The characteristic symptomatology of infectious mononucleosis does not appear to have been reported until the late nineteenth century. In 1885, the renowned Russian pediatrician
Nil Filatov reported an infectious process he called "idiopathic adenitis" exhibiting symptoms that correspond to infectious mononucleosis, and in 1889 a German
balneologist and pediatrician,
Emil Pfeiffer, independently reported similar cases (some of lesser severity) that tended to cluster in families, for which he coined the term
Drüsenfieber ("glandular fever"). The word
mononucleosis has several
senses, but today it usually is used in the sense of infectious mononucleosis, which is caused by EBV. The term "infectious mononucleosis" was coined in 1920 by Thomas Peck Sprunt and Frank Alexander Evans in a classic clinical description of the disease published in the
Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, entitled "Mononuclear leukocytosis in reaction to acute infection (infectious mononucleosis)". A lab test for infectious mononucleosis was developed in 1931 by Yale School of Public Health Professor John Rodman Paul and Walls Willard Bunnell based on their discovery of heterophile antibodies in the sera of persons with the disease. The Paul-Bunnell Test or PBT was later replaced by the
heterophile antibody test. Before the identification of infectious mononucleosis as a distinct disease, it was most often called "glandular fever", and there were few tests to determine an infection. Notable confirmed outbreaks of mononucleosis in the late 19th and early 20th centuries include a large outbreak in an Ohio community in 1896, an outbreak in which 87 people were infected in a community in the
Falkland Islands, and an outbreak at the U.S. Naval Base in Coronado, California, where 220 individuals were infected by the virus. The Epstein–Barr virus was first identified in
Burkitt's lymphoma cells by
Michael Anthony Epstein and
Yvonne Barr at the
University of Bristol in 1964. The link with infectious mononucleosis was uncovered in 1967 by Werner and Gertrude Henle at the
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, after a laboratory technician handling the virus contracted the disease: comparison of serum samples collected from the technician before and after the onset revealed development of
antibodies to the virus. Yale School of Public Health epidemiologist Alfred S. Evans confirmed through testing that mononucleosis was transmitted mainly through kissing, leading to it being referred to colloquially as "the kissing disease". ==References==