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Very few, if any, patients in our experience have exhibited sequelæ due to disease of the cardio-vascular or genito-urinary systems. It may be that these will appear later when the more remote effects of an acute infection are recorded.

A very commonplace sequel, but of more or less interest, is the tendency to furunculosis. Our attention was particularly called to the associated hyperglycæmia. The blood sugar readings varied from 0.2 to 0.41. There was no glycosuria, acetone or diacetic acid. We have no explanation to offer for this, although one might dilate readily on many attractive theories. The hyperglycæmia, one may add, was readily reduced by a lowered carbohydrate intake, which also had a curative action on the furunculosis.

Finally we would mention the peculiar epidemic which has been observed apparently over the world, encephalitis lethargica. We do not for a moment put ourselves on record as regarding this disease as a post-influenzal affair, but no one will deny that it has a peculiar time relation to the epidemic; and further, that its distribution is apparently identical. Its bacteriology seems to be unknown. Its local pathology in the mid-brain is not peculiar or at variance with encephalitis produced by known organisms. We have seen five cases; three of whom had had undoubted influenza, while the other two were entirely free from even the slightest suggestion of any type of illness previous to the attack. All of these cases recovered. It has been stated that following the 1890 epidemic a clinical condition was observed in Europe which bears a close resemblance to what has been termed at the present time encephalitis lethargica.

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