fourths of these dangerous cases were in women under twenty-five years of age—in the most attractive

period of their lives. Averaging a number of large European cities, it was found that not more than[Pg 135] 40 per cent

of prostitutes were even free of the outward signs of syphilis, to say nothing of what laboratory tests might have revealed.

It is more than evident that prostitution is admirably fitted to play the leading rôle in the dissemination of this disease.

The young and attractive prostitute, whether in a house of ill-fame, on the street, or in the more secret and private highways

and by-ways of illicit sexual life, is the one who attracts the largest number with the most certain prospect of infecting them.

[13] The figures here given are based on those of Papee, Wwednesky, Raff, Sederholm, and others. The recently published investigations of the Baltimore Vice Commission showed that 63.7 per cent of 289 prostitutes examined by the Wassermann

test had syphilis. Of 266 examined for gonorrhea, 92.1 per cent showed its presence. Nearly half the girls examined had both

diseases and only 3.39 per cent had neither. (Survey, March 25, 1916, Vol. 35, p. 749.)

Concealed Syphilis and Medical Examinations of Prostitutes.—A number of delusions center around the relation of open and

secret prostitution to disease. From the description of syphilis given in the foregoing pages, it must be apparent how little

reliance can be placed, for example, on the ordinary medical examination of prostitutes as practised in segregated districts.

The difficulties of efficient examination are enormous, especially in women. Even with the best facilities and a high degree

of personal skill, with plenty of time and laboratory help in addition, extremely contagious syphilis can escape observation

entirely, and even the negative result of one day's examination may be reversed by the appearance of a contagious sore on the

next. Women can transmit syphilis passively by the presence of infected secretions in the genital canal even when they

themselves are not in a contagious state. In the same way a woman may find herself infected by a man without any idea that

he was in an infectious state. She may in turn develop active syphilis without ever realizing the fact. Medical [Pg 136]

examination of prostitutes as ordinarily carried out does actual harm by deluding both the women and their partners into a

false sense of security. The life which such women lead, with the combination of local irritation, disease, and fast living,

makes them especially likely to develop the contagious mucous patches, warts, and other recurrences, and to relapse so

often that there can be little assurance that they are not contagious all the time.

Under such circumstances one might almost expect every contact with a prostitute on the part of a non-syphilitic individual to

result in a new infection. The factors which interfere to prevent such wholesale disaster are the same which govern

infectiousness throughout the disease. Local conditions may be unfavorable, even though the germs are present, or there may

be no break in the skin for the germs to enter. If the syphilitic individual is beyond the infectious period, there may be no

dangerous lesions. Here, as all through the history of infections with syphilis, there is an element of the unexpected, a favoring combination of circumstances. Sometimes when infection is most to be expected it is escaped, and conversely it seems at times

that in the "sure thing," the "safe chance," and the place where infection seems most improbable, it is most certain to occur.

Personal Hygiene in Syphilis

Syphilis is a constitutional disease, affecting in one way or another the whole body. For that reason, measures directed to

improving the general[Pg 137] health and maintaining the resistance of the patient at the highest point have an important

place in the management of the disease. By his habits and mode of life a person with syphilis does much to help or hinder

his cure, and to protect or endanger those around him. For that reason a statement of general principles may well be drawn up

to indicate what is desirable in these regards.

A Well-balanced Life.—First, for his own sake, a syphilitic should live a well-balanced and simple life so far as possible.

In this disease the organs and structures of the body which are subject to greatest strain are the ones most likely to suffer the

serious effects of the disease. Worry and anxiety, excessive mental work, long hours without proper rest, strain the nervous

system and predispose it to attack. Excessive physical work, fatigue, exhaustion, poor food, bad air, exposure, injure the

bodily resistance. Excesses of any kind are as injurious as deprivation. In fact, it is the dissipated, the high livers, who go to

the ground with the disease even quicker than those who have to pinch.

Alcohol.—Alcohol in any form, in particular, has been shown by extensive experience, especially since the study of the

nervous system in syphilis has been carried to a fine point, to have an especially dangerous effect on the syphilitic. Alcohol

damages not only the nervous system, but also the blood vessels, and makes an unrivaled combination in favor of early

syphilitic apoplexy, general paresis, and locomotor ataxia. A syphilitic who drinks at all is a bad risk, busily engaged in

throwing away his chances[Pg 138] of cure. Even mild alcoholic beverages are undesirable and the patient should lose no

time in dropping them entirely.

Tobacco.—Tobacco has a special place reserved for it as an unfavorable influence on the course of syphilis. It is dangerous

to others for a syphilitic to smoke or chew because, more than any other one thing, it causes the recurrence of contagious

patches in the mouth. It is remarkable how selfish many syphilitic men are on this point. In spite of the most positive

representations, they will keep on smoking. Not a few of them pay for their selfishness with their lives. These mucous

patches in the mouth, often called "smoker's patches," predispose the person who develops them to one of the most

dangerous forms of cancer, which is especially likely to develop on tissues, like those of the mouth and tongue, which have

been the seat of these sores.

Sexual Relations, Kissing, Etc.—Contagious Sores.—Sexual indulgence, kissing, and other intimate contacts during the

active stage of syphilis, as has been indicated, directly expose others to the risk of getting the disease. For that reason they

should not be indulged in during the first two years of the average well-treated case receiving salvarsan and mercury by the

most modern methods. Exceptions to this rule should be granted only by the physician, and should be preceded by careful

and repeated examination in connection with the treatment. Under no circumstances should a patient kiss or have intercourse

if there is even the slightest sore or chafe on the parts, regardless of whether or not it is thought to be syphilitic.

Articles of Personal Use.—Persons with a tendency [Pg 139] to recurrences in the mouth or elsewhere should report to the

physician any sore they may discover and should watch for them. Persons with syphilitic sores in the mouth or elsewhere

should have their own dishes, towels, toilet articles, shaving tools, pipes, silverware, and personal articles, and should not

exchange or permit others to use them.

Secrecy.—Professional secrecy is something to which the syphilitic is most certainly entitled when it can be had without

danger to the public health. So long as a syphilitic in the contagious period carefully observes the principles which ought

to govern him in his relations to others, his condition is his own concern. But there is one person within the family who

should, as a rule, know of his infection if it is still in the contagious period, since it is almost impossible to secure

coöperation otherwise. No matter how painful it may be, a person with syphilis, if advised to do so by his physician, should

tell husband or wife the true state of affairs. There is no harder duty, often, and none which, if manfully performed, should

inspire more respect. For those who will not follow his advice in this matter the physician cannot assume any responsibility,

and is fully justified, and in fact wise, if he decline to undertake the case.

Re-infection.—Since it is a common misconception, it cannot be said too forcibly that no person with syphilis should forget

that his having had the disease does not confer any immunity, and that as soon as he is cured he may acquire it again. It is

possible, by a single exposure to infection, to undo the [Pg 140] whole effect of what has been done, just after a cure is

accomplished. There can be only one safe rule for infected as well as uninfected persons—to keep away from the risk of

syphilis.

Quacks and Self-treatment.—Hot Springs.—The temptation to take up quack forms of treatment or to treat himself without

the advice of a physician besets the path of the syphilitic throughout the course of the disease; an enormous number of

fraudulent enterprises thrive on the credulity of its victims. Most of them are of the patent medicine specific type. Others,

however, have a tinge of respectability and are dangerous simply because they are insufficient and not carried out under

proper direction. Many popular superstitions as to the value of baths in syphilis and of the usefulness of a short course of

rubs with bathing, or a "trip to the springs," are of this kind. Enough has been said in the foregoing chapters to make it plain

to any one who is open to conviction that syphilis is no affair for the patient himself to attempt to treat. The best judgment

of the most skilled physicians is the least that the victim owes himself in his effort to get well.

Patient and Physician.—For the same reasons every person who has or has had syphilis, cured or not, or has been exposed

to it, should make it an absolute rule to inform his physician of the fact. The recognition of many obscure conditions in

medicine depends on this knowledge. For a patient to falsify the facts or to ignore or conceal them is simply to work against

his own interests and to hinder his physician in his efforts to benefit him. [Pg 141]

Chapter XIV Mental Attitudes in Their Relation to Syphilis

One's way of looking at a thing has an immense influence on what one does about it. Obvious as this principle is in the

every-day affairs of life, it becomes still more obvious as one studies a disease and watches the way in which different

individuals react to it. The state of mind of a few people infected with a rare condition may not seem a matter of more

than passing interest, but in a disease which is a wide-spread and disastrous influence in human life, the sum-total of our

states of mind about it determines what we do against it and, to no small degree, what it does to us. Syphilis as a medical

problem offers comparatively few difficulties at the present day. What blocks our progress now is largely an affair of

mental attitudes, of prejudices, of fears, or shame, of ignorance, stupidity, or indifference. Mental strain, a powerful

influence in many diseases, is a factor in syphilis also, and the state of mind of the patient has often almost as much to do

with the success of his treatment as has salvarsan or mercury. For that reason it is worth while to devote a chapter to

picturing in a general way the mental side of syphilis.

The Public Attitude Toward Syphilis.—First of [Pg 142] all, in order to understand the mental state of the patient, consider

once more the attitude of the world at large toward the victim of syphilis. A few who are frankly ignorant of the existence

of the disease to start with are unprejudiced when approached in the right way. But ninety-eight persons in a hundred who

know that there is such a disease as syphilis are alive to the fact that it is considered a disgrace to have it, and to little else.

Such a feeling naturally chokes all but secret discussion of it. Most of us remember the day when newspaper copy containing

reference to tuberculosis did not find ready publication. Syphilis is just crossing this same threshold into publicity. It is now

possible to get the name of the disease into print outside of medical works and to have it referred to in other ways than as

"blood poisoning" in quack advertisements. The mention of it in lectures on sex hygiene is an affair of the last twenty years,

and the earlier discussions of the disease on such occasions were only too often vague, prejudiced, and inaccurate. There are

many who still believe, as did an old librarian whom I met in my effort to reach an important reference work on syphilis in a

great public library. "We used to keep them on the shelves," he said, "until the high school boys began to get interested, and

then we thought we would reserve the subject for the profession." Syphilis has been reserved for the profession for five

hundred years and the disease has grown fat on it. The lean times will come when a reasonable curiosity about syphilis can

be satisfied without either shame or secrecy[Pg 143] by a reasonable presentation of the facts. We need the light on this

subject and the light on reserved shelves is notoriously poor. The stigma attaching to syphilis as a disease is one of the most

tragic examples of a great wrong done to do a little right. What if there are a few who deserve what they got? We may well

ask ourselves how free we are to cast the first stone. And why single out syphilis as the badge of venery? The "itch" is

transmitted by sexual relations too. Why not make the itch a sign of shame? The power that has done the damage is not the

intrinsic viciousness of syphilis, but the survival of the old idea of sexual taboo, the feeling that sex is a secret, shameful

thing, essentially unclean. To this age-old myth some one added the idea of punishment, and brutalized our conception of

syphilis for centuries. If there were a semblance of crude, stern justice in accepting syphilis as the divinely established

punishment for sexual wrong-doing, protest would lose half its meaning. Not only does syphilis fail to punish justly, but

there is also something savage, akin almost to the mental attitude that makes "frightfulness" possible in war, in the belief

that it is necessary to make headway against a sexual enemy by torturing, ruining, and dismembering men, women, and

children, putting out the eyes of the boy who made a slip through bad companionship and mutilating the girl who loved

"not wisely but too well." Only innocence pays the spiritual price of syphilis. The very ones whose punishment it should

be are the most indifferent to it, and the least influenced by fear of it in their pursuit [Pg 144] of sexual gratification. I always

recall with a shock the utterance of a university professor in the days when salvarsan was expected to cure syphilis at a single

dose. He rated it as a catastrophe that any such drug should have been discovered, because he felt that it would remove a

great barrier to promiscuous relations between men and women—the fear of venereal disease. This is the point of view that

perpetuates the disease among us. It is this attitude of mind that maintains an atmosphere of disgrace and secrecy and shame

about a great problem in public health and muddles our every attempt to solve it. Those who feel syphilis to be an instrument

adapted to warfare against sexual mistakes, and are prepared to concede "frightfulness" to be honorable warfare, will, of

course, fold their hands and smugly roll their eyes as they repeat the words of the secretary of a London Lock hospital, "I

don't believe in making it safe."[14]

[14] Quoted by Flexner in "Prostitution in Europe."

