Morbus gallicus


a landmark in the history of infectious disease.

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  • Mordant

    A substance capable of deepening the reaction to a stain (as in the pathology laboratory); incisive; burning or pungent; and so, by extension, biting and caustic in thought, manner, or style. The word “mordant” has some bite to it since it comes from the Latin “mordere”, the infinitive of the verb “to bite.” In French […]

  • Morgue

    A place where dead bodies are kept before autopsy, funeral, or burial.

  • Morning glory syndrome

    A birth defect of the optic nerve (the nerve to the eye) in which there is a coloboma (cleft) of the optic disc. The coloboma results in a funnel-shaped optic nerve head with a white dot in the center, an elevated ring of pigment around the disk, and vessels radiating out from the ring like […]

  • Morning sickness

    Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy. Morning sickness is a misnomer, because it can occur at any time of the day (though not at night during sleep) and it is not a sickness. It is a normal characteristic of early pregnancy. Morning sickness is now believed to be a good thing since it appears associated with […]

  • Morphea

    Skin changes that are localized to one or more patchy areas of skin that become hardened, dry, smooth, and slightly pigmented. Morphea is called ‘localized scleroderma’ but it rarely, if ever, evolves into full-fledged scleroderma, an autoimmune disease of the connective tissue.


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