The Attempt to Understand Puerperal Fever in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries: The Influence of Inflammation Theory
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Puerperal fever was a devastating disease. It affected women within the first three days after childbirth and progressed rapidly, causing acute symptoms of severe abdominal pain, fever and debility. Although it had been recognized from as early as the time of the Hippocratic corpus that women in childbed were prone to fevers, the distinct name, “puerperal fever” appears in the historical record only in the early eighteenth century.
[1] D. Edinburgh,et al. The Obstetric Memoirs and Contributions of , 1856 .
[2] Puerperal Fever, as a Private Pestilence , 1855, The Buffalo Medical Journal and Monthly Review of Medical and Surgical Science.