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HYPERGLYCEMIA:  ITS THERAPEUTIC APPLICATION IN CERTAIN DERMATOSES

I. L. McGLASSON, M.D.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1926;13(3):338-343. doi:10.1001/archderm.1926.02370150040004.
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Two years ago I read a paper entitled "Hyperglycemia As an Etiological Factor in Certain Dermatoses."1 Two years seem sufficient time to justify various conclusions which I shall now present. In my former paper, I showed elaborate and extensive tables of blood sugar findings. There has been no material change in our findings, as they were outlined previously.

REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE  There is a great volume of literature on the sugar content of the blood, but practically all of it is in relation to one disease, diabetes, and little effort has been made to show its relation to diseases of the skin. Diabetic dermatoses are recognized, but they were well known preceding the period of the general use of blood chemistry. A vast amount of work in blood chemistry has recently been done. Schamberg has probably contributed as much on the subject as any one else. Highman, Schwartz

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