Syphilis as a "Disgrace" and a "Moral Force."—If syphilis really deterred, really acted as an efficient preventive of license,

we might have to tolerate this attitude of mind, even though we disagreed with it. I had occasion, during a period of two years

 to live in the most intimate association with about 800 people who had syphilis—every kind of person from the top to the

bottom of the social scale. It was not a simple matter of ordering pills for them from the pharmacy, or castor oil from the

medicine room. I had to sit beside their beds when they heard the truth; I had to see the women crumple up [Pg 145] and go

limp; I had to tell the blind child's father that he did it, to bolster up the weak girl, to rebuild the wife's broken ideals, to

suppress the rowdy and the roysterer, to hear the vows of the boy who was paying for his first mistake, and listen to the

stories of the pimp and the seducer. What made syphilis terrible to the many really fine and upright spirits in the mass thus

flung together in a common bondage? It was not the fear of paresis, or of any other consequence of the disease. It was the

torture of disgrace, unearned shame, burnt into their backs by those who think syphilis a weapon against prostitution and a

punishment for sin. It wrecked some of them effectually—left them nothing to live for. It case-hardened others against the

world in a way you and I can well pray we may never be case-hardened. It left scars on others, and others laughed it off.

Hundreds of sexual offenders passed through my hands, and in the closest study of their points of view I was unable to find

that in more than rare cases had the risk of syphilis any real power to control the expression of their desires. Sexual morality

is a complex affair, in which the habit of self-control in many other activities of life plays an important part. The man or

woman who best deserves to be called clean and honorable and sexually blameless has not become so through a negative

morality and an enlightened selfishness. The man who does not have bred into him from childhood the instinct to say the

"everlasting no" to his passions will never learn to say it from the fear of syphilis. Sexual self-control is a habit, not a

reasoned-out affair, and its[Pg 146] foundation must rest on the rock bottom of character and not in the muck of venereal

disease.

The Broader Outlook.—If, then, it avails nothing in the uplifting of our morals to treat syphilis as a disgrace, if the disease

is ineffective as a deterrent, and barbarously undiscriminating, inhuman, and unjust as a punishment, let us in all fairness lay

aside the attitude of mind which has so hindered and defeated our efforts to deal with it as an arch enemy to human health,

happiness, and effectiveness. In the face of all our harsh traditions it takes a good deal of breadth of view to look on the

disease impersonally, rather than in the light of one or two contemptible examples of it whom we may happen to know. But,

after all, to think in large terms and with a sympathy that can separate the sinner from his sin and the sick man from the folly

that got the best of him, is no mean achievement, well worthy of the Samaritan in contrast with the Levite. To the remaking

of the traditional attitude of harsh, unkindly judgment upon those unfortunate enough to have a terrible disease, we must look

for our soundest hope of progress.

The Mental States of Syphilitics.—The mental outlook of the person with syphilis is in its turn as important a factor in our

campaign against the disease as is that of the person without it. In order to give some idea of the ways in which this can

influence the situation it may be well to sketch what might be called the four types of mind with which one has to deal—the conscientious, the average, the irresponsible, and the morbid. Under the morbid type are [Pg 147] included those persons who,

without having syphilis, are in morbid fear of the disease, or have the fixed belief that they are infected with it, even when they

are not.

The Conscientious Type.—Conscientious patients, speaking from the physician's standpoint, are the product of intelligence and character combined. Though distinctly in the minority, and usually met in the better grades of private practice, one is often

surprised how many there are, considering the treacherous and deceptive features of the disease, which leave so much excuse

for laxity and misunderstanding on the part of the laymen. A conscientious patient is one who is not content with any ideal short

of that of radical cure. It takes unselfishness and self-control to go without those things which make the patient in the infectious

stage dangerous to others. For a time life seems pretty well stripped of its pleasures for the man who may not smoke, must

always think beforehand whether any contact which he makes with persons or things about him may subject others to risk of

infection, and perhaps must meet the misunderstanding and condemnation of others whom he has to take into his confidence

for the same purpose. An element of moral courage and a keen sense of personal responsibility help to make the ideal patient

in this disease. To meet a treatment appointment promptly at the same day and hour week after week, to go through the

drudgery of rubbing mercurial ointment, for example, to say nothing of the unpleasantness of the method to a cleanly person,

night after night for[Pg 148] weeks, takes unmistakable grit and a well-developed sense of moral obligation. The man who

has been cured of syphilis has passed through a discipline which calls for the best in him, and repays him in terms of better

manhood as well as better health.

The physician's coöperation in the development of the necessary sense of responsibility and the requisite character basis for

a successful treatment is invaluable. To the large majority of the victims of the disease it is a severe shock to find out what

ails them. Many of them, without saying much about it, give up all hope for a worth-while life from the moment they learn of

their condition. Just as in the old days the belief that consumption was incurable cost nearly as many lives as the disease

itself, by leading victims to give up the fight when a little persistence would have won it, so among many who acquire syphilis, especially when it is contracted under distressing circumstances, there is a lowering of the victims' fighting strength, a

sapping of their courage which makes them an easy prey to the indifference to cure that is so fatal in this disease. The person

with syphilis should have the benefit of all the friendly counsel, reassurance, and moral support that his physician can give,

and such time and labor on the latter's part are richly repaid.

The Average State of Mind.—The average mental attitude stops tantalizingly short of the best type of conscientiousness.

Average patients are good coöperators in the beginning of a course of treatment or while the symptoms are alarming or

obvious, but [Pg 149] their energy leaves them once they are outwardly cured. The average patient only too often overrules

his physician's good judgment on trivial grounds, slight inconveniences, and temporary considerations, forgetting that cure is

what he needs more than anything else in the world. The deprivations go hard with this type of patients, and it is difficult,

almost impossible, to persuade them to stop smoking or to abstain from sexual relations or other contacts that are apt to

subject others to risk. Average patients will almost never remain under the care of a physician until cured. A year, or at the

most two years, is all that can be expected, and a second or third negative blood test is usually the signal for their

disappearance. They are, of course, lost in the great unknown of syphilis, and swell the total of deaths from internal causes

of syphilitic origin, such as diseases of the arteries and of the nervous system. A good many have to be treated for relapses,

but the amount of infection spread by them, while of course unknown, is probably small considering how many of them there

are.

Effect of the High Cost of Treatment.—A factor which is extremely influential in forcing average treatment and ideals on

those who, if opportunity were more abundant, would be conscientious about the disease, has already been mentioned as the

cost of treatment, which is such that persons with small incomes, who are too proud or sensitive to seek charitable aid, can

scarcely be expected to meet. The cost of salvarsan under present conditions is a burden that few can hope to assume to the

extent that[Pg 150] modern treatment tends to require, and the slower methods of treatment are more of a tax on the patient's

courage and determination, and less effective in preventing the danger of infectiousness, although quite as reliable for cure.

There is no more serious problem in the public health movement against syphilis than to get for the average man who can pay

a moderate but not a large fee the benefits of expensive and elaborate methods of recognizing and treating a disease such as

syphilis. Some practical methods of doing this will be taken up in the next chapter.

The Irresponsible.—The irresponsible attitude of mind about syphilis forms the background of the darkest and most repellent

chapter in the story of the disease. Yet we ought to confront it if we wish to master the situation. The irresponsible person has

either no regard for, or no conception of, the rights of others where a dangerous contagious disease is concerned, and often

little conception of, and less interest in, what is to his own ultimate advantage. Irresponsible syphilitics lack character first

and sense next. Many of them, through the gods-defying combination of stupidity and ignorance, cannot be approached through

any channel of reason or persuasion. The only argument capable of influencing such minds is compulsion. Others are, of

course, mental defectives with criminal and perverted tendencies. Yet it is both amazing and discouraging to find how many irresponsibles there are in the ordinary and even in the better walks of life. To the wilful type of irresponsible person the transmission[Pg 151] of a syphilitic infection is nothing, and cannot weigh a straw against the gratification of his desire or the

pursuit of his own interest. The disease cannot teach such people anything, and if it cannot, how can the physician? Such

people pursue their personal and sexual pleasure, marry, spread disaster around them, and outlive it all, perhaps brazenly to acknowledge the fact. Others, suave, attractive, agreeable, seductive, often masquerade as respectability, or constitute the

perfumed, the romantic, the elegant carriers of disease. The proportion of ignorant to wilful irresponsibility can scarcely be

estimated. But there is little choice between the two except on the score of the hopefulness of the latter. As examples of the

mixture of types with which a large hospital is constantly dealing, I might offer the following at random, from my own

recollections: A milkman came to a clinic one morning with an eruption all over his body and his mouth full of the most

dangerously contagious patches. Two of us cornered him and explained to him in full why he should come in if only for

twenty-four hours. He promised to be back next morning and disappeared. Another, a butcher in the same condition, put his

wife, whom he had already infected, into the hospital, and in spite of every argument by all the members of the staff, went

home to attend to his business—the selling of meat over the counter. A lunch-room helper, literally oozing germs, was after

several days induced to come up for an examination and promised to begin treatment, whereupon he disappeared. A college

student reported with an [Pg 152] early primary sore. "X——," I said, "If you will pledge me your honor as a gentleman

never to take another chance and not to marry until I say you are cured I will use salvarsan on you, which is just about as

scarce as gold now, and give you a chance for abortive cure." He pledged himself, and six months later there was every sign

that we were going to secure a perfect result. Suddenly he failed to appear for a treatment appointment, and I never saw him

again. But I did see a letter written to him by the clinic which showed that he had come up for the examination with a newly

acquired sore while he knew I was away—in all probability a reinfection. He was not even man enough to face me with his

broken word. Three or four men with chancres may report in an afternoon and leave, the clinic powerless to detain them or to

protect others against the damage they may do. One such, a Greek boy, had exposed four different women to infection before

we saw him, and only the most strenuous efforts of the entire staff got him into the hospital, because he had neither money nor

sense. Half-witted tramps, gang laborers, and foreigners who cannot understand a word of any other language than Lithuanian

or some other of the European dialects for which no interpreter can be secured, pass in a steady stream through the free clinics

of large cities. The impossibility of securing even the simplest coöperation from such patients is scarcely realized by any one

who is not called upon to deal with them face to face. Even with an interpreter, they display the wilfulness of irresponsibility.

One [Pg 153] Italian woman wiped her chancre, which was on her lip, with her fingers at every other shake of the head.

She was cooking for two boarders and had two children. She did not like hospitals and was homesick and pettish. Would she

go over to the dispensary in the next block and find out how to take care of herself? Not a bit of it. She was going home, and

she went. I saw the children later in the children's ward, both infected with syphilis—a poor start in life. Criminal intent in

the transmission of syphilis is common enough, and the writer can think off-hand of four or five cases in which men or women

"got" their estranged partners later in their careers.

The Necessity for Legal Control.—All these repulsive details have a place in driving home a conception of the cost to society

of the immoral and irresponsible syphilitic. Syphilis is an infectious disease, dangerous to the individual and to society. If it is

rational to quarantine a mouth and throat full of diphtheria germs, it is rational to quarantine a mouth and throat full of

syphilitic germs at least until the germs are killed off for the time being. There can be no more excuse for placing society at

the mercy of the one than of the other.

The Morbid Attitude of Mind: Syphilophobia.—The morbid attitude of mind, whether in persons who have the disease or in

those who fear they may have it, is one of the hardest the physician has to deal with. Any one who knows anything of the disease naturally has a healthy desire to avoid it, and if he is a victim of it, a considerable belief in its seriousness. But certain types

of persons, who are[Pg 154] usually predisposed to it by a nervous makeup, or who have a tendency to brood over things, or

who perhaps have heard some needlessly dreadful presentation of the facts, become the victims of an actual mental disorder, a temporary unbalancing of their point of view. To the victims of syphilophobia, as this condition is called, syphilis fills the

whole horizon. If they have not been too seriously disturbed by the idea, a simple statement of the facts does wonders toward

relieving their minds. A few of them cling with the greatest tenacity to the most absurd notions. For those victims of the

disease who are the prey of morbid anxiety the assurance that it is one of the most curable of all the serious diseases, and that

if they are persistent and determined to get well, they can scarcely help doing so, usually sets their minds at rest. The idea that

there is a cloud of disgrace over the whole subject, and the old-fashioned belief that syphilis is incurable and hopeless, inflict

needless torture and may do serious damage to the highly organized sensitive spirits which it is to society's best interest to

conserve. The overconscientious syphilitic hardly realizes that the real horrors of the disease are usually the rewards of

indifference rather than overanxiety. Persons who subject themselves to the ordinary risks of infection which have been

described in the preceding chapters do well to be on their guard and to maintain even a somewhat exaggerated caution. Those

who do not expose themselves need not look upon the disease with morbid anxiety or alarm. In the relations of life in which

syphilis is likely to be a[Pg 155] factor it should, of course, be ferreted out. But there is no occasion for panic. We need a sane consciousness of the disease, a knowledge of its ways and of the means of prevention and cure for the world at large. We do

not need hysteria, whether personal or general, and there is nothing in the facts of the situation to warrant the development of

such a mental attitude either on the part of the syphilitic or of those by whom he is surrounded. Insofar as morbid fear in

otherwise normal persons is the product of ignorance it can be dispelled by convincing them of this fact.

