315
enough the skin seems altered to a larger
extent, being rigid and rugorrs,
sula between the folds
numerous
while the
are
filled
with
epithels. If the disease has
more the character
of
what is termed an-
aesthetic leprosy, I must freely admit- the more general debility, inactivity and want
of perspioration of the thin concurring with
calling forth
fir gero
ulcerations
Contractures of the toes and
In the latter instance
in
you
observe even
the extremities of the tres beginning
at the Nails and ending in the loss of either the
whole the of
one or two phalanges, while the sore heals up and the nails often remain intact,
the whole this presenting the strange sight of
a
M
fort without toes, but with the nails resting
the stump. This Anxes thatic form of the