The Medical Times and Register, Bind 7Medical Publishing Company, 1877 |
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Side 2
... ment so astonishingly evident that its effects on the victim and his friends would be perfectly enchanting . Did you ever see such devotion as is exhibited by the con- verts to homeopathy ? Is it not because " it is the God which they ...
... ment so astonishingly evident that its effects on the victim and his friends would be perfectly enchanting . Did you ever see such devotion as is exhibited by the con- verts to homeopathy ? Is it not because " it is the God which they ...
Side 9
... ment of papers upon fixed topics by men . of acknowledged rank is far more likely to attract than the expectation of volunteer articles by medical nobodies . Further , very few men are prepared to discuss any serious question usefully ...
... ment of papers upon fixed topics by men . of acknowledged rank is far more likely to attract than the expectation of volunteer articles by medical nobodies . Further , very few men are prepared to discuss any serious question usefully ...
Side 21
... ment under the chloroform had been very in- tense , and much vomiting followed . It was , therefore , decided to chloralize him . The so- lution of chloral employed was neutralized by a few drops of carbonate of soda . A gold needle was ...
... ment under the chloroform had been very in- tense , and much vomiting followed . It was , therefore , decided to chloralize him . The so- lution of chloral employed was neutralized by a few drops of carbonate of soda . A gold needle was ...
Side 37
... ment and their improper preparation ; which affect the higher as well as the lower classes of society . The writer alluded especially to the inappropriate food so frequently given to pupils in our fashionable city boarding - schools ...
... ment and their improper preparation ; which affect the higher as well as the lower classes of society . The writer alluded especially to the inappropriate food so frequently given to pupils in our fashionable city boarding - schools ...
Side 40
... ment , than the pulse , which is , confessedly , under the control of the emotions , and apt to mislead the physician by exhibiting conditions due either to these or to local causes , such as organic diseases of the heart or arteries ...
... ment , than the pulse , which is , confessedly , under the control of the emotions , and apt to mislead the physician by exhibiting conditions due either to these or to local causes , such as organic diseases of the heart or arteries ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acid action amount appearance applied attack attended become blood body called cause changes child complete condition connection considerable considered contained continued contracted course death Department disease doses duty effect entirely especially evidence examination existence experiments extremities fact fever five fluid four frequently give given growth half hand head heart Hospital inches increased injected interest irritation latter less liver lower marked means Medical ment method months muscles nature nearly nerve never normal observed occurred opening operation organs origin pain passed patient persons Philadelphia physician portion position practice present probably produced profession pulse question recently regard remained remarks removed result seems seen severe showed side skin Society suffering surface symptoms taken tion tissue treated treatment tumor urine usually weeks wound
Populære passager
Side 113 - A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE DISEASES, INJURIES, AND MALFORMATIONS OF THE URINARY BLADDER, THE PROSTATE GLAND, AND THE URETHRA.
Side 36 - Edited by JAMES C. WILSON, MD, Professor of the Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia.
Side 141 - TRACHEOTOMY, especially in Relation to Diseases of the Larynx and Trachea, by PUGIN THORNTON, MRCS, late Surgeon to the Hospital for Diseases of the Throat. With Photographic Plates and Woodcuts, 8vo, 5s.
Side 38 - Wilde claims that he can cure every case of hooping-cough within eight days by the following treatment : The patient is not to leave the room, and at every access of coughing is to hold before his mouth a small piece of cloth, folded several times, and wet with a teaspoonful of the following solution : ether, 60 parts ; chloroform, 30 parts; turpentine, 10 parts.
Side 438 - Murchisou repeats the thoughtful suggestion that ' most persons have more liver, just as they have more lung, than is absolutely necessary for the due performance of its function. But in others, not unfrequently the offspring of gouty parents, the organ in its natural condition seems only just capable of performing its healthy functions under the most favorable circumstances, and functional derangement is at once induced by articles of diet which most persons digest with facility.
Side 503 - Mosler has been advocating a system of treating tapeworm which, according to a Swiss medical journal, has been attended with remarkable success. Its chief characteristic is the injection of large quantities of warm water into the colon, after the administration of the anthelmintic. The diet is first regulated, food being given which is supposed to be distasteful to the tapeworm,— bilberry tea, herrings, sour cucumber, salted meats.
Side 67 - Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine, and of Clinical Medicine, and formerly Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, in the Medical College of Ohio.
Side 484 - This is precisely what I have tried to show, only that it is a relative degeneracy of certain tissues. Dr. Walshe has collected evidence that " the maximum amount of cancerous disease occurs in Europe, and that it is very rare among the patients of the hospitals at Hobart Town and Calcutta, and among the natives of Egypt, Algiers, Senegal, Arabia, and the tropical parts of America.
Side 484 - ... the cases are so frequent in which deep anxiety, deferred hope, and disappointment, are quickly followed by the growth or increase of cancer, that we can hardly doubt that mental depression is a weighty addition to the other influences that favor the development of the cancerous constitution. Nor is it strange that it should be so ; it is consistent with the many other facts showing the affinity between cancer and depressed nutrition.
Side 46 - Ther. by Dr. Ortega. In the manufactory in which he worked he was avoided by his fellow-workmen, and when he entered a room, the window would be opened. He had consulted several physicians, but without success. The epidermis of the sole of the foot was white and mascerated, and there were little ulcerations at the clefts of the toes, and around the nails.