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  2. Jan 24, 2023 · The first notable description of what might have been scarlet fever was documented by the Sicilian physician Giovanni Filippo Ingrassia in 1553.

  3. The first unequivocal description of scarlet fever appeared in a book by Joannes Coyttarus of Poitiers, De febre purpura epidemiale et contagiosa libri duo, which was published in 1578 in Paris. Daniel Sennert of Wittenberg described the classical 'scarlatinal desquamation' in 1572 and was also the first to describe the early arthritis ...

  4. The term “scarlet fever” was supposedly first used by Thomas Sydenham in 1683, but it appeared in a diary of Samuel Pepys in an entry for November 10, 1664. From the seventeenth to the early twentieth century, the word scarlatina was popularly used to denote a mild form of the disease. Distribution and Incidence.

  5. May 17, 2024 · George Frederick Dick. Related Topics: rheumatic fever. fever. bacterial disease. Dick test. On the Web: Johns Hopkins Medicine - Health Encyclopedia - Scarlet Fever in Children (May 17, 2024) scarlet fever, acute infectious disease caused by group A hemolytic streptococcal bacteria, in particular Streptococcus pyogenes.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Aug 12, 2009 · Streptococci bacteria were probably first isolated by the Viennese surgeon Theodor Billroth in 1874, but the association of hemolytic streptococci with scarlet fever was not demonstrated until 1884, and the specifics not outlined until 1924 by George and Gladys Dick (Dowling 1977).

    • Alan C. Swedlund, Alison K. Donta
    • 2002
  7. Apr 30, 2024 · The common symptoms of scarlet fever can include: Fever. A very red sore throat. A red and bumpy “strawberry” tongue. Swollen lymph nodes in the front of your neck. On lighter skin, a red rash ...

  8. Scarlet fever was one of the first diseases to have an active preventive policy directed against it, and for some late nineteenth-century observers it came to represent a great triumph of preventive medicine. At the mid-century it accounted for some 10,000 deaths per annum in England and Wales.

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