Physician and Surgeon: A Professional Medical Journal, Bind 4J. W. Keating., 1882 |
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Side 18
... tion with Professor Maclean , of Ann Arbor , and Dr. McKenzie , of Unadilla . The distention and difficulty of breathing grad- ually increasing - death occurred in October . No treatment was attempted , except to relieve the attendant ...
... tion with Professor Maclean , of Ann Arbor , and Dr. McKenzie , of Unadilla . The distention and difficulty of breathing grad- ually increasing - death occurred in October . No treatment was attempted , except to relieve the attendant ...
Side 24
... tion and spreading , the tubercles show an analogy with inflam- matory processes . Whatever may be one's particular histoge- netic theory , it is impossible to deny that the exudation and cell formation is invariably the final ...
... tion and spreading , the tubercles show an analogy with inflam- matory processes . Whatever may be one's particular histoge- netic theory , it is impossible to deny that the exudation and cell formation is invariably the final ...
Side 25
... tion ; for as the caseous form of phthisis is curable ( which form until lately had wrongly been been considered as non- tubercular ) then also must tuberculosis , as such , be amen- able to a cure . But the anatomical unity of phthisis ...
... tion ; for as the caseous form of phthisis is curable ( which form until lately had wrongly been been considered as non- tubercular ) then also must tuberculosis , as such , be amen- able to a cure . But the anatomical unity of phthisis ...
Side 30
... tion ; almost absolute absence of wind in winter ; a slight degree of humidity , and great purity of the air . But these are the characteristics of the ideal stimulating and bracing climate , and the author contends that it is only by ...
... tion ; almost absolute absence of wind in winter ; a slight degree of humidity , and great purity of the air . But these are the characteristics of the ideal stimulating and bracing climate , and the author contends that it is only by ...
Side 33
... tion ; from this period we must conclude that the rapid form is the most common . This is not saying that we deny , in an absolute manner , the curability of laryngeal phthisis , and that we regard the ulcerative period as inevitable ...
... tion ; from this period we must conclude that the rapid form is the most common . This is not saying that we deny , in an absolute manner , the curability of laryngeal phthisis , and that we regard the ulcerative period as inevitable ...
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abscess acute albumen albuminuria alcohol amount antiseptic appearance applied arsenic bladder blood body bowels carbolic carbolic acid catarrh cause cent cervix child chloral chloral hydrate chloric acid chloroform chronic clinical color condition contained delirium diphtheria disease Dispens doses drachms drug effect Ether examination experiments extract favor fever fluid four frequently give given glycerine grains grams gtts hepatic hospital hundred increased inflammation injected insanity iodoform irritable Journal kidney laryngeal liver lungs Maclean matter Medical medicine membrane ment Michigan mucous mucous membrane nerves normal observed obtained operation organs ounce pain patient phthisis PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON poison potassium powder present Professor pulse quinine rectum remedy removed respiration salicylate salicylic acid sanitary skin small-pox soda solution stomach strychnia sulphate sulphur symptoms tannic acid temperature Tinct tion tissue titration treated treatment tumor ulcer urine uterus vaccination vomiting
Populære passager
Side 109 - Every year thousands undergo this operation; and the French ambassador says, pleasantly, that they take the small-pox here by way of diversion, as they take the waters in other countries.
Side 84 - A Treatise on Human Physiology : designed for the use of Students and Practitioners of Medicine. By JOHN C. DALTON, MD, Professor of Physiology and Hygiene in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York.
Side 109 - The smallpox, so fatal and so general amongst us, is here entirely harmless by the invention of ingrafting, which is the term they give it. There is a set of old women who make it their business to perform the operation every autumn, in the month of September, when the great heat is abated. People send to one another to know if any of their family has a mind to have the smallpox ; they make parties for this purpose, and when they are met (commonly fifteen or sixteen together), the old woman comes...
Side 140 - A SYSTEM of SURGERY, Theoretical and Practical. In Treatises by Various Authors.
Side 250 - Were a star quenched on high, For ages would its light, Still travelling downward from the sky, Shine on our mortal sight. So when a great man dies, For years beyond our ken The light he leaves behind him lies Upon the paths of men.
Side 527 - O Lord ! if Thou canst bless under the Gospel what Thou didst curse under the law, bless this pig.
Side 427 - The Change of Life In Health and Disease : a Clinical Treatise on the Diseases of the Nervous System incidental to Women at the Decline of Life.
Side 83 - A MANUAL OF ORGANIC MATERIA MEDICA. Being a Guide to Materia Medica of the Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms. For the use of Students, Druggists, Pharmacists and Physicians.
Side 121 - The most striking of all evidence is, perhaps, that derived from the small-pox hospitals themselves. Here the protective influence of vaccination is seen and proved in a manner beyond all cavil. At Highgate, during an experience of forty years, no nurse or servant having been re-vaccinated has ever contracted the disease ; and evidence of the same character I can myself bring forward, for during the whole time that I have had charge of the fever hospital more than a thousand cases of...
Side 122 - ... rather with the prevention of maladies than with their cure; when governments shall be induced to consider the preservation of a nation's health an object as important as the promotion of its commerce or the maintenance of its conquests, we may hope then to see the approach of those times when...