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AN ACNEFORM DERMATERGOSIS

JACK W. JONES, M.D.; HERBERT S. ALDEN, M.D.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1936;33(6):1022-1034. doi:10.1001/archderm.1936.01470120073010.
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It is only within comparatively recent times that the dermatologist has interested himself in dermatoses associated with or caused by the daily work. With the advent of a more clearly defined appraisal of the words eczema and dermatitis and the more general use of the patch test, dermatologists have necessarily inquired more and more deeply into the innumerable chemical contacts that occur in the day by day lives of their patients. As well as being conversant with dermatology, the dermatologist must have a working knowledge of the manufacture and content of the many new and old compounds that are handled and applied by large numbers of persons. Hence, more and more dermatologists are becoming industrially minded, and it is dawning on them that the solution of some of their industrial difficulties may aid them in a clearer conception of the dermatoses that are encountered in their every-day

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