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Excerpt from The Pituitary Body and Its Disorders: Clinical States Produced by Disorders of the Hypophysis Cerebri The results of some clinical studies made upon a series of 20 patients with hypophyseal disease observed before December of 1910 were at that time used as the basis of an address in the Harvey Lecture series before the New York Academy of Medicine. About an equal number of cases have come under observation during the succeeding nine months, so that it has become possible to fill in some obvious gaps in the original series with certain clinical types of which we then had no satisfactory examples. Consequently these additional case reports - recognizable by the fact that the dates of admission to the hospital read subsequent to the time of the address - have been used in this amplification of the original manuscript. Unfortunately, while acquiring its adolescence the manuscript has so far outgrown its clothes as to preclude the possibility of its incorporation in the annual volume containing the years lectures, where a fragment only of the text will have appeared. During the present year, moreover, studies in conjunction with Drs. Goetsch and Jacobson on the carbohydrate metabolism of patients with hypophyseal disease have reached a point at which they can be used as a further aid in the recognition of certain of the more obscure constitutional states consequent upon glandular insufficiency. The results of these studies, which have also been incorporated, serve to support the views advanced at the time of the lecture regarding hypopituitarism and its relative frequency in many intracranial diseases. We are unquestionably approaching a stage in our knowledge when the classification or grouping of the cases, here employed as a provisional basis for clinical use, will no longer be necessary. However, it may temporarily serve others, as it has served us, and some one, it is to be hoped, will provide a more useful subdivision, if any subdivision at all is necessary. The rapid increase in the number of individuals suffering from grades of dyspituitarism which are observed and correctly diagnosed by physicians throughout the country convinces me more strongly than ever of the truth of the statement made some years ago, that there is every reason to believe that cases of clinically recognizable pituitary disease are at least as common as are cases of cHnically recognizable thyroid disease. And despite the wide publicity among the profession of matters relating to dysthyroidism, it is unquestionable that in only a small proportion of the individuals afflicted with low grade functional disorders of the thyroid is the nature of the malady appreciated. How much more this is true of pituitary body disorders needs no comment. There are few subjects in medicine which promise a wider overlap upon the fields of many special workers than this one of hypophyseal disease. From the frequent direct implication of the optic nerves by the glandular enlargement the ophthalmologist has often been the first to recognize these maladies. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.