“…At that time the current view of causation of the anaemia was that 'it was in part due to haematopoietic depression, but in part to loss in epistaxis, dysentery, etc' (Cole, 1944). The view that 'crowding out of the erythrocyte precursors' resulted from the presence of the leishmaniae in the marrow was suggested by Chatterjee (1946) and, indeed, remained current until the present work was done. Chatterjee, who studied the marrow in fatal cases of kala azar, concluded that 'progressive cellular degeneration' explained the characteristic blood picture; in the femur in fatal cases he found the total number of cells to be diminished and almost all Knight et al(1967), however, found from studies of the ferrokinetics and life span of erythrocytes using radioisotopes that the marrow handled iron almost normally but that a major factor was marked shortening of the erythrocyte life span.…”