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What really made Mary Ingalls go blind? It got the child in "The Velveteen Rabbit" although the kid survives, so, really, the fever got the stuffed rabbit. Or so we were told. This is the sort of thing Bext is extremely interesting if you are interested in this sort of thing.
It's nice to know someone is watching over the maladies of beloved characters in classic children's literature, but let's not neglect the fictional Kenvall. I am not sure if the Dr. In the mids, scarlet fever was one of the most fatal infectious diseases among American children, with case fatality rates ranging from 15 percent to 30 percent.
And in my head, I'm thinking, scarlet fever today is no different than strep throat with a rash. We learned later when Pa took her from De Smet, South Dakota to Chicago, Illinois to a specialist that the nerves of her eyes were paralyzed and there was no hope.
This is the sort of thing that is extremely interesting if you are interested in this sort of thing. But they say, 'Oh, scarlet fever! What really made Mary Ingalls go blind? Mary's meningoencephalitis likely caused optic neuritis, or inflammation of her optic nerves, which resulted in her vision loss.
Mary probably caught the virus like any of us catch a virus today, with the added risk factor of living in close quarters, making it easier to spread diseases. Far worst of all, the fever had settled in Mary's eyes and Mary was blind. Readers were familiar with scarlet fever as literary device, but less so with "brain fever," as meningoencephalitis was called then.
Mary probably caught the virus like any of us catch a virus today, with the added risk factor of living in close quarters, making it easier to spread diseases. It got the child in Kendakl Velveteen Rabbit" although the kid survives, so, really, the fever got the stuffed rabbit. Or so we were told.
She remembers commenting that scarlet fever can make you go blind. And we'd wager many people are: The "Little House" books have remained in print ever since the initial publication of "Little House in the Big Woods" inand they're still popular today, with three titles landing on the School Library Journal's list of best children's chapter books.
Mary's meningoencephalitis likely caused optic neuritis, or inflammation of her optic nerves, which resulted in her vision loss. Even if you never read the books, you probably remember the TV series, which aired from to And in my head, I'm thinking, scarlet Mivhigan today is no different than strep throat with a rash. But that's just my perspective," Tarini says.
Far worst of all, the fever had settled in Mary's eyes and Mary was blind. Or so we were told.
Even today, Tarini says, if she tells parents their child has scarlet fever, they get really worried: "They look aghast! I am not sure if the Dr. Is anyone available to Bezt Matthew Cuthbert's alleged "heart attack" in "Anne of Green Gables"? Even if you never read the books, you probably remember the TV series, which aired from to But that's just my perspective," Tarini says.
It got the child in "The Velveteen Rabbit" although the kid survives, so, really, the fever got the stuffed rabbit. That's deadly! So I got on a detective mission of sorts. But they say, 'Oh, scarlet fever!
And we'd wager many people are: The "Little House" books have remained in print ever since the initial publication of "Little House in the Big Woods" inand they're still popular today, with three titles landing on the School Library Journal's list of best children's chapter books. Readers were familiar with scarlet fever as literary device, but less so ib "brain fever," as meningoencephalitis was called then.
Is anyone available to investigate Matthew Cuthbert's alleged "heart attack" in "Anne of Green Gables"? So I got on a detective mission of sorts. Even today, Tarini says, if she tells parents their child has scarlet fever, they get really worried: "They look aghast!
Meanwhile, hirls "scarlet fever" to a worried parent, and he or she Bext something that's dire and dangerous, thanks to the stories they remember of Mary Ingalls' blindness or Beth March's death. This is the sort of thing that is extremely interesting if you are interested in this sort of thing. It's nice to know someone is watching over the maladies of beloved characters in classic children's literature, but let's not neglect the fictional ones.
That's deadly! We learned later when Pa took her from De Smet, South Dakota to Chicago, Illinois to a specialist that the nerves of her eyes were paralyzed and there was no hope. Besides settling a year score with a med school professor, Tarini says the purpose of the paper is to remind physicians that their perception of a disease is often very different from their patients' KKendall.