During the five years which succeeded the publication of Bostock's second paper no less than five treatises on hay asthma appeared in England, some of them by the most prominent medical men of that period. They are remarkable as showing the great diversity of opinion entertained at that early date as to the etiology of the disease. Thus, Macculloch4 (1828) attributed it to the air of hot-houses and green-houses, while Gordon5 (1829) attributed it to the flowers of grasses, particularly those of the Anthroxanthum odoratum, and suggested that grass asthma would be a more appropriate name than hay asthma.
4 An Essay on the Remittent and Intermittent Diseases, London, 1828, vol. i. pp. 394–397.
5 London Medical Gazette, 1829, vol. iv. pp. 266–269.
Even as late as 1859 the disease appears to have been scarcely known in Germany, for Phoebus, who has since published a most excellent work on the subject, on being consulted by a colleague suffering from hay asthma frankly confessed that he was unacquainted even with the name of the disease. This incident, and the belief that he had before him a comparatively unworked field, stimulated him to investigate the disease. By addressing circulars to the various medical societies and hospitals, not only in his native country, but also in other parts of Europe, as well as by personal interviews with patients and by publishing requests for information in the various medical journals, he collected a large number of cases and gained much valuable information concerning the disease. The results of his assiduous and painstaking labors were published in 1862 in the form of a valuable work,6 which, although over twenty years old, is still regarded the best authority on the spring variety of hay fever.
6 P. Phoebus, Der Typische Freuhsommer Katarrh, Geissen, 1862.
Previous to the year 1859, when Phoebus's circulars directed attention to it, hay asthma seems to have been almost unknown in France, as, with the exception of a single case by Cazenave of Bordeaux (1837), who described it as a new disease, we find previous to that date no mention of it in French literature.
The first case of hay asthma published in America, a typical one of the autumnal form of the disease, is recorded by Drake in his work, The Principal Diseases of the Interior Valley of North America, p. 803, published in 1854.
It will be seen by this brief summary of the history of hay asthma that the disease was first recognized in England in 1819, where in 1828 it became generally known, and that at the time of the publication of Phoebus's work (1862), with the exception of one or two isolated cases in France and the United States, England was the only country in which it was generally known and understood. Since the publication of Phoebus's valuable work numerous additions have been made to the literature of the disease, but with the limited space at my disposal I can only refer to a few of the most important that have appeared in the last two decades.
In no country has the subject of hay asthma attracted more attention than in the United States, and in no other has its study been rewarded by the discovery of so many new and interesting facts. To Morrill Wyman of Cambridge, Mass., we are indebted for the first elaborate American work on hay asthma, or rather the autumnal variety of that affection, which Wyman believes to be a distinct disease in no way connected with rose cold, June cold, and other forms which appear in the late spring and early summer.7 He had previously described the disease in his lectures as early as 1854, and also in a paper read before the Massachusetts Medical Society in 1866. Being himself a sufferer from it, he naturally devoted much time and attention to its study, and his work may be justly considered the most valuable contribution to the literature of the disease which has appeared since that of Phoebus. Another American work on hay asthma is that of the late Beard of New York.8 He elaborates the nervous theory of the disease, and establishes three varieties—the first appearing in the spring, the second in midsummer, and the third in autumn. In 1877, Elias Marsh of Paterson, N.J.,9 read an exceedingly valuable paper before the New Jersey State Medical Society, in which he describes a series of experiments which led him to believe that hay asthma is caused by the pollen of plants. In Europe the best treatise on the subject that has been published of late years is undoubtedly that of Blackley of Manchester, who by a series of ingenious and carefully-conducted experiments claims to have found in the pollen of certain plants the true cause of the disease. To all of these works we shall again have occasion to refer in the course of this article.
7 Autumnal Catarrh, Cambridge.