[Pg 156]

Chapter XV Moral and Personal Prophylaxis

Prophylaxis, of course, means prevention, and it has been a large part of the purpose of the present study to deal with syphilis

from the standpoint of prevention and cure. The material of this chapter is, therefore, only a special aspect of the larger

problem.

Repression of Prostitution.—By the moral prophylaxis of syphilis is meant the cultivation of such moral ideals as will

contribute to the control of a disease which is so closely associated with sexual irregularities. Since public and secret

prostitution serve as the principal agencies for the dissemination of the disease, it follows that anything tending to decrease

the amount of disease in prostitutes, on the one hand, or to diminish the amount of promiscuous sexual activity, on the other,

will retard the spread of syphilis. Systems based on the first ideas, aiming rather to control the disease in public women by

inspection of their health and activities than by suppressing prostitution, have failed because the methods of control

ordinarily practised are worthless for the detection of infectiousness. So-called regulation has, therefore, given way very

largely in progressive communities to the second ideal of repressing or[Pg 157] abolishing the outward evidences of vice

as far as possible. In behalf of sanitary control of prostitution, leaving out of the question its moral aspect, it must be

admitted that Neisser, probably the greatest authority on the sexual diseases, believed that, as far as syphilis is concerned,

the use of salvarsan as a means of preventing infection from prostitutes has never had a satisfactory trial. In behalf of

abolition it would seem that systematic stamping-out of the outward evidences of vice, the making of immorality less

attractive and conspicuous, is, in theory at least, a valuable means of diminishing the extent and availability of an important

source of infection.

Educational Influences.—To do something positive against an evil is certainly a more promising mode of attack than to use

only the negative force of repression of temptation. Education of public opinion offers us just such a positive mode of attack.

Men and women and boys and girls should first be taught sexual self-control even before being made aware of the risk they

run in throwing aside the conventional moral code. Teach honor first and prudence next. The slogan of education in sexual

self-restraint is the easiest to utter and the most difficult to put into practice of all the schemes for the control of sexual

diseases. A large part of the difficulty of making education effective arises from one or two situations which are worth

thinking over.

Economic Forces Opposing Sexual Self-control.—In the first place, while continence, or abstinence from sexual relations,

is a valuable ideal in its place,[Pg 158] it cannot be indefinitely extended with benefit either to the individual or to the race.

The instinct to reproduce is as fundamental as the instinct of self-preservation and the desire for food. A social order which

disregards it or defies it will meet defeat. To an alarming extent the tendency of the present economic system is to create

unsocial impulses by making the normal gratification of sexual instinct in marriage and the assumption of the responsibility

of a family more and more difficult. The cost of living is steadily rising without a corresponding certainty on the part of a

large proportion of young men that they can meet it for themselves, to say nothing of meeting it for wife and children. The

uncertainties of a 'job' are often serious enough to discourage the rashest of men from depending on a variable earning power

to help him do his share for the advancement of the race. It will be an impossible task to convince even naturally clean-

minded, healthy young men and women that they should live a life of hopeless virtue because it is part of the divine order

that they should be so held down by hard times and small earnings as to make marrying and having children an unattainable

luxury. Continence and clean living as preparations for decent and reasonably early marriage and the raising of a healthy

family are the highest of ideals, and ought to be preached from every housetop. Continence as a life-long punishment for the

impossible demands of an oppressive social and economic order gets as little attention as it deserves. First, let us make a

clean sexual life lead with greater certainty to some of the rewards that make life [Pg 159] worth living and we shall then

have a more substantial basis for making continence before marriage other than empty words. If every father, for example,

could say to his sons and daughters that if they showed themselves clean men and women he would back them in an early

marriage, there would be an appreciable decrease in the amount of young manhood which is now squandered on indecency.

If every employer, or the state itself, would give a clean marriage a preferred position in the social and economic scale, and,

by helping to meet the cost of it, recognize in a substantial way the value to the race of a family of vigorous children, an

important factor in youthful sexual laxity would be robbed of its power. No one will assert that such remedial proposals

are of themselves cure-alls for present evils, but they must have at least an emphatic place in the future of moral prophylaxis.

The Teaching of Sexual Self-control.—First then, make the social order such that sexual self-control yields a reward and not

a punishment. Second, teach sexual control itself, since it is one of the fundamental means of attack on the problem of syphilis.

How can such control be taught? Information about the physical dangers of illicit sexual indulgence is of course of value, and

should be spread broadcast. But taken by itself, the fear of disease, especially if it enters the individual's life after the age

when he has already experienced the force of his sexual instincts, is a feeble influence. The person who has nothing but the

knowledge that he is taking great risks between him and the gratification of his [Pg 160] sexual desires will take the risks and

take them once too often. One cannot begin to teach the boy or girl of high school age that sexual offenses mean physical

disaster, and expect to control syphilis. The time to control the future of the sexual diseases is in the toddler at the knee, the

child whose daily lesson in self-control will culminate when he says the final 'No' to his passions as a man. The child who

does not learn to respect his body in the act of brushing his teeth and taking his bath and exercise, and whose thought and

speech and temper are unbridled by any self-restraint, will give little heed when told not to abuse his manhood by exposing

himself to filth. The prevention of syphilis by sexual self-control goes down to the foundations of character, and has practical

value only in those whose self-control is the expression of a lifelong habit of self-discipline bred in the bone from childhood,

not merely painted on the surface at puberty. Those who want their sons and daughters never to know by personal experience

the meaning of syphilis must first build a foundation in character for them which will make self-control in them instinctive,

almost automatic. Knowledge of sexual matters has power only in proportion to the strength of the character that wields it,

and on well-rounded character education, rather than mere knowledge of the facts, the soundest results will be based.

E. Roux

E. Roux

Élie Metchnikoff [1845-1916]

Élie Metchnikoff [1845-1916]

(From McIntosh and Fildes, "Syphilis from the Modern Standpoint," New York, Longmans Green & Co., 1911.)

The moral prophylaxis of syphilis is then briefly summed up in the repression of as many of the recognized agencies for the

spread of the disease as possible; the making of continence a preparation for a normal sex life rather than an end in itself;

the [Pg 161] control and remedying of those influences which are making normal marriage harder of attainment; and the

development of an instinctive self-control and self-discipline in every field of life from childhood up as the character basis

necessary to make knowledge about sexual life and sexual disease effective.

Personal Preventive Methods.—Continence.[15]—There remains to be considered what is often called the personal

prophylaxis of syphilis, meaning thereby the methods by which the individual himself can diminish or escape the risk of

infection. The first and most effective method of avoiding syphilis is abstinence from sexual relations and intimacies except

in normal marriage with a healthy person. Although it has been alluded to under the moral prophylaxis of syphilis, it deserves

to be reëmphasized. No consideration as to the justice or desirability of continence and self-restraint can add anything to the

simple fact that it is the way to avoid disease, and can be unhesitatingly recommended as the standard for personal

prophylaxis. In the experience of physicians it is an axiom that disillusionment sooner or later overtakes those who think

they are exempt from this rule. Persons who discard continence in favor of what they believe to be some absolutely safe

indulgence are so almost invariably deceived that the exceptions are not worth considering. Although infection with syphilis

is no necessary[Pg 162] evidence of unclean living, clean living will always remain the best method of avoiding syphilis.

[15] The American Social Hygiene Association, 105 W. 40th Street, New York City, can supply pamphlets and lists of

authoritative publications bearing on this and related subjects.

The Metchnikoff Prophylaxis.—The second method of personal prophylaxis of syphilis was developed as a result of the

discovery of Metchnikoff and Roux in 1906, that a specially prepared ointment containing a mercurial salt, if rubbed into

the place on which the germs were deposited within a few hours (not exceeding eighteen hours, and the sooner the better)

after exposure to the risk of syphilis, would prevent the disease by killing the germs before they could gain a foothold. This

method of protection against syphilis has been subjected to rigid tests, with fairly satisfactory results. It has been adopted by

the army and navy of practically every country in the world, and, as carried out under the direction of physicians and with

military control of the patient, has apparently reduced the amount of syphilitic infection acquired in the armies and navies

using it to a remarkable degree. The method, of course, cannot assume to be infallible, but if intelligently applied, it is one

of the important weapons for the extinction of syphilis in our hands at the present day. It fails to meet expectations precisely

in those circumstances and among those persons in whom intelligent employment of it cannot be expected. This of course

covers a considerable number of those who acquire syphilis. What disposal an awakened opinion will make of this

knowledge remains to be seen. At the present time it may well be doubted whether the indiscriminate placing of it in the

hands of anybody and everybody would not work as much harm as good through ignorant and unintelligent [Pg 163] use.

This opinion is shared by European as well as American authorities. Administered under the direction of a physician, the

Metchnikoff prophylaxis of syphilis would undoubtedly be at its best in the prevention of the disease. For these reasons, as

well as to prevent the spread of the knowledge to those who would be damaged by it, those interested are referred to their

physicians for a description of the method. Any one having the benefit of it should be able to convince his medical advisor

that there is good reason why this kind of professional knowledge should be brought to bear on his case. The ordinary

methods of preventing infection by washes and similar applications used by the "knowing ones" are most of them worthless

or greatly inferior to the Metchnikoff prophylaxis. They are, moreover, a positive source of danger because of the false

sense of security which they create. If every person who has run the risk of contracting syphilis should visit his physician

at once to receive prophylactic treatment, the effect on syphilis at large would probably be as good as in the army and navy.

There would still be opportunity on such occasions to bring moral forces and influence to bear on those who would respond

to them. There can be no object in withholding such knowledge from those who are confirmed in their irregular sexual habits.

At the same time there could be few better influences thrown across the path of one just starting on a wrong track than that

exerted by a physician of skill and character, to whom the individual had appealed to avert the possible disastrous result of

an indiscretion.

[Pg 164]

Chapter XVI Public Effort Against Syphilis

The World-wide Movement Against Venereal Disease.—This chapter is intended to give some account of the great

movements now begun to control syphilis and its fellow-diseases throughout the world. A campaign of publicity was the

starting-point of the organized attempt to control tuberculosis, and in the same way a similar campaign has been at the

bottom of movements which now, under the pressure of the tremendous necessities of war, are making headway at a pace

that generations of talking and thinking in peaceful times could not have brought about. Although this country at the present

writing is probably farther in the rear than any other great nation of the world in its efforts to control the venereal diseases

as a national problem, it is fortunate in having had the way paved for it by epoch-making movements such as those of the

Scandinavian countries, and by the studies of the Sydenham Royal Commission on whose findings the British Government

is now undertaking the greatest single movement against syphilis and gonorrhea that has ever been launched. For many years

Germany has had a society whose roll includes some of the greatest names in modern science, directing all its energy

toward the solution of the problem of sexual[Pg 165] disease, and German sentiment on these matters is developing so fast

that it is difficult, even for those in touch with such matters, to keep pace with it. In this country progress has been much

slower, hampered by peculiarities of mental outlook and tradition very different from those which have controlled the

thought of Europe. The association of syphilis with prostitution has been largely instrumental in putting much valuable

statistical and general knowledge of the disease into semi-private reports and sources not available to the large mass of

the thinking public. The effect of finding the problem of syphilis invariably bound up with discussions of the social evil

has been to perpetuate in popular thought an association which simply blocks the way to any solution of the public health

problem. While the control of prostitution will influence syphilis, ignoring syphilis, or treating it as incidental, will never

contribute anything to the conquest of either. It is one of the most significant features of the great movements now on foot

all over the world that they have finally adopted the direct route, and are attacking syphilis and gonorrhea as diseases and

not by way of their association with prostitution.

The agencies in this country which are making notable efforts to push the campaign against syphilis and gonorrhea deserve

every possible support from the thinking public. The American Social Hygiene Association is a clearing-house for trustworthy information in regard to the problems of sexual disease, and publishes a quarterly journal.[16] The National[Pg 166]

Committee for Mental Hygiene and its branch societies are also engaged in spreading knowledge of the relation of syphilis

to mental disease and degeneration. State and City Boards of Health are active in their efforts to further the campaign, and

notable work is being done by New York City, Buffalo, Cleveland, and Rochester, New York, both on publicity and in the

provision of facilities for recognizing and treating the diseases in question. Certain states, such as Ohio, Michigan, and

Vermont, have made steps toward an intelligent legislative attack on different aspects of the problem. Influential

newspapers and magazines have made the idea of a campaign against these diseases familiar enough to the public, for

example, to bring a young girl to me to ask outright without affectation that she be told about syphilis, because she had seen

the word in the paper and did not fully understand it. The aggregate of these forces is large, and an awakening is inevitable.

