Railway Surgical Journal, Bind 51899 |
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Side 1
... accident is to have a small , hot cinder penetrate the outer layers of the cornea , actually burning a bed into it . If that cinder can be removed promptly , there is usually little trouble ; but if allowed to remain a few hours , the ...
... accident is to have a small , hot cinder penetrate the outer layers of the cornea , actually burning a bed into it . If that cinder can be removed promptly , there is usually little trouble ; but if allowed to remain a few hours , the ...
Side 6
... accidents and destruction of property . He wonders if , with all the anxiety , vigilance and striving after the ideal ... accident , with torn- up track , wrecked equipment , and that senti- ment of self - preservation which animates ...
... accidents and destruction of property . He wonders if , with all the anxiety , vigilance and striving after the ideal ... accident , with torn- up track , wrecked equipment , and that senti- ment of self - preservation which animates ...
Side 7
... accident . It is a right the traveling public has to demand that the hu- man machine employed shall be as perfect as any other part of the equipment ; should pass as rigid inspection . It is the duty of the man- agement to the owners to ...
... accident . It is a right the traveling public has to demand that the hu- man machine employed shall be as perfect as any other part of the equipment ; should pass as rigid inspection . It is the duty of the man- agement to the owners to ...
Side 12
... accident to where he may receive first aid the better . The es- sential restoratives are - after checking bleed- ing and applying some protective antiseptic dressing - absolute quiet , artificial heat , the ad- ministration of drugs ...
... accident to where he may receive first aid the better . The es- sential restoratives are - after checking bleed- ing and applying some protective antiseptic dressing - absolute quiet , artificial heat , the ad- ministration of drugs ...
Side 20
... accident . This technique , by This technique , by the way , has lately obtained important adher- ents in the Germans Braun and Hackenbruch , who maintain that it is the best that can be em- ployed . I will end and sum up this ...
... accident . This technique , by This technique , by the way , has lately obtained important adher- ents in the Germans Braun and Hackenbruch , who maintain that it is the best that can be em- ployed . I will end and sum up this ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abdominal accident amputation anæsthetic anesthesia ankylosis antiseptic applied artery aseptic Association bandage blood bone brain carbolic acid catgut cause cavity cent cerebral Chicago chloroform City cocaine compression condition contusion death diagnosis disease disinfection drainage dressing employes ether eucaine examination experience fact fever fluid foot foreign body fracture gangrene gauze hæmorrhage hand healed hospital humerus inches incision infection injury intestinal iodoform irritation joint lacerated lesion limb Louis Marshalltown ment method miles muscles nerve nervous normal occurred operation pain patella patient periosteum peritonitis physician practice present pressure produced pulse railroad Railway Age Railway Surgeon recovery removed respiration result road rupture sepsis shock skin skull solution splint sterilized Street Chicago strychnia surgery surgical suture symptoms temperature tendon tetanus tion tissues Toronto train Traumatic treated treatment trephine ture vessels weeks wound
Populære passager
Side 482 - A yearly digest of scientific progress and authoritative opinion in all branches of medicine and surgery, drawn from journals, monographs and text-books of the leading American and foreign authors and investigators; collected and arranged by eminent American specialists and teachers, under the editorial charge of George M. Gould, MD In one imperial octavo volume of
Side 406 - A Pocket Medical Dictionary; giving the Pronunciation and Definition of the Principal Words Used in Medicine and the Collateral Sciences." By George M. Gould, AM, MD A new edition entirely rewritten and enlarged, including over 21,000 words. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co.
Side 89 - injury—a continuous operation? Did the facts constitute a continuous succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole, or was there some new and independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury.'" The importance of this question is apparent in actions brought for
Side 285 - of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat; Diseases of the Skin, and on the Diet, Hygiene and General Management of Children. By American Teachers. Edited by Louis Starr, MD. assisted by Thompson S. Westcott, MD Second Edition revised. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders,
Side 405 - prescriptions, representing the latest and most approved methods of administering remedial agents. By E. Quin Thornton, MD, Demonstrator of Therapeutics, Pharmacy and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. In one wallet-shaped volume, strongly bound in leather, with pocket and pencil.
Side 374 - body shall be enveloped in a layer of cotton not less than one inch thick, completely wrapped in a sheet and bandaged and encased in an air-tight zinc, tin, copper or lead lined coffin, hermetically sealed and inclosed in a strong wooden box. Rule 3. Bodies dead of typhoid fever or other dangerous communicable disease not mentioned in rules
Side 272 - The St. John Ambulance Association, of which the Prince of Wales is president, is the Ambulance Department of The Grand Priory of the Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem in England, an
Side 369 - must be on both the original and duplicate copies. The undertaker's certificate and paster of the original shall be detached from the transit permit and pasted on the coffin box. The transit permit shall be handed to the passenger in charge
Side 97 - A Text Book on Surgery; General, Operative and Mechanical. By John A. Wyeth, MD, Professor of Surgery in and President of the Faculty of the New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital, etc., etc. Third edition, revised and enlarged. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1898.
Side 368 - which the body may be expected. This notice must be sent by or in the name of the health officer at the initial point, and is to enable the health officer at destination to take all necessary precautions at that point. Rule 6.—Every dead body must be accompanied by a person in charge,