| Edwin Lee - 1844 - 56 sider
...functions, while the solid parts occupy an inferior grade, and are but of secondary importance in disease. The elements of general and internal disease, or the...form the most important objects of treatment, may then all be reduced to vitiated states (dyscrasies) of the blood and lymph, or to derangement of the... | |
| James George Davey - 1858 - 368 sider
...functions ; while the solid parts occupy an inferior grade, and are but of secondary importance in disease. The elements of general and internal disease, or the...form the most important objects of treatment, may, then, all be reduced to vitiated states of the blood, and of the lymph ; or to derangement of the nervous... | |
| Seth Pancoast - 1882 - 166 sider
...functions, while the solid parts occupy the inferior grades, and are of but secondary importance in disease. The elements of general and internal disease, or the...form the most important objects of treatment, may, then, all be reduced to a vitiated state of the blood and the lymph, or to the derangement of the nervous... | |
| 1896 - 516 sider
...carries this hypothesis to the entire category of bodily disorders. He declares in so many words that " the elements of general and internal disease, or the...all be reduced to vitiated states of the blood and lymph, or to derangements of the nervous system." The symptoms manifest in the various complaints confirm... | |
| 1898 - 946 sider
...would be more proper to define it as functional. The blood and nervous substance. Dr. Kreysig truK declares, are the primitive and essential instruments...system." It is safe to supplement this quotation by the declaration that neither the blood nor the lymph is likely to become vitiated unless the organic nervous... | |
| Eugene F. Starke, Wilson A. Smith, Wesley A. Dunn - 1892 - 598 sider
...investigations of morbid conditions of the brain or nervous system. The blood and. nervous substance are the primitive and essential instruments of all...the lymph, or to derangement of the nervous system. In fevers we find impairment of all the vital functions ; the stomach refusing food or rejecting it,... | |
| 1883 - 354 sider
...functions : while the solid parts occupy an inferior grade, and are but of secondary importance in disease. The elements of general and internal disease, or the...form the most important objects of treatment, may, then, all be reduced to vitiated states of the blood, and of the lymph ; or to derangement of the nervous... | |
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