'Jane Austen and Addison's disease: an unconvincing diagnosis' / K. G. White

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Main Collection post-1900  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2009 
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(ABS) Jane Austen's letters describe a two-year deterioration into bed-ridden exhaustion, with unusual colouring, bilious attacks and rheumatic pains.Im 1964, Zachary Cope postulated tubercular Addison's to explain her symptons and her relatively pain-free illness. Literary scholars later countered this posthumous diagnosis on grounds that are not well substantiated, while medical authors supported his conclusion. Important symptons reported by contemporary Addison's patients - mental confusion, generalised pain and suffering, weight loss and anorexia - are absent from jane Austen's letters. Thus, by listening to the patient's perspective, we can conclude it is unlikely that Addison's disease caused Jane Austen's demise. Diseminated bovine tuberculosis would offer a coherent explanation of her symptoms, so that Cope's original suggestion of infective tuberculosis as the cause of her illness may have been correct.||(PUB) J Med Ethics, Medical Humanities, 2009; 35: 98-100. 
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