Medical Standard, Bind 341911 |
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Side 3
... positions would be characterized by entire freedom from prejudice . Clearly there must be no assumption about the matter . Public sentiment will not tol- erate a law based on the assumption of infalli- bility on the part of men possibly ...
... positions would be characterized by entire freedom from prejudice . Clearly there must be no assumption about the matter . Public sentiment will not tol- erate a law based on the assumption of infalli- bility on the part of men possibly ...
Side 9
... position with the shoulders close to the end of the table is preferable , as the head can be moved backward freely . Whatever position the patient assumes , the operator should see that he himself takes up an easy attitude . This can be ...
... position with the shoulders close to the end of the table is preferable , as the head can be moved backward freely . Whatever position the patient assumes , the operator should see that he himself takes up an easy attitude . This can be ...
Side 10
... position for a short time or to rotate it , before the mouth re- laxes . Sometimes getting the patient to make a swallowing movement induces the desired relax- ation . Where the lesion is known to be some distance below the cricoid ...
... position for a short time or to rotate it , before the mouth re- laxes . Sometimes getting the patient to make a swallowing movement induces the desired relax- ation . Where the lesion is known to be some distance below the cricoid ...
Side 15
The sitting posture is recommended for children by Pfaundler , but this position has the disad- vantage of permitting occasionally a sudden change in the pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid . As soon as the needle reaches the ...
The sitting posture is recommended for children by Pfaundler , but this position has the disad- vantage of permitting occasionally a sudden change in the pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid . As soon as the needle reaches the ...
Side 18
... position to discuss special measures and their peculiar indications . The diet should be carefully regulated as to quantity and qual- ity . It should be light , wholesome , simple , easily digested and adapted to the requirements of the ...
... position to discuss special measures and their peculiar indications . The diet should be carefully regulated as to quantity and qual- ity . It should be light , wholesome , simple , easily digested and adapted to the requirements of the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abdominal acid acute anesthesia applied arteries atropine bacillus bismuth bladder blood body bowel calcium cancer cardiac catarrh cause cells cent chloroform chronic clinical condition constipation cure diagnosis diet digitalis dilatation disease doses drug duodenum effect examination fact fever fluid frequently function gall-bladder gastric give given glands heart hospital increased injection intestinal iodine irritation kidney lesions less lung matter Medical Journal medicine membrane meningitis ment mental method milk mucous membrane muscles nerve nervous normal nystagmus occur operation organs pain patient pelvis physician position practice practitioner present pressure produced pylorus radium reaction rectum reflex remedy removed salvarsan serum skin sodium solution spinal stomach surgeon surgical symptoms syphilis tetany therapeutic thyroid tion tissue treated treatment tube tuberculin tuberculosis tuberculous tumor ulcer umbilicus ureter urine usually uterus vomiting X-ray
Populære passager
Side 270 - Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia. Containing many Prescriptions and Formulae, conforming to the US Pharmacopoeia, Directions for making Artificial Human Milk, for the Artificial Digestion of Milk, etc.
Side 203 - Late Instructor in Dietetics, Bellevue Training School for Nurses, Bellevue Hospital, New York City.
Side 371 - Pathology, Dermatology, Ophthalmology, Otology, Rhinology. laryngology, Hygiene, and other topics of interest to students and practitioners.
Side 321 - The predisposing diseases mentioned were colitis, stricture, proctitis, fissure, hemorrhoids, fistula, polypi, enlarged prostate, and malignant growths. PHYSIOLOGY OF CONSTIPATION. — By Samuel T. Earle, M. D., of Baltimore, Md. — In reviewing the Physiology of Constipation in the symposium read before the American Proctologic Society, June, 1911, Earle calls attention to the sensibility of the alimentary canal in connection with its bearing on constipation. It has been shown that the stomach...
Side 3 - In my message of last year I recommended the creation of a Bureau of Health, in which should be embraced all those Government agencies outside of the War and Navy Departments which are now directed toward the preservation of public health or exercise functions germane to that subject. I renew this recommendation. I greatly regret that the agitation in favor of this bureau has aroused a counteragitation against its creation, on the ground that the establishment of such a bureau is to be in the interest...
Side 420 - No. 17 of their series of charts on dislocations. This series forms a most valuable and interesting addition to any physician's library.
Side 418 - The Antikamnia Chemical Company, and reads: "Gentlemen: Illness, dating from the very day of my former letter, must be my plea for my silence and my seeming indifference to your courtesy, and your exceptional kindness in sending me your little 'Vest-Pocket-Box.
Side 285 - An ideal operation for internal hemorrhoids must embody the five following surgical principles and precepts: 1. Complete hemostasis. 2. Immediate closure of the operative wounds. 3. Preservation of the function of the parts. 4. Permanency of cure. 5. Due consideration of the factors of safety, simplicity of technic, time required for recovery, and the amount of post-operative discomfort. The ligature operation violates principle 2. The clamp and cautery operation falls short with reference to the...
Side 270 - THE CARE OF THE BABY. — A Manual for Mothers and Nurses, containing Practical Directions for the Management of Infancy and Childhood in Health and in Disease.
Side 115 - This photograph represents the fact as I saw it,' there is no more reason to exclude it than if he had said, 'The following words represent the fact as I saw it,' which is always in effect the tenor of a witness' oath. If no witness has thus attached his credit to the photograph, then it should not come in at all, any more than an anonymous letter should be received as testimony.