Publication | Closed Access
MULTIPLE MYELOMA
136
Citations
23
References
1947
Year
UrologyNovember 1845PathogenesisHematologyDiagnosisPathologyHistopathologyExperimental PathologySir James WatsonClinical PathologyNeuropathologyMedicineAnimal MatterHuman Pathology
One hundred years ago, in November 1845, Sir James Watson sent a test tube of urine obtained from a 45 year old tradesman to Dr. Henry Bence-Jones with an accompanying note inquiring as to the nature of a strange substance present in that urine. This substance, then called "animal matter," has since become known as Bence-Jones protein.<sup>1</sup>MacIntyre<sup>2</sup>reported this case in 1850 in the<i>Medico-Chirurgical Transactions</i>. Dalrymple<sup>3</sup>examined and described pathologically two ribs of an affected patient and reported the condition as mollifies ossium in 1846. However, von Rustizky<sup>4</sup>is said to have been the first to describe the condition under the title "multiples myelom" in 1873, and Kahler<sup>5</sup>is credited with having associated this disease with the occurrence of Bence-Jones protein in the urine. Since these early reports additions have been made to the literature steadily and at a somewhat increasing rate as
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