Sleeping sickness: being an account of the investigations of the Commission of the Royal Society in Uganda, the Nile Valley and Sudan, from May 1903 to February 1905
dc.contributor.author
Greig, Edward David Wilson
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dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T12:39:05Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-22T12:39:05Z
dc.date.issued
1905
dc.description.abstract
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dc.description.abstract
I was directed by the Government of India in
April 1903 to proceed to Uganda to investigate Sleeping Sickness on their behalf, in order to obtain exact
information regarding it, so that measures might be
taken to prevent it's gaining an entrance into India.
A Commission had just been appointed by the Royal
Society for this purpose. The Government of India,
through the Secretary of State, asked permission from
the Royal Society for me to join the Commission as
their Representative. This sanction was given, and I
met the Commission in Uganda on 25th May 1903. The
Commission was composed of Col David Bruce F.R.S. Dr
Nabarro and Myself. We worked together until Aug 1903,
when Col Bruce left for England. Dr Nabarro left shorly after. I continued the work alone elaborating and
extending the investigations in Uganda until Nov 1904
I then conducted an expedition to Lake Albert and from there down the Nile through the Sudan and Egypt. The
object of this expedition was to determine for the Uganda Administration, whether Sleeping Sickness was
present on the shores of Lake Albert and if so, to determine exactly the distribution of the disease and
the fly on the Lake and down the Nile: and further,
for the information of the Government of Egypt, how
far, if at all, the fly extended into the territory of
the Sudan; a matter of great practical importance in
view of the possible northward spread of the disease
into Egypt.
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dc.description.abstract
I propose, in this Thesis, to bring forward the
results of the work of the Commission. The work done
by us up to the time of Col Bruce's departure for England has been published in the Reports of the Sleep-Sickness Commission of the Royal Society No 4, Nov
1903. The investigation carried on by me until my arrival in England, on leave, in Feby 1905, has formed the
subject of a Report, which has been submitted to the
Royal Society. The Royal Society having decided to
publish this Report, it is now being printed by the
Stationery Department at the request cf the Royal
Society. I had the assistance of Lieut Gray R.A.M.C.
in the work from March to Nov 1904, but the investigations were under my direction, and I was entirely responsible for them from the time of Col Bruce's and Dr
Nabarro' departure. The Report presented by me to the
Royal Society was drawn up by myself. Having thus detailed the work done in conjunction with my Colleagues
on the Commission and that done by myself, I shall
now, set forth the results of our researches in their
entirety and proper sequence.
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dc.description.abstract
Since in this Report a good deal of detail will
be given, the propositions, that this Thesis brings
forward evidence to prove, may be briefly stated:-
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dc.description.abstract
1. That sleeping sickness is caused by the entrance into the tissues cf a species of trypanosoma.
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dc.description.abstract
2. That this species is, probably, that discovered by Forde and described by Dutton from the West
Coast of Africa and called by him the Trypanosoma gambiense.
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dc.description.abstract
3. That so-called cases of Trypanosoma Fever
from the West Coast are cases of sleeping sickness in
the earliest stages.
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dc.description.abstract
4. That enlargement of lymphatic glands containing trypanosornes in large numbers is the essential
feature of Trypanosoma Fever: sleeping sickness is
Trypanosoma Fever with in addition, signs and symptoms
due to changes in the nervous system, and the appearance cf these symptoms synchronises with the appearance in number of the trypanosomes in the cerebro-spinal fluid.
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dc.description.abstract
5. That 70 to 80% of the general population of
the sleeping sickness areas of Uganda are in the early
stage of the disease.
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dc.description.abstract
6. That monkeys are susceptible to sleeping sickness, and show the same symptoms and run the same
course, whether the trypanosomes are derived from cases
of trypanosoma fever, or from the cerebro-spinal fluid of cases of sleeping sickness. The pathological changes found in man in cases of sleeping sickness can
also be reproduced in monkeys.
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dc.description.abstract
7. That dogs, rats and guinea-pigs are partially
susceptible, but donkeys, oxen, goats, and sheep have
proved absolutely refractory.
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dc.description.abstract
8. That the trypanosones are conveyed from the
sick to the healthy by a species of tsetse fly, Gloss-fina palpalis, and possibly certain other varieties of
tsetse flies (Glossina pallidipes, norsitans, fusca
and lengipennis).
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dc.description.abstract
9. That the distribution of sleeping sickness
and Glossina palpalis correspond.
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dc.description.abstract
10. That sleeping sickness has recently infected
the fly belt of the Albert Lake and it has spread down the banks of the Nile to Wadelai (about 100 miles);
it will continue, under existing circumstances, to spread
until it reaches the limit of the fly belt on the Nile.
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dc.description.abstract
11. That sleeping sickness is,in short,a human
tsetse fly disease, and the lymphatic system is mainly
involved.
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dc.description.abstract
The stage at which our knowledge of the etiology
of this disease in Uganda had reached on the arrival
of the Commission was, that the cause of the disease
was a streptococcus (CASTELLANI). Whilst searching
for this organism in the cerebro-spinal fluid of sleeping sickness cases, Castellani saw, in 5 cases atrypanosoma, but, at that time, he was of opinion, that this
was an accidental concomitant, like Filaria perstans.
Accordingly the Cmmission had to determine, 1) The exact cause of the maladv; 2) How it was spread from the
sick to the healthy. In a Conference held on the 22nd
March 1905, between the Royal Society, Colonial and
Foreign Offices, the Royal Society, in a Memorandum,
held that these facts had been satisfactorily proved
by the researches of the Commission in Uganda. This
Memorandum was based on the Reports submitted by their
Commission on sleeping sickness in Uganda.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30227
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 19
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
Sleeping sickness: being an account of the investigations of the Commission of the Royal Society in Uganda, the Nile Valley and Sudan, from May 1903 to February 1905
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
MD Doctor of Medicine
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