[16] Social Hygiene, New York.

To prepare ourselves for an active and intelligent share in the movement, we should review briefly the essential elements of

a public campaign against syphilis as they have been developed by recent investigations and legislative experiments.

Undesirable and Freak Legislation.—Syphilis has had a limited amount of recognition in law, unfortunately not always wise

or timely. Freak legislation and half-baked schemes are the familiar preliminaries which precede the grim onset of a real attack supported by public sentiment. Typical examples of such premature legislation may be found in the setting [Pg 167] up of the Wassermann test as evidence of fitness for marriage by certain states, and in the efforts of certain official agencies to enforce

the reporting of syphilis and gonorrhea by name. Proposals to quarantine and placard all syphilis are in the same category,

though seriously entertained by some. The plan to establish by state enactment or municipal appropriation special venereal

hospitals falls in the same class, since it is obvious that in the present state of opinion none but down-and-outs would resort to

them. The stigma attached to them would effectually make them useless to the very group of worth-while people which it is to

the public interest to conserve and reëducate.

Value of Conservative Action.—It cannot be said too often that a reasonable conservatism should temper the ardor of

reformers, or more harm than good will be done by the collapse and failure of ill-considered special legislation. Unified action

against syphilis and gonorrhea as public health problems is as important as unified action on the problems of railroad control,

child labor, or corporate monopoly. For that reason it is a matter of some uncertainty how much can be accomplished by

individual states in this country in the way of restrictive legislation, such as that controlling the marriage of infected persons,

or punishing persons who fail to carry treatment to the point of cure. Under the direction of a national bureau or department

of health administration there is no doubt that the movement against syphilis would advance at a much more rapid pace

[Pg 168] than with the sporadic and scattered activities of mixed state and private agencies.

The Essential Features of a Modern Campaign.—The repeated sifting of the facts which has been done in recent years by

important investigations, such as that of the Sydenham Commission in Great Britain and the Society for Combatting Sexual

Disease in Germany, and the legislative programs already mentioned, have gradually crystallized into fairly definite form,

the undoubted essentials of a program for controlling venereal diseases, syphilis among them. These may be summarized

as follows:

  1. The provision of universally available good treatment, at the expense of the state, if necessary, for the diseases in question.

  2. The provision by the state of efficient means of recognizing the diseases at the earliest possible time and with the greatest

  3. possible certainty in any given case.

  4. The suppression of quack practice, drug-store prescribing, and advertising of cures for these diseases.

  5. Moral and educational prophylaxis and the vigorous suppression of prostitution.

In addition to these measures, which are common to all proposals and working systems for the control of sexual disease,

certain other recommendations may be classed as debatable, inasmuch as they are still under discussion and have been

incorporated into some and omitted from others. These are as follows:

[Pg 169]

  1. General instruction in personal prophylaxis for the population at large.

  2. Compulsory measures and penalties obliging patients to receive treatment and continue it until cured, regardless of their

  3. own desires in the matter.

  4. Notification or reporting of cases of sexual disease to the health authorities.

  5. Indirect legislation, as it might be called, which aims to detect infected persons before they enter on marriage rather

  6. than at the outset of the disease, either by releasing the physician in charge of the case from the bond of professional

  7. confidence, or by requiring health certificates before marriage, and which annuls marriages after infection is discovered.

Easily Available Treatment.—It will be noticed that toleration of prostitution with supervision has finally disappeared from

the modern program for the control of sexual diseases. The provision for universally available treatment, regardless of the

patient's means or circumstances, should be thought of as the one fundamental requirement without which no program has

made even a beginning. For over a century Denmark has provided for the free treatment of all patients with venereal disease.

The Norwegian law, essentially similar, dates from 1860. Italy a few years ago adopted a similar program, placing squarely

upon the state the responsibility of providing for the care of all patients with venereal diseases. England has just adopted

a mixed provision which will in practice place most of the responsibility upon the state and very little on the individual, as

far as the expense of treatment is concerned.[Pg 170] Germany has compelled her insurance companies to shoulder the

burden, and under pressure of war is hastening matters by invoking more and more governmental aid. The recent West

Australian Act provides that every medical officer in the pay of the state shall treat venereal disease free of charge. In

comparison with the tremendous advances over previous indifference which such programs represent, this country makes

a poor showing. Among us, no public agency is formally charged with any duty in the matter of preventing, recognizing,

or treating the vast amount of venereal infection that mars our national health. Certain state boards of health are attempting

to perform Wassermann tests, and certain municipalities have well-organized laboratories for the detection of syphilis and

gonorrhea, but there are few purely public agencies that even pretend to have a specialist in their employ to assist in the

recognition of cases and conduct the treatment of patients who cannot afford private care. Hospital and dispensary treatment

of venereal diseases is almost entirely in semi-private hands, and a recent investigation of clinics and dispensaries for the

treatment of syphilis and gonorrhea in New York city, for example, showed that many of them were so poorly equipped and

run at such unreasonable hours that they were frequented only by vagabonds, were of no value in the early recognition of

syphilis, could not administer salvarsan under conditions to which a discriminating patient would dare to trust himself, and

made no pretense at following their cases beyond the door or [Pg 171] discharging them from medical care as cured. One of

the largest cities in this country until a year ago had not even a night clinic to which day workers could come, and is scarcely

awake now to the necessity for such a thing.

Dispensary Service.—The provision of adequate treatment and diagnostic facilities, on a par with those which will presently

cover Europe, will mean the following things: First of all, dispensaries, and many of them, for the identification of early

cases, fully equipped with dark-field microscopes, with record systems, and with the means for following patients from the

time they enter until they are cured. This means nurses, it means social service workers, it means doctors with special and

not general knowledge of syphilis and gonorrhea. The Brooklyn Hospital Dispensary is an admirable example of what such

an institution should be, but it is one where such institutions should be numbered by dozens and by hundreds. Copenhagen,

with a population less than that of several cities in this country which have none, has seven municipal clinics whose hours

and names are prominently advertised.

Hospitals.—In the second place there must be hospital facilities. They must not be venereal hospitals, but services or parts of

general hospitals, so that patients who are received into them will be protected from stigma and comment. Pontopidan, a

Danish expert, estimated that for the care of venereal disease one hospital bed to every 2000 of population was insufficient,

and yet there are cities[Pg 172] in this country which do not have one bed available for the purpose to 100,000 people. The

hospital performs a peculiarly valuable function in the care of syphilis in particular. It provides for temporary quarantine, and

for the education of the patient in his responsibility to the community when he is discharged. Three weeks or more under hospital direction is the best possible start for an active syphilis that is to be cured. The privacy of a syphilitic can be protected in a

hospital as successfully as in a specialist's office, and the quality of treatment which can be given him is distinctly better than

he can obtain while out and around. Hospitals in general have kept their doors closed to syphilis until recently, and it is only

under the pressure of a growing understanding of what this means to the public health that they are awakening to their duty.

Cheap Salvarsan.—Before a general campaign for the successful treatment of syphilis can be made a fact, salvarsan must

become, as has already been pointed out, a public and not a private asset. It must be available to all who need it at the lowest

possible cost[17]—practically that of manufacture—and must be supplied by the state when necessary. The granting of

patent rights which make possible the present exploitation for gain of such vital agents in the protection of the public health

is a mistake which we should lose no time in remedying. While salvarsan does not mean the cure of syphilis, it does [Pg 173]

mean a large part of its control as an infectious disease. When it can be given only to the person who can muster from five to

twenty-five dollars for each dose which he receives, it is evident that its usefulness is likely to be seriously restricted.

[17] The price of salvarsan before the war was $3.50 per full dose for the drug alone. It can be profitably marketed at less

than $1.00 per dose. The patent rights have been temporarily suspended during the war, and their renewal by Congress should

not be permitted.

Reduction of the Expense of Efficient Treatment.—Free treatment for those who cannot afford to pay is a necessary part of the successful operation of any scheme for the control of sexual disease. But for those who can and are willing to pay a moderate

amount for what they receive, there should be pay clinics which will bridge the gap between the rough and ready quality and the unpleasant associations of a free dispensary, and the expensive luxuries of a specialist's office. This is a field which is almost

virgin in this country, and which deserves public support. There is no reason why, for a reasonable fee, the patient with syphilis

should not secure all the benefits of hospital care, the personal attention of specially trained men, an intelligent supervision of

his case, and the benefit of coöperation between a hospital service in charge of experts and the home doctor who must care for

him during a considerable part of the course of his disease. Provision of this sort makes treatment both more attractive and more available to large numbers of people whose pride keeps them away from the public provision for charity cases, and whose

limited means leave them at the mercy either of quackery or of well-meaning but entirely inexperienced physicians.

Value of Expert Services.—The factor of expert judgment in the care and recognition of syphilis is

[Pg 174] an important one, and a progressive public policy will not neglect to provide for it. The state, municipal or hospital

laboratory which professes to do Wassermann tests should not be in charge of some poorly paid amateur or of a technician

largely concerned with other matters, or its findings will be worthless. Every clinic and hospital should also attach to its staff

an expert consultant on syphilis on whom it can draw for advice in doubtful cases and for the direction of its methods of work.

Every city health board which undertakes a serious campaign against syphilis should not be satisfied merely with doing

Wassermanns, but should enlist in behalf of the public consultation of the same grade which it expects to employ in the solution

of its traction and lighting problems, and in the management of its legal affairs. No one would think nowadays of placing a

physician in charge of a great tuberculosis sanitarium whose knowledge of the chest was confined to what he had learned in

medical school twenty or more years before—yet in a parallel situation one often finds the subject of syphilis handled with

as little attention to the value of expert knowledge. Expert service is expensive, and if the state wishes to command the whole

energy of progressive men, it must be prepared to pay reasonably well for what it gets.

Suppression of Quacks and Drug-store Prescribing.—The suppression of quackery is nowhere more urgent than in the control

of syphilis. Every important legislative scheme that has come into existence in recent years has recognized this fact. The

[Pg 175] devil may well be fought by fire, and reputable agencies should enter the field of publicity with some of the vigor

of their disreputable opponents. The brilliant success of this scheme was admirably illustrated by the results of the recent

efforts of the Brooklyn Hospital Dispensary, which, by replacing the placards of advertising quacks in public comfort and

toilet rooms, and running a health exhibit on Coney Island, attracted to a clinic where modern diagnosis and treatment were

to be had an astonishing number of young people who would have fallen victims to quacks. The evil influence of the drug

store in perpetuating the hold of syphilis and gonorrhea upon us is just being understood. The patient with a beginning

chancre, at the advice of a drug clerk, tries a little calomel powder on the sore, and it either "dries up" and secondary

symptoms of syphilis appear in due course, or it gets worse or remains unchanged and the patient finally goes to a doctor

or a dispensary to find that his meddling has lost him the golden opportunity of aborting the disease. If secondaries appear,

a bottle or two of XYZ Specific, again at the suggestion of the all-knowing drug clerk, containing a little mercury and

potassium iodid, disposes of a mild eruption, and a year or so later a marriage with subsequent mucous recurrences and

the infection of the wife signalizes the triumph of ignorance and public shortsightedness. The health commissioner of one

of the largest and most progressive cities in this country stated before a recent meeting of the American Public Health

Association that he had sent a special investigator[Pg 176] to twelve representative drug stores in his city, and that simply

 

on describing some symptoms, without even the ceremony of an examination, he had received from ten of them something

to use on a sore or to take for gonorrhea. It is only justice to say that occasionally one finds drug stores which will refer a

patient to a doctor or a dispensary. Drastic legislation to suppress this sort of malpractice is part of the program of Great

Britain, Germany, and West Australia, and we in this country cannot too quickly follow in their steps.

Publicity Campaign.—The educational campaign against sexual disease has already been discussed in theory. In close

relation to it is the question of the use of publicity methods for legitimate ends, mentioned above. It has had a number of

interesting applications in practice. The West Australian law has taken the stand of prohibiting all advertising, replacing

the method of attracting the patient into coming for treatment of his own free will by the method of making treatment

compulsory under heavy penalty. In this country, where compulsory legislation will be slow of adoption, publicity methods

will have a certain vogue and a proper place. It has been of great service in the campaign against tuberculosis and in the

movements for "Better Babies" and the like. It should never be forgotten that it is a two-edged weapon, however, and that

where a stigma exists, as in the case of sexual disease, too much advertising of the place of treatment as distinguished from

the need for it will drive away the very people whose sensitiveness or need for secrecy[Pg 177] must be considered. On

the other hand, the publication of material relating to sexual diseases in the public press has not yet reached the height of its possibilities, and should be pushed.

