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Article
January 1953

RECURRENT HERPES SIMPLEX INFECTIONS OF UPPER EXTREMITIES WITH LYMPHANGITIS: Report of Three Cases with Virus Studies in Two

Author Affiliations

MEDICAL CORPS, ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES; ARLINGTON, VA.

From the Dermatology and Syphilology Section, Walter Reed Army Hospital, Washington, D. C. (Lieutenant Colonel William N. Piper, Medical Corps, Army of the United States, Chief of Section), and the Department of Dermatology and Syphilology, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, D. C.

AMA Arch Derm Syphilol. 1953;67(1):37-41. doi:10.1001/archderm.1953.01540010041005
Abstract

THE PROTEAN nature of infections due to the virus of herpes simplex has been repeatedly emphasized, and unusual clinical manifestations caused by this virus are being recorded with increasing frequency.1 Herpes simplex infections occurring on the fingers or forearms, however, have been described only rarely, and their association with lymphangitis is even more unusal.2 Furthermore, actual identification of the virus has been accomplished only in occasional instances.

It is the purpose of this paper to report on two patients with recurrent herpes simplex infections on the fingers and one patient with recurrent herpes simplex infection on the forearm, in which lymphangitis was a prominent feature. Herpes simplex virus was isolated and identified from two of these patients. Virus studies were not attempted in the third case.

METHODS OF VIRUS ISOLATION AND IDENTIFICATION

The method followed in these cases for the identification of herpes simplex virus has been

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