Abstract

Soon after the Wassermann reaction was introduced for the diagnosis of syphilis, aspirations appeared that had the goal, on the one hand, to improve the method of serodiagnosis of syphilis in the sense of obtaining more accurate results, since the Wassermann reaction, even with the most careful formulation, is still sometimes gave unsatisfactory results, on the other hand, a simplification of this technique, in order thereby to be able to apply serodiagnostic methods in primitive laboratory conditions, without laboratory animals.

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