XXXVI]
NOT AN HEREDITARY DISEASE
641
Without absolutely denying the possibility of ovum infection, the probability is that such an event is very rare. The age at which leprosy usually appears is against such a supposition. The latency of a germ for twenty, thirty, forty, or even seventy years is an extremely improbable thing and without parallel in pathology. Atavism, or rather, the appearance of atavism, frequently met with in leprosy, is also against such a supposition; for, although we can understand infection of an ovum by a leper parent, we cannot understand the transmission of a germ from a grandparent to a grandchild through a parent who is not, never was, and may never become a leper. Such a thing would imply proliferation of the bacillus in the parent without pathological evidence of its presence.
Even admitting that leprosy is sometimes transmitted by ovum infection, this method of transmission cannot be the only one, or even a common one, for many lepers have no leper ancestors; and, as is well known, the healthy European, coming from a country in which leprosy has not been seen for generations, may acquire leprosy on visiting a country in which the disease is endemic.
If leprosy be communicated generally, or even sometimes, by parent to child by heredity, how explain the striking fact, brought out by Hansen, that of the numerous offspring of 160