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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1959)
The Medical Roundup by (NVJi Emerltmi Coasnltai jWr '? CI Consultant la Medicine. Clinic Emeritus Professor of Medicine. Hays Cttata FT Km LAi Black Moles and Their Dangers Dr. George D. Pack, one of the world's experts on tumors tells of studying 1,000 adult patients who had come to a diagnostic clinic with no particular con cern about a their skin. The I average one y of the patients f y had 15 moles, k 1 none of which feet or the genitalia. When a study was made of 1,225 pa tients with the black moles, or so-called melanomas, which often cause serious trouble, many were found on the soles of the feet and on the genitals. What this means is- that anvone who has a black mole on his feet or genitals ought: to have it removed. These black moles occur most often on the skin of blonds or per sons with a sandy complexion, red hair, and a tendency to freckles. Dr. Pack and his as-. sociates urge all people of this ; complexion to get their black j moles cut out before they be- j gin to give trouble. They! should be removed, also, from j infants and children. . Some times a pigmented mole will remain quiet for years, and then it will grow bigger and darker, and it may ulcerate a bit or bleed or hurt. This generally means that trouble is starting. Sometimes by then it is too late to get the thing all out. Already it may have scattered through the body. Often the black moles don't show up in child ren until after puberty. For tunately, there are some dark pigmented moles which don't change into cancer, but one cannot always tell them from the other type even with the help of a microscope. Young women, when pregnant can have a bad flare-up of a black mole. At the great Memorial Cancer Center in New York it was found that between the years 1917 and 1945, 21.4 per cent of the patients treated for flare-ups of black moles stayed well. During the last few years the percentage of cures has gone up to 39.1. Snakebiie During my many years " of traveling through the Sierras of California, I was often im pressed with the fact that, al though my companions and I met many a rattlesnake, we rarely had a dangerous brush with one. I once nearly step ped on a big fellow but he rattled and warned me in time. We practically never, heard of or met with anyone who had been bitten or had known personally a person who had been bitten. In all of my many years of medical life I have seen only one man who was bitten by a rattler, and he was a professional rat tlesnake catcher who sold rattlesnake bile to Chinese herb doctors for large sums. He was foolish enough to reach down into a bag to pick out a snake that he had caught. He surely was asking for trouble and he got it. Af ter the bite, he had a nasty black swelling of one of his fingers,,but aside from this he didn't seem to be any the worse for wear. I was just reading an interesting article by Drs. H. M. Parrish and E. B. Pollard, who say that it has been estimated that each year in the United States from 2,000 to 3,000 persons are bit ten by poisonous snakes. That the mortality is not high is shown by the fact that in the period from 1950 to 1954 there were only 71 reported deaths from snake bites. In this country, most of the dan gerous bites are inflicted by the pit vipers, which include the rattlesnake, the moccasin, the copperhead and the cot- tonmouth. Cases Reported The remarkable thing that Drs. Parrish and Pollard have now done is to report the cases of 14 persons who were repeatedly bitten by snakes. One was bitten 12 times, another 10 times, two had six bites, one had five bites, three had four bites, one had three bites and five had two bites! They were all either profes sional herpetologists (students of snakes), or snake-handlers, wild animal dealers, or bio- logists. Usually they got bitten on the fingers or thumbs or forearms or hands or legs. Some of the persons had to have a finger of thumb ampu tated because of the gangrene that followed a severe bite. None of these people appear ed to have become so im munized against snake venom that their second or third bite would do them little harm. In many cases the bite was not severe because the snake was ' small. Usually, there was some shock, nausea, vomiting and giddiness, a little fever, a - rapid, thready pulse, occas ionally unconsciousness and muscular twitching, and then the hand and arm became bad ly swollen. So far as I know, the whiskey usually given has no good effect on persons bit ten by a deadly snake. Mental Patients to Run Own Wing in Hospital In the Coppice Hospital, Nottingham, England, a re markable new experiment is being tried out. A wing .is being added to a mental hos pital - a wing which will be run by the patients! Doctors and nurses will come in only on invitation. Doubtless, the only types of patients admit ted will be those who are well behaved and troubled only by some mental quirk which they still have to get under control before they can safely take their place in the community again. Dr. Alvarez' booklet on heart trouble may be obtained by sending 25 cents and a large, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Dr. Walter C. Al- Six Public Hearings Scheduled Next Month A total of six public hear ings have been called for June meetings of the Medford city council. ' The hearings, based on rec ommendations from the city planning commission, were called at the council meeting Thursday night. A proposed subdivision ord inance is slated for a hearing June 4. Passage of the ordin ance would mark the fulfill- varez, Dept. MMT Register and Tribune Syndicate, Box 957, Des Moines 4, Iowa. (Released by The Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1959) ment of several years' efforts by city officials. Other, hearings called for June 4 concern two zone change requests. One is for a change from single family residential to multiple family to permit erection of a Scot tish Rite consistory at the southeast corner of Crestbrook rd. and Highland dr. The sec ond concerns a change from single family to limited com mercial asked by the Knights of Columbus for a lodge hall on property on Black Oak dr. south of Barnett rd. Two hearings slated for June 18 concern requests on behalf of B. and G. properties, a block of businesses on East Jackson st. near the new Med ford Shopping Center. The lots, currently zoned single family residential, are a non-conforming use. One re quest would change the zone to limited commercial. The Exeter, England-(UPD-At the Devon County pig show Thursday: Two bishops show ed up to hold a special com munion service for herdsmen. No herdsmen came. The pig that won a blue ribbon for Mrs. Diana Suthrell bit her on the hand as she waited to collect "his prize. second concerns - vacation of an alley behind the properties. A third hearing slated June 18 is on a zone change re quest from single family to light industrial by Harold Farr to permit expansion of his Valley Center Trailer court, North Pacific highway, onto a lot in the Valley Cen ter subdivision. Fuscias t African Violets FREELAND'S Tropical Fish 2958 Freeland Read (West End Beall Lane) W. B. Taylor rowed on the MAIL TRIBUNE, Medferd, Or. Harvard crew' in an intercol legiate regatta in 1875 and next day won both the seven mile walk and the three-mile walk. Sunday, May 24, 195 As water changes to team it expands 1,700 times its or iginal volume. CASH DAVIS PHARMACY THE 1?ettOf STORE 135 West Main, corner Grap Ph. 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