Guest guest Posted February 27, 2004 Report Share Posted February 27, 2004 Firstly, a 'syndrome' is a collection of physical features which, when they occur together, enable a physician to recognize a certain condition. Many different problems occur in Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS) and not everyone will have all the problems or have them to the same degree but at least some of them must be present for a diagnosis of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. There are, at least, ten different types of EDS and the severity, even within the type can vary in the same family. The history of EDS begins in 1657 where the first written reports, by a surgeon called Van Meerken, appeared in Latin. (Although it was noted by Hippocrates in 400 BC that Nomads and Scythians were lax of joint and had multiple scars). Van Meerken describes the hyperelastic skin of a Spanish sailor and the joint laxity of a professional contortionist who Van Meerken presented to a group of senior physicians at the Academy of Leiden. The next place of report of the syndrome is found, is in Moscow in 1891 where a Dr. A.N. Chernogubov resented a boy of seventeen years old at a meeting of the Moscow Venereology and Dermatology Society. The boy had recurrent joint dislocations and cutaneous nodules, his skin was hyperextensible and fragile and he had multiple scars resulting from minor injuries. Chernogubov accurately diagnosed that the clinical manifestations were caused by abnormality of the connective tissue. The article written by Dr. Chernogubov did not come to the notice of Western Europe at that time however, to this day, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome is still known by his name in his own country. We now move on to Paris in 1899 where Ehlers from Denmark spoke at a clinical meeting of the Paris Society of Syphilogy and Dermatology. The patient he presented was a law student from the Island of Bornholm in the Gulf of Bosnia. The young man had joint laxity and orthopaedic complications. He also had hyperextensible skin and had developed pigmented lesions over the bony prominences due to minor traumas. Again in Paris, about nine years later, Henri-andre Danlos gave a presentation to the same society. Danlos was specifically interested in Dermatology and his scientific work received recognition in 1904 when he was elected President of the Paris Medical Society then, in 1906, he became Secretary of the Dermatological Society of Paris. At the 1908 presentation Danlos disagreed with the diagnosis originally made by another physician and drew attention to extensibility and fragility of the patients skin and stated the lesions over the bony prominences where post-traumatic 'psuedo-tumours' in a patient with an inherent defect which he termed 'cutis laxa'. There followed a discussion in which the original physician maintained his initial diagnosis but Danlos persisted and drew attention to Ehlers report in 1901 and one from the Berne Congress by Khon in 1906. By 1936 other isolated cases had occurred and there was some problem over the name, it was proposed in an article in the British Journal of Dermatology by Frederich Parkes-Weber that it be named Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and this has now gained universal acceptance over other named such as Cutis Hyperlastica by which it was once known. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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