Utilization of Personal Prophylaxis.—Passing now to the debatable elements in a public campaign, opinion about the value

of personal prophylaxis (Metchnikoff) against syphilis shows interesting variations in different countries at the present time.

English-speaking countries hesitate over this. On the other hand, eminent German authorities, such as Neisser and Blaschko,

rged it at the outset of the present war, and their views have apparently overcome a vigorous opposition. As a result, the

knowledge of methods of preventing venereal infection are being spread broadcast over Germany in the hope of diminishing

the inevitable risk that will arise with the disbanding of armies after peace is concluded, no matter how stringent the

precautions taken to insure the health of soldiers before their return to civil life. The results of this experiment will be

watched with the most intense interest by all those familiar with the situation, and the results will be of value as a guide

for our own policy when we have had time to develop one. It is interesting that the most radical departure in the way of

legislative provision for sexual disease, that of West Australia, takes up the patient at the point where his infection begins

and promptly places him under penalty in the hands of a physician, but assumes no responsibility for other than indirect

prevention. The most radical of all present-day legal measures against the disease [Pg 178] has therefore not yet reached

the radicalism of compulsory prophylaxis as it exists in armies, or even the radicalism of compulsory vaccination for

smallpox.

Reporting of Syphilis to Health Officers.—The question of reporting syphilis to health officers as a contagious disease is

a good one to raise in a meeting when a stormy session is desired. Upon this question wide differences of opinion exist all

over the world. The right of a sick person to privacy, always deserving of consideration, becomes acute when it touches not

only his physical but his social, economic, and moral welfare. It becomes a matter of importance to the state also when the

prospect that his secret will not be kept leads him to conceal his disease and to avoid good public aid in favor of bad private

care. It is a question whether the amount gained by collecting a few statistics as to the actual presence of the disease will be

offset by the harm done in driving to cover persons who will not be reported. Modified forms of reporting sexual diseases,

without name or address, for example, can be employed without betraying a patient's identity, thus doing away with some of

the objections, and they have been in force in such cities as New York for some time. Vermont has recently adopted a

compulsory reporting system, with the almost ludicrous result that by the figures her population shows 0.5 per cent syphilis,

when the truth probably stands nearer 10 per cent. Much of the difficulty with reporting systems goes back to the lack of an

educated public or professional sentiment behind them. For this reason they may be fairly placed in the category [Pg 179] of

premature legislative experiments, and should be postponed until a more favorable time. That this view has the sanction of

students of such problems is borne out by the recent comment of Hugh Cabot on this issue, and by the decision of the British

Royal Commission which, after careful deliberation, decided not to recommend to the Government at the present time any

form of reporting for sexual disease. The West Australian law recognizes the wisdom of providing the patient having sexual

disease with every safeguard for his secret provided he conforms to the requirement of the law in the continuance of his

treatment. German sentiment is strongly against reporting, and no provision is made for it in the civil population. On the other

hand, the very complete programs of the Scandinavian countries provide for reporting cases without names. It is, therefore,

apparent, in view of this conflict of opinion, that we can afford to watch the experience of our neighbors a little longer before committing ourselves to the risk of arousing antagonism over a detail whose importance in the scheme of attack on syphilis is

at best secondary to the fundamental principles of efficient treatment and diagnosis. There is no apparent reason why we

should not be satisfied, for the present, at least, with drawing to our aid everything which can give us the confidence and the

willing coöperation of those we want to reach. Physicians who work with large numbers of these patients realize that privacy

is one of the details which has an attraction that cannot be ignored.

Compulsory Treatment.—Compulsory provisions[Pg 180] in the law form the third debatable feature of a modern program

against syphilis. The Scandinavian countries have adopted it, and in them a patient who does not take treatment can be made

to do so. If he is in a contagious condition, he can be committed to a hospital for treatment. If he infects another, knowing

himself to have a venereal disease, he is subject, not to fine, but to a long term of imprisonment. The West Australian law is

even more efficient than the Scandinavian in the vigor with which it supplies teeth for the bite. The penalties for violations

of its provisions are so heavy as to most effectually discourage would-be irresponsibles. At the other end of the scale we

find Great Britain relying thus far solely upon the provision of adequate treatment, and trusting to the enlightenment of

patients and the education of public sentiment to induce them to continue treatment until cured. Italy has, in the same way,

left the matter to the judgment of the patient. The Medical Association of Munich, Germany, in a recent study has subscribed

to compulsory treatment along the same lines as the West Australia act, although thus far enforcement has been confined to

military districts. The program for disbanding of the German army after the war, however, includes, under Blaschko's

proposals, compulsion and surveillance carried to the finest details. A conservative summary of the situation seems to

justify the belief that measures of compulsion will ultimately form an essential part of a fully developed legal code for the

control of syphilis. The reasons for this belief have[Pg 181] been extensively reviewed in the discussion of the nature of

the disease itself (pages 104-105). On the whole, however, the method of Great Britain in looking first to the provision

for adequate diagnosis and treatment, and then to the question as to who will not avail himself of it, is a logical mode of

attacking the question, and as it develops public sentiment in its favor, will also pave the way for a sentiment which will

stand back of compulsion if need be, and save it from being a dead letter.

Backwardness of the United States in the Movement.—It will be apparent, from the foregoing review of the world movement

against syphilis, and the essentials of a public policy toward the disease, that the majority of our efforts in this direction have

been decidedly indirect. We have no national program of which we as a people are conscious. It is all we can do to arouse a

sentiment to the effect that something ought to be done. In these critical times we must mobilize for action in this direction with

as much speed at least as we show in developing an army and navy, slow though we are in that. To limit our efforts to the

passing of freak state legislation regulating the price of a Wassermann to determine the fitness of a person for marriage, when

both Wassermann test itself, and Wassermann test as evidence of fitness for marriage, are likely, under the conditions, to be

absolutely worthless, is to play penny eugenics. The move to take the gag from the mouth of the physician when an

irresponsible with a venereal disease aims to spread his infection by marriage is at least intelligent, preventive, even

[Pg 182] if indirect, legislation, because it acts before and not after the event. Although at the present time we cannot boast

a single example of a complete program of direct legislation, the example of Michigan, which is providing free hospital

treatment for adults and children with syphilis, should be watched as the first radical step in the right direction. If war and

our mobilization for defense leave us with every hospital and dispensary and public health resource and all the expert

judgment we have available within our borders enlisted finally in a great campaign against gonorrhea and syphilis, it will

have accomplished a miracle, though it will have done no more than war has done for Europe. If it leaves us even with our

more progressive states committed to an expanding program of universal efficient and accessible diagnosis and treatment, it

will have conferred a blessing.

Relation of War to the Spread of Venereal Disease.—The frequent reference to the relation of war to the problems of sexual

disease seems to justify a concluding paragraph on this aspect of the matter. Much of the impetus which has carried European

nations so far along the road toward an organized attack on syphilis and gonorrhea, as has been said, is undoubtedly due to the realization that war in the past has been the ally of these diseases, and that a campaign against them is as essential to national

self-defense as the organization of a vast army. Conflicting reports are coming from various sources as to the prevalence of

syphilis and gonorrhea among European troops, although hopeful indications seem to be that troops in the field may have even a lower[Pg 183] rate of disability than in peace times (British figures). The most serious risks are encountered in troops

withdrawn from the front or sent home on leave, often demoralized by the strain of the trenches. The steady rise in the amount

of syphilis in a civil population during war is evidenced, for example, by the figures of Gaucher's clinic in Paris, in which,

just before the war, 10 per cent of patients were syphilitic; after the first sixteen months of the war 16.6 per cent were

syphilitic, and in the last eight months, up to December, 1916, 25 per cent had the disease. There can be no doubt that a

campaign of publicity can do much to control the wholesale spread of infection under war conditions, and we should bend

our efforts to it, and to the more substantial work of providing for treatment and the prevention of infectiousness, with as

much energy as we devote to the other tasks which preparedness has forced upon us. The rigorous provisions proposed for

continental armies should be carefully studied, and in no cases in which either syphilis or gonorrhea is active should leave

or discharge be granted until the infectious period is over. Compelling infected men to remain in the army under military

discipline until cured might have a deterrent effect upon promiscuous exposure. In addition we should create as rapidly as

possible a mechanism for keeping inactive cases under surveillance after discharge until there can no longer be the slightest

doubt as to their fitness to reënter civil life. Observers of European conditions in the population at large are emphatic in

saying that home conditions must have as much attention as the army, and that[Pg 184] suppression of open prostitution, a

watchful eye on the conditions under which women are employed or left unemployed, and the control of contributory factors,

such as the liquor traffic, must be rigorously carried out. Nation-wide prohibition will do much to control venereal disease

.[18] It is interesting and significant that little reliance is being placed on the obsolete idea that prostitution can be made a

legitimate and safe part of army life solely by personal prophylactic methods, or by any system of inspection of the women

concerned. It is a hopeful sign that this conception is at last meeting with the discredit which has long been due it.

[18] Through the effect on prostitution. A well-known and very intelligent prostitute, with whom this question was recently

discussed, rated the liquor traffic first among the influences tending to promote prostitution.

The question has occurred to those interested in compulsory military service as a measure of national defense as to whether

the mobilization of troops for training will favor the spread of sexual disease. Unfortunately, there are no satisfactory figures

for the civil population showing how many persons per thousand per year acquire syphilis or gonorrhea, to be compared

with the known figures for the onset of such infections in the army. Arguing from general considerations, however, there

seems to be no reason to suppose that the army will show a higher proportion of infections than civilians. In fact, there is

every ground for believing that the percentage will be lower, since the army is protected by a fairly efficient and enforceable

system of prophylaxis which is taught to the men, and they live, moreover,[Pg 185] under a general medical discipline which

reduces the risk of infection from other than genital sources to the lowest possible terms. In opposition to the conception that

the sexual ideals of the army are low, it may be urged that they are no lower than those of corresponding grades in civil life,

and that hard work and rigid discipline have a much better effect in stiffening moral backbone than the laxities of present-day

social life. In the last analysis, the making of the moral tone of the army is in our own hands, and by putting into it good blood

and high ideals, we can do as much to raise from it a clean manhood as by submitting that same manhood to the temptations and

 inducements to sexual laxity that it meets on every street corner.

This chapter closes the discussion of syphilis as a problem for the every-day man and woman. It represents essentially the

cross-section of a moving stream. Today's truth may be tomorrow's error in any field of human activity, and medicine is no

exception to this law of change. It is impossible to speak gospel about many things connected with syphilis, or to offer more

than current opinion, based on the keenest investigation of the facts which modern methods make possible. None the less, the

great landmarks in our progress stand out with fair prospect of permanent place. The germ, the recognition of the disease by

blood test and dark field microscope, the treatment and prevention seem built on a firm foundation. As they stand, without

regard to further advances, they offer a brilliant future to a campaign for control To that campaign, each[Pg 186] and every

one of us can address himself with the prospect of adding his mite of energy to a tremendous movement for human betterment.

For every man or woman to whom the word syphilis can be made to mean, not a secret, private, shameful disease, but a great

open problem in public health, a recruit has been called to the colors. There are no signs more hopeful of the highest destiny

for humanity than those of today which mark the transition of disease from a personal to a social problem. Such a transition

foreshadows the passing of syphilis. In that transition, each one of us has his part. Toward that consummation, a goal only to

be won by united and stubborn assault, each one of us can contribute the comprehension, the sympathetic support, the

indomitable determination, which make victory.

