Isolation of Acute Articular Rheumatism From Gout
Hallowed by tradition, this erroneous conception of the identity of gout and rheumatism endured until 1642, when Baillon, in his treatise “De Rheumatismo et Pleuritide,” effected a cleavage, at any rate between the acute varieties of these two diseases.
Dissociating the term “rheumatism” from its primitive interpretation, Baillon restricted its usage to that particular group of symptoms we now call acute articular rheumatism. In the same century Sydenham, in his “Classical Observations,” materially clarified the existing clinical confusion, defining with his customary lucidity the essential differences between the two disorders.