A Medical Sketch of the Synchonus Maligna,

Name/Title

A Medical Sketch of the Synchonus Maligna,

Description

Isaac Cathrall: A Medical Sketch of the Synchonus Maligna, or Malignant Contagious Fever as it lately appeared in the City of Philadelphia to which is added, some account of the morbid appearances observed after death, on dissection.” Philadelphia, printed by Thomas Dobson (1794) First edition. In 1794, (Miner 94): Cathrall began experiments on animals that had ingested the black vomit of yellow fever victims, and on himself through subcutaneous injections of blood and vomit. He concluded that this matter is an "inert secretion" of the disease having no morbific power. At the same time, however, Cathrall maintained that yellow fever is contagious: through personal contact, through the medium of air surrounding the victim, and through contact with objects that have absorbed the unspecified contagious matter.