The Medical Chronicle: A Monthly Record of the Progress of Medical SchinceSherratt & Hughes, 1896 |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abdominal abscess action acute alcohol animals appears artery attacks bacilli bile duct biliary blood cancer capillaries carcinoma cause cavity cells cent changes charcoal chronic cirrhosis clinical common bile duct condition cord curette deciduoma diagnosis dilatation diphtheria disease doses drug effect epiblast epithelial epithelium examination experiments fibres fluid foetal gall bladder gallstones glands glycerine gonorrhoea growth hæmorrhage heart hospital incision increased inflammation injection intestine kidney larynx layer lesions liver lung lymphatics malignant maternal medicine method middle ear mucous membrane muscles nerve neuritis nodules normal observations occur operation opium organisms Owens College pain paralysis pathological patient peritoneum Physiology placenta points poisoning posterior present produced Professor regard serum showed skin slight stomach substances sutures symptoms temperature test solution therapeutic tion tissue treatment tube tubercle tubercular tuberculosis tumour ulceration uric acid urine usually uterine uterus vessels vomiting wall whilst wound
Populære passager
Side 176 - Whatever, in connection with my professional practice, or not in connection with it, I see or hear, in the life of men, which ought not to be spoken of abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such should be kept secret.
Side 15 - Any cistern for supplying water to the bakehouse shall be separate and distinct from any cistern for supplying water to a water-closet. (3) No drain or pipe for carrying off foecal or sewage matter shall have an opening within the bakehouse.
Side 112 - In advising patients on the subject of cycling, it is often more important to consider the peripheral condition of the circulation than the central. Enfeebled or worn-out arteries, that is to say, are more dangerous than the feeble heart, and, when connected with a heart that is over-active, are seats of danger. This same remark would, of course, apply to cases where there is local arterial injury, as in aneurism.
Side 15 - Where a court of summary jurisdiction is satisfied on the prosecution of a district council that any room or place used as a bakehouse is in such a state as to be on sanitary grounds unfit for use or occupation as a bakehouse...
Side 112 - As the action of cycling tells directly upon the motion of the heart, the effect it produces on that organ is phenomenally and unexpectedly great, in regard to the work it gets out of it.
Side 112 - Excessive fatigue, (c) The process of exciting the heart and wearing it out sooner by alcoholic stimulants, to the omission of light, frequently repeated, and judiciously selected foods.
Side 15 - Act; the court may, upon application, enlarge the time so named, but if, after the expiration of the time as originally named or enlarged by subsequent order, the order is not complied with, the occupier shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one pound for every day that such non-compliance continues.
Side 112 - ... the fear incidental to cycling, especially in crowded thoroughfares, is often creative of disturbance and palpitation of the heart, and ought to be taken into account in preventive advice.
Side 170 - A wise physician, skilled our wounds to heal, Is more than armies to the public weal.
Side 274 - That the vas deferens having been displaced in the manner usually adopted in operations for varicocele, the spermatic artery does not accompany it, but remains with the spermatic veins. 2. That in cases of varicocele the division of the main trunk of 'the spermatic artery, together with the veins, if the ordinary principles of surgical cleanliness be observed, is not only harmless to the testicle, but probably aids in the ultimate relief of the affection by diminishing the pressure of blood going...