Department of Medical HistoryVolume 357, Issue 9252p299-301January 27, 2001

The fourth disease, 1900-2000

Affiliations & Notes
Department of Pediatrics, West Virginia University School of Medicine, USA
Article Info
Publication History:
Published January 27, 2001
Copyright: © 2001 Elsevier Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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Summary

Measles and scarlet fever were differentiated from one another in the 17th century. Rubella was accepted as the third distinct paediatric exanthem in 1881. Nil Filatow in 1885 and Clement Dukes in 1894 described two distinct forms of rubella, and in 1900 Dukes proposed that one of these forms of rubella was a separate entity which he called the fourth disease. For the past five decades, fourth disease has been considered a non-entity, perhaps a mild form of scarlet fever, but certainly not a distinct disease. In 1979 Keith Powell resurrected the idea of the fourth disease and argued that it was caused by exotoxin-producing Staphylococcus aureus. We present additional arguments for the existence of fourth disease, as well as information to link the disease to S aureus.

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