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1018767 
Journal Article 
Neurosyphilis, or chronic heavy metal poisoning: Karen Blixen's lifelong disease 
Weismann, K 
1995 
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
ISSN: 0148-5717
EISSN: 1537-4521 
22 
137-144 
English 
BACKGROUND: Since the 1490s, the treatment of syphilis has consisted of heavy metals--first mercurial and later arsenic and bismuth preparations. Tabes dorsalis, as described by Duchenne in the 1850s, is made up of various characteristic neurologic symptoms. "Gastric crises," sudden stabbing pains followed by vomiting and diarrhea, was originally included by Duchenne, but later, syphilologists disputed its relevance to syphilis. Poisoning by heavy metals, including mercury, may produce similar pain reactions and tabes-like neurologic symptoms.

METHODS: According to an earlier published pathography, the Danish author Karen Blixen (1885-1962), also known under the pseudonym Isak Dinesen, suffered from a lifelong disease described as tabes dorsalis. She got syphilis in 1914 and took mercury pills for a year, after which she experienced a severe mercurial intoxication. The Wassermann reaction (WR) in peripheral blood was positive only once, in 1915, before treatment with arsphenamine (Salvarsan), which she received during hospitalization in Copenhagen in 1915 to 1916. Her spinal fluid was examined several times from 1915 to 1956. Apart from an increased number of cells in 1915, the fluid remained unremarkable and the WR was always negative.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: It was postulated that her illness, ending with a cachectic state, was the result of heavy metal poisoning from the various treatments and not a monosymptomatic tabes dorsalis with negative serology. 
IRIS
• Arsenic (Inorganic)
     1. Literature
          PubMed
          Toxline, TSCATS, & DART
          Web of Science
     4. Adverse Outcome Pathways/Networks Screening
          Excluded/Not relevant
               Title/Abstract screening
• Arsenic MOA
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          MOA Cluster
     3. Excluded
          Other not relevant
               Dragon Screened
• Inorganic Arsenic (7440-38-2) [Final 2025]
     1. Initial Lit Search
          PubMed
          WOS
          ToxNet
     4. Considered through Oct 2015
     6. Cluster Filter through Oct 2015