[Pg 187]

INDEX

  • Abortion, syphilis as cause of, 95

  • Abortive cure and marriage, 127

    • of syphilis, 27, 86

    • salvarsan in, 73, 79, 89

    • time required for, 87

  • Accidents, late, 45. See also late syphilis

  • Advertising in regard to treatment for syphilis, 175, 176

  • Alcohol, effects of, in syphilis, 137

  • America, backwardness of, in movement against venereal diseases, 181

    • state control of venereal diseases in, 170

  • American Social Hygiene Association, 165

    • pamphlets, 161

  • Antibodies in disease, 54

  • Antiseptics, effect of, on germ of syphilis, 27

  • Appearance of chancre, time elapsing before, 29

  • Armpits, contagious patches in, 38

  • Army and navy, Metchnikoff prophylaxis in, 162

    • probable outlook for venereal diseases in, 184

    • proposed measures relative to venereal disease in, 183

    • syphilis in, 25

  • Arsenic in salvarsan, 71

  • Arteries, effect of syphilis on, 47

  • Australia. See West Australia

  • Babies, hereditary syphilis in, 99

  • Baltimore Vice Commission, report of, 134

  • Baths in treatment of syphilis, 140

  • Bath-tubs not means of transmitting syphilis, 114

  • Berlin, syphilis in clerks and merchants of, 25

  • Birth, premature, 95

  • Blaschko and German sexual disease program, 177, 180

    • estimate of syphilis in Berlin, 25

  • Blindness in hereditary syphilis, 104

  • Blood, Spirochæta pallida in, during secondary stage of syphilis, 35

    • test for syphilis, 54. See also Wassermann test

    • vessels, late syphilis in, 46

  • Board of Health, activities of, against syphilis, 165

    • national, need for, 167

  • Body, invasion of, by germs in secondary stage of syphilis, 35

  • Bones in hereditary syphilis, 102

    • late syphilis (gumma) in, 46

    • Spirochæta pallida in, 39

    • supposed effect of mercury on, 63

  • Bordet and Wassermann, blood test for syphilis, 14

  • Brain, late syphilis of, 48

  • Brawl chancre, 116

  • Breasts, contagious patches on, 38

  • Brooklyn Hospital Dispensary, 171

    • health exhibit by, 175

  • Cabot, Hugh, comment on reporting syphilis, 179

  • Cancer following smoker's patch, 138

  • Chafe, chancre resembling, 30

    • relation of, to infection with syphilis, 28

  • Chancre, 29

    • and cold sores, 30

    • appearance of, 30

    • brawl, 116

    • combined with chancroid, 30

    • concealment of, by gonorrhea, 30

    • contagiousness of, 109

    • contracted during engagement, 117

    • cure of syphilis in stage of, 85

    • developed from kissing game, 117

    • diagnosis of, prevented by improper treatment, 32

    • ease with which overlooked, 30

    • enlargement of glands near, 33

    • extra-genital, from lax relations, 134

    • importance of early recognition of, 31, 34

    • in women, 30

    • location of, 28

    • of the lip, 117, 119

    • on knuckle (brawl chancre), 116

    • painlessness of, 30

    • soft, 30. See also chancroid

    • tertiary symptoms following, 45

    • urethral, in men, 30

    • variations in, 30

  • Chancroid, 16

    • and syphilitic infection, 30

    • confusion of, with syphilitic chancre, 31

  • Child, death of, in syphilitic miscarriages or abortion, 95

    • early signs of hereditary syphilis in, 99

    • effect of syphilitic eye trouble on development of, 103

    • healthy, born of syphilitic mother, 94

    • infection of wet nurse by syphilitic, 100

    • necessity of teaching sexual self-control to, 160

    • older, effect of hereditary syphilis on, 102

    • transmission of syphilis from mother to, 92

    • treatment of syphilis in, before birth, 97

    • unborn, effect of syphilis on, 98

  • Child-bearing, effect of syphilis on, 95

  • Children, adopted, syphilis in, 106

    • syphilitic, mental condition of, 101

  • Clap, 16.

    • See also gonorrhea

  • Clinics for pay patients to secure better treatment, 173

    • inadequate, for venereal disease, 170

    • night, necessity for, 171

  • Cold sores and chancres, 30

  • College students, syphilis in, 25

  • Commission, Baltimore Vice, 134

    • Sydenham Royal, 164

  • [Pg 189]Complications, serious, of syphilis, 45

  • Compulsory treatment, state provision for, 169

  • Conception, influence of syphilis on, 95

    • treatment of syphilis occurring in mother after, 97

  • Coney Island Health Exhibit, 175

  • Contagiousness of moist sores in syphilis, 27, 38, 110

    • of secondary relapses in syphilis, 42

      • syphilitic sores, 38

    • of syphilis, 109. See also infectiousness, infection, and transmission

      • and medical examination of prostitutes, 135

      • control of, by salvarsan, 73, 74, 122

      • detection of, by examination of patient, 123

      • disappearance of, in late syphilis, 110

      • duration of, in late syphilis, 112

        • under treatment, 123

      • effect of incomplete cure on, 83

        • of local irritation on, 43

        • of mercury on, 64

        • of moisture on, 27, 38, 110

        • of time on, 111

        • of tobacco on, 138

      • estimate of risk for wife, 125

      • factors tending to increase, 112

      • five-year rule in relation to, 124

      • hereditary, 100, 105

      • ignorance of, in women, 135

      • impracticability of quarantine in control of, 121

      • in wet nurses, 101

      • inability of mercury to control, 123

      • obstacles to control by treatment, 123

  • Continence as personal prophylaxis, 161

    • economic forces opposing, 157

  • Copenhagen, dispensaries for treatment in, 171

  • Cost, economic, of mental disease due to syphilis, 51

    • of living, effect of, on marriage and sexual life, 158

    • of treatment, effect of, 84, 149

  • Cups, drinking, transmission of syphilis by, 113

  • Curability of syphilis, critical estimate of, 90

  • Cure, importance of, for the wife, 128

    • incomplete or symptomatic, danger of, 82

    • of early syphilis, abortive, 27, 34, 86, 127

    • of hereditary syphilis, 107

    • of syphilis, 124, 126, 129. See also five-year rule

      • abortive, salvarsan in, 73, 79, 89

      • complete, responsibility of the physician in regard to, 84

      • effect of cost on, 84, 149

        • stage of disease on, 85

      • importance of, 90

      • in early stage, 27, 86

      • in primary stage, 85. See also cure of syphilis, abortive

      • in secondary stage, 86, 88

      • [Pg 190]methods of determining, 90

      • obstacles to, 80

      • radical or complete, 80

      • Wassermann test in, 58

    • symptomatic, in late syphilis, 87

    • time required for, 87

  • Dark-field examination, use of, in recognizing contagious recurrences, 111

    • germ of syphilis in, 22

    • importance of using, 22

    • use of, in recognizing early syphilis, 33

  • Deafness and loss of speech due to hereditary syphilis, 104

  • Deaths due to hereditary syphilis, 98, 99

    • due to late syphilis, 48

  • Denmark, free treatment of syphilis in, 169

  • Disgrace, syphilis and, 142, 144

  • Disinfection of hands, dishes, etc., by washing and disinfectants, 114

  • Dispensaries for syphilis in large cities, 170

  • Drinking of alcoholic liquors, effect of, in syphilis, 137

  • "Drops," 69

  • Drug stores and drug clerks, evil influence of, 175

    • prescribing, suppression of, 168, 174

  • Drying, effect on germ of syphilis, 27

  • Dumbness (loss of speech) in hereditary syphilis, 104

  • Dyes, relation of, to salvarsan, 70

  • Ears, secondary recurrences affecting, 43

  • Ears, trouble in, in hereditary syphilis, 104

  • Eating utensils, transmission of syphilis by, 113, 115

  • Education and character in the control of syphilis, 160

    • as means of controlling contagiousness of syphilis, 122

  • Ehrlich, Paul, 70

  • Engagements, syphilis contracted during, 117

    • to marry in syphilitics, precautions in connection with, 129

  • England, action of, against drug stores prescribing for syphilis, 176

    • provision for treatment of venereal disease in, 169

    • treatment not compulsory in, 180

  • English-speaking countries, attitude on Metchnikoff prophylaxis in, 177

  • Eruptions, absence of, in serious syphilis, 46

    • effect of mercury on syphilitic, 64

    • in hereditary syphilis, 100

    • non-syphilitic, 37

    • recurrent, 42, 43

    • secondary syphilitic, 36

    • syphilitic, effect of salvarsan on, 74

  • Estimate of damage caused by syphilitic eye trouble, 103

    • of frequency of relapse and recurrence in secondary syphilis, 125

    • of increase of syphilis during war, in Paris, 183

    • [Pg 191]of percentage of marital syphilis, 119

    • of percentage of non-genital syphilis, 119

    • of prevalence of gonorrhea, 26

    • of syphilis, 24, 25

    • of risk of infecting wife, 125

    • of syphilis in prostitutes, 134

  • Examination, medical, before marriage, 130

    • limitations of, in detecting contagiousness, 123

  • Excesses, effect of, on the syphilitic, 137

  • Expense of treatment, effect of, 77, 84, 149

  • Expert advice, importance of, 32

    • in secondary stage of syphilis, 86

    • in pay patient clinics, 174

    • services, value of, in control and

    • treatment of syphilis, 173

  • Eye trouble in hereditary syphilis, 103

    • in later life, 105

    • in secondary syphilis, 36

  • Eyes, secondary syphilitic recurrences affecting, 43

  • Family, economic forces working against, 158

    • transmission of syphilis in, 116

  • Fathers of families, encouragement of early marriages by, 159

  • Fiancée, non-genital chancre in, 129

  • First sore, 29. See also chancre

  • Fist chancre, 116

  • Five-year rule, 124, 126, 129

    • in relation to marriage, 126

  • Founder's estimate of prevalence of syphilis, 24

  • France, increase of syphilis in, during war, 183

  • Gaucher's estimates of increase in syphilis during war in France, 183

  • Genital syphilis in lax individuals, 133

  • Genitals, contagious sores on, 38, 112

    • fitness of, for harboring germs of syphilis, 118

  • Germ of syphilis, 40. See also Spirochæta pallida

  • Germany, action of, against drug store prescribing for syphilis, 176

    • attitude on Metchnikoff prophylaxis in, 177

    • compulsory treatment of venereal disease in, 180

    • sentiment against reporting of venereal disease in, 179

    • society for preventing sexual disease in, 164

    • syphilis in, 25

  • Germs, behavior of, in various diseases, 40

  • Glands, enlargement of, in neighborhood of chancre, 33

    • in chancre of the lip, 33

  • Gonorrhea and syphilis, measures to prevent spread from army to general population, 183

