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Am. J. Trop. Med., s1-1(2), 1921, pp. 109-118
Copyright © 1921 by American Journal of Tropical Medicine

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Hymenolepis Nana; Possible Cercocystis Stage1

Alfred Goldman2
From the Medical Clinic of Barnes Hospital, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis

1. A review of the literature shows that the dwarf tapeworm is the most common tapeworm in many parts of the United States.
2. The first cases of Hymenolepis nana from St. Louis are reported.
3. A possible cercocyst stage of Hymenolepis nana is demonstrated in man.


1 Reprinted from the Archives of Internal Medicine, September, 1920, 26, 373–380.


2 This paper was read in abstract by Dr. George Dock at the meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine, held at New Orleans, April 27, 1920. In the discussion that followed it was shown that Tenia saginata is much less common in some places than it was about thirty years ago.







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Copyright © 1921 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.