Hutchinson's triad
Hutchinson's triad is named after Sir Jonathan Hutchinson (1828–1913). It is a common pattern of presentation for congenital syphilis, and consists of three phenomena: interstitial keratitis, Hutchinson incisors, and eighth nerve deafness.[1]
References
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| Bacterial disease | |
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| Viral disease | |
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| Parasitic disease | |
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| Description | |
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| Disease |
- Gram-positive firmicutes
- Gram-positive actinobacteria
- Gram-negative proteobacteria
- Gram-negative non-proteobacteria
- Cholera
- Tuberculosis
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| Treatment |
- Antibiotics
- cell wall
- nucleic acid
- mycobacteria
- protein synthesis
- other
- Antibodies
- Vaccines
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| Description | |
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| Disease |
- Systemic
- Cutaneous
- Zoster
- Human papillomavirus
- Zoonotic
- Symptoms and signs
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| Treatment | |
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| Description |
- Alveolata
- Amoebozoa
- Excavata
- Protist
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| Disease |
- Amoebozoa
- Chromalveolate
- Excavata
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| Treatment |
- Drugs
- amoeboa
- chromalveolate
- excavata
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