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Læknablaðið - 01.12.1978, Blaðsíða 75

Læknablaðið - 01.12.1978, Blaðsíða 75
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 205 I have seen and possibly Horders, with an injury when handlin.g Hodgkin’s tissue in at least three of these and in two possibly three a rapid and fatal outcome. We might be impressed by these cases, as Uddstromer was, were it not that my second case turned out to be not Hodgkins Disease at all but Acute Histiocytosis or the Histio- cytic HVIedullary Reticulosis of Robb Smith,40 a condition only recognised subse- quent to the publications of the cases of Sisto and Horder which were also acute. The situation is most unsatisfactory but it raises the question at to wheter other Hodgkins Diseases or Histiocytic medullary reticulosis are infectious diseases or even could the latter be the acute form of Hodgkins Disease. This is not an impossible suggestion. The whole question of the infectivity of Hodgkin’s Disease bristles with such un- certainties. We have the question of its possible relationship to infectious mono- nucleosis41 though whether the Epstein- Barr virus is involved in this is question- able24 but now it has been shown that there are sub-types of EBV,:n and that in families with immunologic defects infec- tion with the EBV can produce very dif- ferent effects28 this question is still an open one. It still is true that every attempt to demonstrate that Hodgkins Disease is an infectious disease by the laboratory iso- lation of an infective agent has been fruit less.10 It has, however, been equally fruit- less to find positive evidence that it is a neoplasm. Thus, the question as to its nature re- mains open and much opinion still leans to the belief that the disease, at least in young people may be of infective etio- logy.lð It is argued that perhaps poliomye- litis may be a model15 but in this disease it is easily possible to find non-laboratory evidence that the disease behaves as do infectious diseases. In both poliomyelitis and Hodgkin’s Disease the risk increases with higher social class and small families. As long as the nature of Hodgkins Disease is uncertain no one can possibly predict what items of evidence may be important in the final solution. This then is the challenge the disease, as so many other unsolved disease problems poses. These questions are not to be answered by national statistics, mass figures and sur- veys, but by careful probing into the lives of patients who develop Hodgkins Disease, and of their families, relatives, friends and social acquaintances in school, factory, leisure resorts and so on. These enquiries can only be made with the full cooperation of the public, always in our experience, most generously given when its purpose is understood. Indeed when we first reported the Albany epidemic we were deluged with requests from the public to investigate local outbreaks of the disease which had convinced our correspondents of its infective nature;65 some of these out- breaks were very extensive. Our long negative experiences suggest that we may have been looking for an agent in the wrong place, at the wrong time or with the wrong methods, perhaps as Dörkens work11 suggests we should look at animal exposure, perhaps as in some virus disease when the glands enlarge the agent has gone,57 perhaps we should scru- tinise the contacts more closely. Perhaps we should pay more attention to age and sex differences, in affluent and non-affluent circumstances, pay attention to the poten- tial role of hormones, genetic influences, shemical exposures. The scope is immense, the opportunities great and can as likely be followed in an isolated area as in a crowded city. Among the qualities wanted are enthusiasm, scepticism, sympathy and kindness and good humour and the willing- ness to probe deeply in this newer epi- demiology of cancer. I do not know if Hodgkins Disease is infectious but I did recognise on the three occasions I met Niels Dungal that there were things about him that were infectious, his enthusiasm, his kindness, which I personally experienced, and his happy robust laughter. Our gropings would elicit his good humored laughter, and his en- couragement, his enthusiasm, the spur to fresh endeavours, and his kindness and sympathy set the atmosphere four our
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