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  Vol. 31 No. 1, January 1940 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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ARGYRIA RESULTING FROM INTRANASAL MEDICATION

A CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDY

BEN L. BRYANT, M.D.

Arch Otolaryngol. 1940;31(1):127-139.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Despite the warnings that have appeared occasionally in the literature, many otolaryngologists still deny the danger of the production of generalized argyria from the use of silver-containing intranasal medication. This heedless attitude is abetted by the advertisements of certain manufacturers of such medications. One of them states quite consistently in the advertising pages of medical publications that the solution is "non-toxic, definitely bacteriostatic, and above all, it is markedly soothing to inflamed tissues."

The physician who has seen even a single victim of full-blown argyrosis, with its typical generalized pigmentation of the skin, giving the patient a bronzed blue or slate color which has been described aptly as the appearance of a corpse suddenly come to life, must necessarily have been impressed with the importance of preventing such a condition. Prevention is actually the only treatment, for, although Stillians1 and others have shown that by painstaking and multitudinous injections of . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

LOS ANGELES

From the Otolaryngological Research Department of the Good Hope Clinic.


Footnotes

The experimental work embodied in this article was aided by a grant from the Good Hope Foundation Fund.

Read before the Section on Laryngology, Otology and Rhinology at the Ninetieth Annual Session of the American Medical Association, St. Louis, May 17, 1939.



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