Abstract

The question of the use of serotherapy in postpartum septic diseases arose relatively recently and is still far from its final decision. It has been almost two years since Marmorek, at a meeting of the Biological Society of Paris (February 23rd, 1895), first reported that he had succeeded in obtaining an anti-streptococcal serum, and Charrin and Roger, at the same meeting, reported that the anti-streptococcal serum they had received they have already managed to cure two cases of childbirth fever; but so far, relatively few observations have been published on this score, and even those are extremely contradictory, and this proves that not a small amount of new research is required to correctly solve the question of interest to us.

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