    • concealment of chancre by, 31

    • confusion of, with syphilis, 13, 16, 31

    • drug store treatment of, 175

    • estimated prevalence of, 26

    • [Pg 192]in prostitutes in Baltimore, 134

  • Gonorrhea, transmission of, by toilet seats, 114

  • Great Britain. See England

  • Gumma, 46. See also syphilis, late

    • effect of treatment on, 47

    • nature of, 46

  • Gummatous infiltration in hereditary

    • syphilis, 102

    • in late syphilis, 46

  • Haiti, origin of syphilis in, 11

  • Hata, 70

  • Headaches in syphilis, 36

  • Health, effect of secondary syphilis on, 36

    • Exhibit, Brooklyn Hospital Dispensary, 175

  • Hearing, disturbances of, in hereditary syphilis, 104

    • in secondary syphilis, 36

  • Heart in hereditary syphilis, 102

  • Hereditary syphilis, apparently healthy children with, 101

    • as cause of abortions and miscarriages, 95

      • of death, 98

    • blindness in, 104

    • bones and teeth in, 102

    • contagiousness of, 100, 105

    • deafness in, 104

    • early signs of, 99, 100

    • effect of accident and injury in, 105

    • eye trouble in, 103

    • heart, blood-vessels and nervous system in, 102

    • Hutchinson's teeth in, 102

    • immunity in, 106

    • in adopted children, state provision for care of, 106

    • in infant, 99

    • in unborn child, 98

    • late, in older children and adults, 101

    • moral costs of, 99

    • non-transmission of, by marriage, 105

    • treatment of, 107

      • in school hospitals, 108

  • Hoffmann's rule for marriage of syphilitics, 124

  • Hospital beds, number of, needed for venereal disease, 171

    • treatment for hereditary syphilis, 108

  • Hospitals in treating venereal disease, 171

  • Hot Springs in treatment of syphilis, 140

  • Hunter, John, 13

  • Husband, probability of infection of wife by, 125

  • Hutchinson's teeth in hereditary syphilitics, 102

  • Hygiene, personal, of the syphilitic, 136

  • Idiocy in hereditary syphilis, 101

  • Immunity in syphilis, absence of, 139

    • hereditary, 106

  • Incubation period of syphilis, 28, 29

  • Infection, break in skin necessary to, 28

    • double, with gonorrhea and syphilis, 30

    • with syphilis and chancroid, 30

    • point of entry of, site of chancre, 29

    • [Pg 193]risks of, 32

    • time elapsing after, before chancre appears, 29

    • unsuspected risk of, 161

    • with syphilis favored by moisture, 27

  • Infectiousness of syphilis. See contagiousness

    • of syphilitic discharges, 28

  • Infiltration, gummatous, in late syphilis, 46

    • in hereditary syphilis, 102

  • Injections, mercurial, 66

  • Innocence, question of, in transmission of syphilis, 118

  • Inoculation, favorable ground for, 114

  • Insane asylums, amount of syphilitic mental disease in, 50

  • Inunctions, advantages of, 66

    • disadvantages of, 65

    • mercurial, 65

    • number required for cure, 66

  • Iodid of potash, 69

  • Irresponsible mental attitude in syphilis, 150, 151

  • Irritation, effect of, on contagious recurrences, 43

  • Italy, non-compulsory treatment in, 180

    • provision for treatment of venereal disease in, 169

  • Keratitis, interstitial, in hereditary syphilis, 103

  • Kernels. See glands

  • Keyes' estimate of risk of infection of wife by husband, 125

  • Kissing, rules governing, in syphilitics, 138

    • transmission of syphilis by, 116

  • Knuckle chancre, 116

  • Late syphilis, non-contagious character of, 110

    • premature development of, 45

    • prospects for cure in, 86

  • Latent or concealed syphilis, 22

  • Law, Ohio, relative to physicians and marriage of syphilitics, 131

    • controlling professional confidence, 131

    • crippling physician in relation to marriage of syphilitics, 131

    • providing for compulsory treatment in various countries, 180

  • Legal control, necessity for, in irresponsible syphilitics, 153

  • Legislation, conservative, 167

    • indirect, against venereal disease, 169

    • undesirable and freak, 166

  • Legs in locomotor ataxia, 49

  • Lemberg, study of prostitutes in city of, 134

  • Lesion, primary. See chancre; also sore

  • Life, well-balanced, for syphilitic, 137

  • Lip, chancre of, glands in, 33

  • Liquid medicine, giving of mercury in form of, 65

  • Liquor, alcoholic, effect of, in syphilis, 137

    • traffic, importance of abolition of, in prevention of venereal disease, 184

  • Liver, Spirochæta pallida in, 39

  • Locomotor ataxia, 48

    • frequency of, 51

    • [Pg 194]stomach symptoms in (gastric crises), 49

    • symptoms in legs, bladder and rectum, 49

    • syphilitic germs in spinal cord in, 49

    • treatment and prevention of, 52

  • London, syphilis in, 24

  • Luetin test, Noguchi, 79

  • Malaria, comparison of, with syphilis, 62

  • Marriage and abortive cure of syphilis, 127

    • and five-year rule, 126

    • and syphilis, 125

    • and Wassermann test, 130

    • annulment of, for concealment of syphilitic infection, 132

    • early encouragement of, by state, parents, employers, 159

    • effect of economic forces on, 158

    • medical examination for syphilis before, 130

    • of hereditary syphilitics, 105

    • of persons with syphilis, inability of physician to prevent, 131

    • of syphilitics, Hoffmann's rule for, 124

    • syphilis acquired in, 120

  • Massachusetts, syphilitic mental disease in, 51

  • Medical examination before marriage, 130

    •  

      • in relation to syphilis, 130

    • of prostitutes, 135, 136

  • Mental attitude in relation to syphilis, 141

    •  

      • morbid, in syphilis, 153

    • disease and hereditary syphilis, 101

  • Mental disease and syphilis, 50

    • Hygiene, National Committee for, 166

  • Mercury, 62

    • and salvarsan, combination of, in controlling contagiousness, 124

    • comparative value of, 68

    • deceptive value of, 64

    • effect of, on syphilis, 63

    • inability of, to control contagiousness, 123

    • ineffectiveness of, by mouth, 65

    • injections of, 66

    • injurious effects of, 67

    • inunctions (rubs), 65

    • methods of administering, 64

    • of using in treatment, 62

    • misconception in regard to, 63

  • Metchnikoff and Roux, 14

    • prophylaxis in syphilis, 162

  • Michigan, legislative measures against syphilis in, 182

  • Military service, universal, and spread of venereal disease, 184

  • Miscarriage and abortion, syphilis as cause of, 95

    • repeated, 95

  • Misconceptions regarding cure of syphilis with salvarsan, 72

    • syphilis in children, 100

  • Moisture, effect of, on contagiousness of syphilis, 27, 38, 110

    • relation of, to infection with syphilis, 27, 38, 110

  • Moore, Noguchi and, 48

  • Moral problems in relation to syphilis, 18

  • Morality, sexual, in relation to syphilis, 18

  • [Pg 195]Morals, syphilis and, 144

  • Morbidness in syphilitics, 153

  • Mother, knowledge of, in adopting a child, 106

    • syphilitic, apparent good health of, 93

      • period of greatest danger to child, 94

    • treatment of syphilis in, 97

  • Mouth, administration of mercury by, 64

    • contagious sores in, 38, 42. See also mucous patches

    • effect of mercury on, 67

    • late syphilis in, 47

  • Mucous patches, 38, 42

    • cancer following, 138

    • effect of salvarsan on, 74

      • of tobacco in predisposing to, 43, 112

    • susceptibility of prostitutes to, 136

  • National Board of Health, need for, 167

  • Neck, enlargement of glands in, 33, 34

  • Neosalvarsan, 75

  • Nervous strain, effect of, on syphilis, 137

    • system, complications, relation of, to mild secondary syphilis, 45, 46

      • examination of, in determining cure of syphilis, 90

      • relapses, 43

      • Spirochæta pallida in, 39

  • New York City, clinics and dispensaries in, 170

    • reporting of syphilis in, 178

  • Noguchi, 48

    • test, luetin, 79

  • Non-genital syphilis, estimate of percentage of, 119

    • in lax individuals, 133, 134

  • Notification of venereal disease. See reporting

  • Nurse, accidental infection of, with syphilis, 116

    • wet, syphilis in, 100

  • Nursing mothers, syphilitic germs in milk of, 39

    • of syphilitic child by mother, 101

  • Ohio, law permitting physician to prevent marriage of contagious syphilitic person, 131

  • Overwork, effect of, on syphilitics, 137

  • Papee's study of prostitution in Lemberg, 134

  • Paralysis, general, danger to others in, 49, 50

    • estimated frequency of, 51

    • mental symptoms in, 49

    • of insane, 48

    • syphilitic germs in brain in, 49

    • treatment and prevention of, 52

  • Paresis, 48. See also paralysis, general

  • Paris, increase of syphilis in, during war, 183

  • Physician, accidental infection of, with syphilis, 116

    • coöperation of, in educating syphilitic, 148

    • importance of informing, in regard to syphilis, 105, 140

    • [Pg 196]inability of, to prevent marriage of persons with syphilis, 131

  • Physician proper person to administer Metchnikoff prophylaxis, 163

  • Piles, contagious sores mistaken for, 43

  • Pills, ineffectiveness of, in treating syphilis, 65

    • mercury, 65

  • Pinkus' estimate of syphilis in Germany, 25

  • Pontopidan's estimate of number of hospitals needed for venereal diseases, 171

  • Population, civil, syphilis in, 183

    • general, prevention of venereal disease in, during war time, 184

  • Potash, iodid of, 69

  • Pregnancy, syphilis acquired during, 94

    • treatment of mother during, 97

  • Prevalence of gonorrhea, estimates of, 26

    • of syphilis, estimates of, 24, 25

  • Prevention of locomotor ataxia and general paralysis, 52

    • of syphilis. See prophylaxis

  • Primary lesion. See chancre

    • stage. See also chancre

      • contagiousness of syphilis in, 109

      • cure of syphilis in, 85

  • Prohibition, national, importance of, in controlling venereal disease, 184

  • Prophylaxis, educational, 157

    • state provision for, 168

    • Metchnikoff, 162

      • utilization of, in public campaign, 177

    • moral, of syphilis, 156

  • Prophylaxis, personal, of syphilis, continence in, 161

    • general instruction in, 169

    • in army and navy, 162

    • physician proper person to administer, 163

    • unsatisfactory features of, 162

  • Prostitutes in Baltimore, gonorrhea in, 134

    • medical examination of, 135

    • syphilis in, 134

  • Prostitution, abolition or repression of, 156, 157

    • and syphilis, 18, 133

    • clandestine, risks of, 136

    • effects of liquor traffic on, 184

    • regulation of, 156

  • Psoriasis, confusion of, with syphilitic eruptions, 37

  • Public Health, syphilis as problem of, 18

    • Service, United States, estimates of prevalence of syphilis, 24

    • opinion about syphilis, 141

    • sentiment and reporting of syphilis to health officers, 178

  • Publicity, campaign for, 176

  • Quacks, suppression of, 168, 174

    • treatment of syphilitics by, 140

  • Quarantine and freak legislation, 167

    • compulsory, for irresponsible syphilitics, 153

    • limitations of, in controlling spread of syphilis, 121

    • temporary, for syphilis, in hospitals, 172

  • [Pg 197]Quiescent period following entry of germ, 28

  • Railroad men, locomotor ataxia and general paralysis in, 50

  • Rash. See eruption

  • Recurrences, contagiousness of, 111

    • estimated frequency of, in secondary syphilis, 125

    • in secondary stage, 42, 43

  • Re-infection with syphilis, 139

  • Relapses, contagious, in syphilis, 42

    • frequency of, in secondary stage, 125

    • in nervous system, 43

  • Reporting of syphilis, attitude of various countries on, 179

    • to health officers, 178

  • Resistance of body to syphilis, 29, 107, 112

  • Rest, need of, in syphilis, 137

  • Restaurants, risk of transmitting syphilis under conditions found in, 115

  • Rheumatism, symptoms resembling, in secondary syphilis, 36

  • Ricord, founder of modern syphilology, 13

  • Rub, mercurial. See inunction

  • Rule, five-year, 124, 126, 129

    • for marriage of syphilitics. See marriage

    • for personal hygiene of syphilitics, 136

    • governing miscarriage and abortion due to syphilis, 96

    • sexual relations in syphilitics, 138

    • variations on, in hereditary syphilis, 96

  • Saliva, syphilitic germs in, 38

  • Salvarsan, accidents due to, 78

    • action of, in syphilis, 73

    • and abortive cure, 73, 79, 89

    • and mercury, comparative value of, 68, 89

      • in pregnancy, 97

    • animal tests on, 71

    • arsenic in, 71

    • as a social asset, 78

    • cheap, vital importance of, 172

    • combination of arsenic and dye, 70, 71

    • correct administration of, 77

    • discovery of, 70

    • effect of first dose, 78

      • of insufficient treatment with, 76

      • on mucous patches, 74

    • expense of treatment with, 76

    • importance of, in controlling contagiousness of syphilis, 73, 74, 122

    • in treatment, 89

    • in control of syphilis in prostitutes, 157

    • methods of giving, 75

    • misconceptions regarding cure by single dose, 72

    • need for governmental control, 77

    • patent rights on, 172

    • preliminary tests of, on man, 71, 72

    • price of, 172

    • repeated doses, 76

    • use of, does not justify relaxation of rules for marriage, 127

    • value of, in syphilis, 73

  • [Pg 198]Scandinavian countries, compulsory treatment of venereal disease in, 180

