![]() |
|
|
1 From the Pharmacological Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University
1. A phyto-pharmacological study of blood specimens from pernicious anemia revealed that the serum in all such cases is very much more toxic than normal human blood serum.
2. Such a toxicity is not shown by blood specimens examined from all other kinds of anemias or diseases of the blood.
3. These observations speak in favor of a toxic etiology for pernicious anemia.
4. The phyto-pharmacological test has been found useful in the differential diagnosis of pernicious anemia.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. I. MACHT DEMONSTRATION OF PEMPHIGUS TOXIN IN FRESH AND IN DRY BLOOD Arch Dermatol, November 1, 1937; 36(5): 1022 - 1032. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. HOLLANDER and R. J. GREB EVALUATION OF THE PHYTOPHARMACOLOGIC TEST OF PELS AND MACHT Arch Dermatol, June 1, 1936; 33(6): 1012 - 1017. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
I. R. PELS and D. I. MACHT PHYTOPHARMACOLOGIC TEST IN DERMATOLOGY: FURTHER STUDIES AND SOME CRITICAL ESTIMATIONS Arch Dermatol, February 1, 1934; 29(2): 206 - 218. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||