In the last days of the 1400s, a terrible epidemic swept through Europe. Men and women spiked sudden fevers. Their joints ached, and they broke out in rashes that ripened into bursting boils. Ulcers ...
Ancient skeleton evidence suggests congenital infection doesn’t prove syphilis, pointing instead to multiple treponemal ...
In the last days of the 1400s, a terrible epidemic swept through Europe. Men and women spiked sudden fevers. Their joints ached, and they broke out in rashes that ripened into bursting boils. Ulcers ...
Humans have suffered from infectious diseases for as long as civilization has existed, and new research has provided insight into the origins of syphilis, one of the most well-known STDs. The ...
A 5,500-year-old skeleton from the Americas has yielded the oldest genetic evidence yet of a bacterium closely related to the one that causes syphilis, forcing researchers to rethink when and where ...
Read before the Section for Clinical Medicine, Pathology, and Hygiene, of the Suffolk District Medical Society, Oct. 10, 1888. Select the format you want to export the citation of this publication.
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