[Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine by George M. Gould]@TWC D-Link book
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine

CHAPTER XIII
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Koehler reports a fatal instance of gangrene of the penis, caused by a prostatic abscess following gonorrhea.

In this case there was thrombosis of the pelvic veins.

Hutchinson mentions a man who, thirty years before, after six days' exposure on a raft, had lost both legs by gangrene.

At the age of sixty-six he was confined to bed by subacute bronchitis, and during this period his whole penis became gangrenous and sloughed off.

This is quite unusual, as gangrene is usually associated with fever; it is more than likely that the gangrene of the leg was not connected with that of the penis, but that the latter was a distinct after-result.


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