    • free treatment of venereal diseases in, 169

    • provision for reporting venereal disease in, 179

  • Scars following gummatous changes, 46

  • Schaudinn and Hoffmann, 14, 22

  • School-hospitals for hereditary syphilis, 108

  • Secondary stage of syphilis, 35

    • contagious relapses in, 42

    • contagiousness in, 110

    • cure in, 86

    • eye trouble in, 36

    • headaches in, 36

    • loss of weight in, 36

    • problems of, 42

    • rash (eruption) in, 36

    • rheumatic pains in, 36

    • severe, 36

    • spontaneous disappearance of symptoms, 39

    • time required for cure, 88

  • Secrecy, professional, right of syphilitics, 139

    • right of syphilitic, in connection with reporting of disease, 178

  • Self-control. See sexual self-control

  • Self-deception in regard to risk of infection, 161

  • Self-treatment in syphilis, 140

  • Semen, Spirochæta pallida in, 39

  • Sexual characteristics of syphilitic children, 102

    • morality, development of, 145

    • relations, abstinence from, economic influences opposing, 158

    • of syphilitics, rules governing, 129, 138

  • Sexual relations, transmission of syphilis by, 117

    • self-control, economic forces opposing, 157

    • teaching of, 159

    • transmission of syphilis, question of guilt or innocence, 118

  • Silverware, transmission of syphilis by, 115

  • Single dose cure of syphilis with salvarsan, 72

  • "606." See salvarsan

  • Skin, recurrences of secondary eruption in, 43

    • unbroken, importance of, in preventing contagiousness of eruptions, 38

  • Sleeping sickness, 70

  • Smoker's patches, 138

  • Smoking (tobacco) in syphilis, 138

  • Snuffles in hereditary syphilis, 100

  • Social evil and syphilis, 165. See also prostitution

    • problem of syphilis, 15

  • Soft ulcer or sore, 16. See also chancroid

  • Soldiers, syphilis and gonorrhea among, in present war, 183

  • Sore throat in secondary syphilis, 38

  • Sores, contagious, effect of salvarsan on, 74

    •  

      • in prostitutes, 136

      • in syphilis, 38

      • transitory character of, 123

    • contagiousness of moist, 27, 38, 110

    • on nipples in wet nurses, 101

    • primary. See chancre

    • [Pg 199]soft, 16. See also chancroid

    • tertiary. See syphilis, late, gumma

  • Sperk's estimate of frequency of relapse in secondary stage, 125

  • Spirochæta pallida, 27

    • average life of, on objects outside body, 113

    • destruction of, in body, 39

    • discovery of, 14, 22

    • distribution of, in internal organs, 39

    • effect of antiseptics on, 27

      • of drying on, 27

      • of salvarsan on, 74

    • growth of, 27

    • in brain, in general paralysis of insane, 48

    • in hereditary syphilitic children, 99

    • in late syphilis, 45

    • in lymph-glands, 34

    • in secondary syphilitic eruptions, 38

    • in spinal cord, in locomotor ataxia, 49

    • invasion of body by, in secondary stage, 35

    • low vitality of, 27

    • mode of entry into body, 28

    • sensitizing of body to, 39

    • strains or type of, 40

    • variations in behavior of, in different persons, 40

  • Spleen, Spirochæta pallida in, 39

  • Stage of syphilis, relation of, to curability, 82

    • secondary, of syphilis, 35. See also secondary stage; secondary syphilis; contagiousness; transmission; and Spirochæta pallida

  • Stage, tertiary, of syphilis, 45. See also syphilis, late

  • State, encouragement of early marriage by, 159

    • provision of, for recognition and treatment of syphilis, 168

  • Stigma attaching to syphilis, harm done by, 143

    • of syphilis, effect of, on venereal hospitals, 167

  • Still birth, relation of syphilis to, 96

  • Still's statistics on death from hereditary syphilis, 98

  • Stomach in locomotor ataxia, 49

  • Sweat-glands, absence of Spirochæta pallida in, 39

  • Sydenham Royal Commission, 164

    • views on reporting of venereal disease, 179

  • Symptomatic cure in late syphilis, 87

  • Symptoms, absence of, in syphilis, 23

    • constitutional, of secondary syphilis, 36

  • Syphilis, absence of immunity in, 139

    • accidental, in physicians and nurses, 116

    • acquired, in children, 95

      • in marriage, 119

    • action of mercury in, 63

      • of salvarsan in, 74

    • active, relation of, to miscarriages and abortion, 96

    • adequate dispensary service for treating, 171

    • ageing effect of, in child, 99

    • and civil population, 183

    • [Pg 200]and engagements to marry, 129

  • Syphilis and marriage, 125

    • and mental disease, 50

    • and prostitution, 18, 133

    • and public prejudice, 141

    • and sexual problems, 18

    • and war, 183

    • as cause of death in children, 98

      • of miscarriages and abortion in women, 95

    • as public health problem, 18

    • as social problem, 15

    • blood test for, 54

    • broader outlook concerning, 146

    • comparison of, with malaria, 62

    • compulsory treatment of, 180

    • concealed forms of, 23

    • concealment of, by gonorrhea, 30

    • confusion of, with gonorrhea, 13, 16, 31

    • problem of, with various issues, 16, 17, 165

    • congenital, 94. See also syphilis, non-hereditary

    • constitutional symptoms of, 36

    • contagiousness of, in secondary stage, 110

    • course of, summary, 52

    • cure of, 90

    • danger from irresponsible persons infected with, 150

    • deaths from, 48

    • definition of, 21

    • diminishing virulence of, 12

    • early, methods of recognizing, 32

    • educational prophylaxis of, 157

    • epidemic of, in sixteenth century, 11

    • eruption in secondary stage, 36

    • essentials of campaign against, 168

    • false silence in regard to, 15

    • five-year rule regarding contagiousness, 124, 126, 129

    • freak legislation in regard to, 166

    • guilt or innocence in transmission, 118

    • harm done by stigma attaching to, 143

    • hereditary, 92

      • accident and injury in, 105

      • contagiousness of, 100, 105

      • destructive changes in, 101, 102

      • early signs of, in children, 99, 100

      • late signs of, 101

      • mental symptoms in, 101

      • of eye, 103

      • treatment of, 107

    • history of, 11

    • importance of prohibition in controlling, 184

    • important advances in knowledge of, 17

    • in adopted children, 106

    • in British working men, 24

    • in families, detection of, by Wassermann test, 128

    • in father or mother of family, 92, 93, 126

    • in men who have only had gonorrhea, 31

    • in prostitutes, 134

    • in United States, estimates of, 26

    • in wet nurses, 100, 101

    • inability of physician to prevent marriage of persons with, 131

    • incomplete cure of, 82

    • influence of, on progress of mediæval medicine, 13

    • innocent, in fiancée, 129

    • late, attributable to insufficient salvarsan treatment, 73

      • curability of, 86

      • destructive effect of, 47

      • in nervous system, 48

      • most serious forms of, 47

      • seriousness of, 45

      • tissue changes in (gumma), 46

    • measure to prevent spread of, from army to general population, 183

    • medical examination for, as means of detecting contagiousness, 123

      • of prostitutes for, 135

    • mental attitudes in relation to, 141

    • Metchnikoff prophylaxis of, 162

    • mild, dangers of, 41

      • relation to complications in nervous system, 45

    • mistaken conceptions of, 13

    • moral prophylaxis of, 156

    • morbid fear of, 154

    • non-genital, 28

      • or extra-genital, 119

    • obstacles to control of contagiousness of, 123

      • to social control of, 141

    • passive, transmission of, by prostitutes, 135

    • personal hygiene of, 136

    • prevalence of, 23

      • in lax individuals, 133

    • prevention of, by sexual self-control, 159

    • public attitude toward, 141

    • quacks and self-treatment in, 140

    • radical or complete cure, 80

    • reinfection with, 139

    • relation of mouth and tongue cancers to, 138

    • reporting of, to health officer, 178

    • risk of acquiring, from prostitutes, 136

      • of infecting wife with, 125

    • secondary, cure of, 86

      • time required for cure of, 86

    • sexual transmission of, 117

    • stages of, 26

    • state provision for treatment of, in Denmark, Norway, Italy, England, Germany, West Australia, 168, 169

    • tertiary, 45

    • transmission and hygiene of, 109

      • by kissing, 116

      • to and by wet nurse, 100, 101

    • treatment of, 60

      • at Hot Springs, 140

      • with salvarsan, 75

    • unnoticed manifestations of, 41

    • variations in course of, in different persons, 41

    • Wassermann test for, 54

    • world movement against, 164

  • Syphilitic, average type of, 148

    • child, nursing of, by mother, 101

    • ideal conscientious type of, 147

    • irresponsible types of, 151

    • morbid mental states, 153

    • personal hygiene of, 136

    • should tell physician he has disease, 140

    • rule governing care of personal articles used by, 139

    • rules governing kissing in, 138

    • [Pg 202]sexual relations in, 138

    • well-regulated life for, 137

  • Syphilophobia, 153

  • Tabes dorsalis, 48. See also locomotor ataxia

  • Taboparesis, 50

  • Teeth, effect of mercury on, 63, 67

    • (Hutchinson's), in hereditary syphilis, 102

  • Tertiary stage, 45

  • Test for syphilis in blood, 54. See also Wassermann test

    • Noguchi, luetin, 79

  • Throat, contagious sores in, 38

  • Time treatment principle in relation to marriage, 124, 126, 129

  • Tobacco, effect of, in syphilis, 43, 112, 138

  • Toilet seats not means of transmitting syphilis, 114

    • transmission of gonorrhea by, 114

  • Tongue and tonsils, contagious sores on, 42

    • cancer of, following contagious mucous patches, 138

  • Towels, transmission of syphilis by, 113, 115

  • Transmission of syphilis by dishes, etc., effect of washing and disinfection on, 114

    • by infected articles, 113

    • by kissing, 116

    • by sexual contact, 117

    • effect of treatment on risk of, 124

    • from father to mother, 93

    • from mother to child, 92

    • increased risk of, in tobacco users, 138

    • medical examination in prevention of, 123

    • not by door-knobs, bath-tubs, or toilet seats, 114

    • passive, by prostitutes, 135

    • personal responsibility in, 124 to wife, 125

    • under conditions of crowding and bad sanitation, 115

      • of everyday life, 114

    • unlikely in marriage of hereditary syphilitics, 105

  • Treatment, intraspinal, in syphilis of nervous system, 79

    • lack of effect of, on deafness in hereditary syphilis, 104

    • obstacles to control of contagiousness of syphilis, 123

    • of chancre may prevent recognition, 32>

    • of syphilis, 60

      • advertising in regard to, 176

      • backwardness of this country in public provision for, 170

      • by drug clerks, 175

      • by quacks, 140

      • compulsory, 180

      • control of contagiousness, 122, 124, 126

      • dispensary service necessary for, 171

      • efficient, 88

      • expense of, 76, 173

      • expert advice in, 174

      • hospitals in, 171

      • importance of salvarsan in, 89

      • in pay-patient clinics and hospitals, 173

      • [Pg 203]necessity for cheap salvarsan in, 172

      • various state provisions for, 168, 169

      • Wassermann test in, 57

      • with salvarsan and mercury combined, 89

    • specific methods of, 60

  • Troops, syphilis and gonorrhea in, 182

  • United States. See America

  • Vedder's estimate of prevalence of syphilis, 25

  • Venereal disease, 16

    •  

      • and marriage, annulment of, 132

      • effect of universal military service on, 184

      • European and American provision in regard to care of, 169, 170

      • importance of national prohibition in controlling, 184

      • proposed military measures in connection with, 183

      • relation of war to spread of, 182

      • world-wide movement against, 164

    • hospitals and freak legislation, 167

  • Vermont, reporting of syphilis in, 178

  • Vice Commission, Baltimore, syphilis in prostitutes, 134

  • Virulence of syphilis in 15th and 16th centuries, 12

  • Vomiting in locomotor ataxia, 49

  • War, control of venereal diseases during, 183, 184

  • War, relation of, to spread of venereal disease, 182

  • Warts, contagious syphilitic, 42

  • Washing, effect of, on transmission of syphilis by dishes, 114

  • Wassermann test, 54

    • as evidence of fitness to marry, 130

    • difficulties of, 55

    • effect of mercury on, 67

      • of treatment on, 58

    • factor of error in, 56

    • importance of expert performance of, 174

      • to pregnant mother, 97

    • in connection with adoption of children, 106

    • in determining cure of syphilis, 58, 90

    • in family where one member is syphilitic, 128

    • in freak legislation, 167

    • in late hereditary syphilis, 106

    • in syphilitic mothers, 93

    • negative, development of infectious sores in spite of, 123

      • meaning of, 56

    • on spinal fluid, 59

    • persistently positive, 58

    • positive, meaning of, 56

    • practical details concerning, 59

    • provocative, 130

    • use of, in recognizing early syphilis, 33

  • Weight, loss of, in secondary recurrences, 43

    • in secondary syphilis, 36

  • [Pg 204]Welander homes for hereditary syphilis, 108

  • West Australia, action of, against drug stores prescribing for syphilis, 176

    • attitude of, on personal Metchnikoff prophylaxis, 177

    • compulsory treatment of syphilis in, 180

    • state provision of, for treatment of venereal diseases, 170

  • Wet nurses, syphilis in, 100

  • Wife, importance of cure for, 128

    • infection of, by husband during pregnancy, 94

    • risk of infecting, 125

  • Williams, syphilis and mental diseases, statistics on, 50

  • Womb, chancre on neck of, 30

  • Women, child-bearing, effect of syphilis on, 95

    • employment of, in connection with problem of controlling venereal diseases in war times, 184

    • miscarriages and abortions in, due to syphilis, 95

    • syphilis in lax, 133

  • Worry and anxiety, effect of, on syphilitic, 137


 

 

 

Transcriber's Note:The following variably hyphenated words have been left as in the text.

Everyday

Every-day

everyday

every-day

extragenital

extra-genital

lifelong

life-long

lifetime

life-time

makeup

make-up

newborn

new-born

Two extra entries ("Preface" and "Contents") have been added to the Table of Contents.

A List of Illustrations hyperlinked to the appropriate pages has been added.

End of Project Gutenberg's The Third Great Plague, by John H. Stokes

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