Surgical Anaesthesia: Addresses and Other PapersLittle, Brown,, 1900 - 378 sider |
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Side 6
... pulse being for many days so low that considerable fears were enter- tained for his life . " Christison quotes the following from the " Midland Medical and Surgical Journal , " to prove that nitric ether in vapor is a dangerous poison ...
... pulse being for many days so low that considerable fears were enter- tained for his life . " Christison quotes the following from the " Midland Medical and Surgical Journal , " to prove that nitric ether in vapor is a dangerous poison ...
Side 9
... pulse rose from 130 to 142 . After A girl of sixteen immediately occupied the chair . coughing a little , she inhaled during three minutes , and fell asleep , when a molar tooth was extracted , after which she continued to slumber ...
... pulse rose from 130 to 142 . After A girl of sixteen immediately occupied the chair . coughing a little , she inhaled during three minutes , and fell asleep , when a molar tooth was extracted , after which she continued to slumber ...
Side 10
... pulse is not affected , at least in frequency ; the patient remains in a calm and tranquil slumber , and wakes with a pleasurable feeling . The mani- festation of consciousness or resistance I at first attributed to the reflex function ...
... pulse is not affected , at least in frequency ; the patient remains in a calm and tranquil slumber , and wakes with a pleasurable feeling . The mani- festation of consciousness or resistance I at first attributed to the reflex function ...
Side 11
... pulse sud- denly diminishing in force , so much so that I suggested the propriety of desisting . The pulse continued decreasing in force , and from 120 had fallen to 96. The respiration was very slow , the hands cold , and the patient ...
... pulse sud- denly diminishing in force , so much so that I suggested the propriety of desisting . The pulse continued decreasing in force , and from 120 had fallen to 96. The respiration was very slow , the hands cold , and the patient ...
Side 12
Addresses and Other Papers Henry Jacob Bigelow. pulse became more full , but again decreased in the sitting posture , and it was only after being compelled to walk during half an hour that the patient was able to lift his head . Complete ...
Addresses and Other Papers Henry Jacob Bigelow. pulse became more full , but again decreased in the sitting posture , and it was only after being compelled to walk during half an hour that the patient was able to lift his head . Complete ...
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Surgical Anaesthesia: Addresses and Other Papers - Primary Source Edition Henry Jacob Bigelow Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2013 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
action agent American Medical Association amputation anæsthetic anatomy anesthesia animal application asphyxia Boston cause character chemistry chloroform claim common conceded danger death dentist discovery disease doubt effect equally especially ether inhalation evidence existence experiments facts faculty force glottis hand Hospital human hypothesis important individual induction inebriating influence inhalation intellect invention inventor Jackson knowledge labor less machinery Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts Medical Society material mechanical medical education medical science medical student medicine method mind minutes modern Morton muscular narcotism nature nitrous oxide Novum Organum observation occurred once opium oxygen pain patient perhaps phenomena philosopher physician physiology practice practitioner principle probable protracted proved pulse quackery question recognized relation respiration safe says scientific success suffering suggestion sulphuric ether surgeon surgery surgical operations symptoms teaching theory therapeutics tion truth tumor vapor vivisection vivisector
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Side 286 - I WAS ever of opinion, that the honest man who married, and brought up a large family, did more service than he who continued single, and only talked of population.
Side 264 - The odious stranger, disguising every circumstance of time and place, assumed the mask of a martyr, a saint, and a Christian hero; and the infamous George of Cappadocia has been transformed into the renowned St. George of England, the patron of arms, of chivalry, and of the garter.
Side 117 - As nitrous oxide in its extensive operation appears capable of destroying physical pain, it may probably be used with advantage during surgical operations in which no great effusion of blood takes place.
Side 302 - MY LORD : — I would not have you take too much physic, for it doth always make me worse, and I think it will do the like with you. I ride every day, and am ready to follow any other directions from you. Make haste to return to him that loves you. CHARLES P.
Side 168 - London, said that she had no fear about her beauty, for she had had a disorder which would prevent her from ever catching the smallpox. Were these discoverers ? Surely, yes, if Dr.
Side 311 - ... momentary respite of insensibility by an unexplained special machinery of the nervous currents, or a sensibility too exquisitely acute for animal endurance ? Better that I or my friend should die than protract existence through accumulated years of torture upon animals whose exquisite suffering we cannot fail to infer, even though they may have neither voice nor feature to express it.
Side 141 - On the day when the inflammation was most troublesome, I breathed three large doses of nitrous oxide. The pain always diminished after the first four or five inspirations, the thrilling came on as usual, and uneasiness was for a few minutes swallowed up in pleasure. As the former state of mind, however, returned, the state of organ returned with it ; and I once imagined that the pain was more severe after the experiment than before.
Side 274 - Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office; reflecting that the ease, the health, and the lives of those committed to their charge, depend on their skill, attention and fidelity. They should study, also, in their deportment, so to unite tenderness with firmness, and condescension with authority, as to inspire the minds of their patients with gratitude, respect and confidence.
Side 140 - I experienced an extensive inflammation of the gum, accompanied with great pain, which equally destroyed the power of repose, and of consistent action. On the day when the inflammation was most troublesome, I breathed three large doses of nitrous oxide. The pain always diminished...
Side 6 - It is necessary to use caution in making experiments of this kind. By the imprudent inspiration of ether, a gentleman was thrown into a very lethargic state, which continued with occasional periods of intermission for more than thirty hours, and a great depression of spirits; for many days the pulse was so much lowered that considerable fears were entertained for his life.