The Medical Brief: A Monthly Journal of Scientific Medicine and Surgery, Bind 391911 |
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Side v
... Physician , The Beloved .. Physicians of the Arthurian Age . 352 Piffard , The Late Dr. 557 290 Pituitary Gland , The . 258 , 349 Plants in a Sick Room . 499 Plaster of Paris , Removing . Play 498 Retinal Image in Mixed Astigmatism ...
... Physician , The Beloved .. Physicians of the Arthurian Age . 352 Piffard , The Late Dr. 557 290 Pituitary Gland , The . 258 , 349 Plants in a Sick Room . 499 Plaster of Paris , Removing . Play 498 Retinal Image in Mixed Astigmatism ...
Side 5
... physician or the patient to avail himself of this method is both foolish and groundless , a relic of conditions which have long since passed away . A THE DOCTOR AS NURSE . SHORT time ago we published in these pages an abstract of an ...
... physician or the patient to avail himself of this method is both foolish and groundless , a relic of conditions which have long since passed away . A THE DOCTOR AS NURSE . SHORT time ago we published in these pages an abstract of an ...
Side 35
... physician who is fair enough and broad- minded enough to ascertain for himself the merits of the various electrical mod- alities and to fit them in with his other therapeutic aids . He finds them per- fectly compatible with his drugs ...
... physician who is fair enough and broad- minded enough to ascertain for himself the merits of the various electrical mod- alities and to fit them in with his other therapeutic aids . He finds them per- fectly compatible with his drugs ...
Side 38
... physician in charging that where one holds himself out to the public as a physician , the law implies a promise that he will use rea- sonable skill and diligence in the treat- ment of those employing him , and that a physician need not ...
... physician in charging that where one holds himself out to the public as a physician , the law implies a promise that he will use rea- sonable skill and diligence in the treat- ment of those employing him , and that a physician need not ...
Side 52
... physician- “ a little man with a red face , -dressed of course in black , with a stiff white neckerchief . He had a very large practice , and plenty of money , which he had amassed by invariably humouring the worst fancies of all the ...
... physician- “ a little man with a red face , -dressed of course in black , with a stiff white neckerchief . He had a very large practice , and plenty of money , which he had amassed by invariably humouring the worst fancies of all the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acid action acute alcohol antiseptic applied astigmatism atropine bath believe bismuth blood body bowel called cancer cause cells cent child chloroform chronic ciliary muscle clinical cold condition constipation course cure death diagnosis digestive disease doctor dose drug eczema effect fact faradic fever fluid give given glands glass glycerin grains hand headache hemorrhage Hospital injection intestinal iodine irritation lens lesions less medi medicine ment mental method milk mucous membrane muscles myopia nerve nervous normal nurse ointment operation organs pain patient physician poison powder practice practitioner prescription present produce profession pylorus quinine radium rays rectum remedy removed salvarsan skin solution stomach strabismus strychnine suffering surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature therapeutic things tient tion tissue treat treatment tube tuberculosis typhoid fever ulcer usually uterus X-ray
Populære passager
Side 252 - I firmly believe that if the whole materia medica, as now used, could be sunk to the bottom of the sea, it would be all the better for mankind, — and all the worse for the fishes.
Side 254 - No envelope will be opened except that which accompanies the successful essay. The committee will return the unsuccessful essays if reclaimed by their respective writers or their agents within one year. The committee reserves the right not to make an award if no essay submitted is considered worthy of the prize.
Side 255 - Codeine, an hour before retiring, and repeat it hourly until the irritation is allayed. Allow the tablet to dissolve slowly in the mouth, swallowing the saliva. After taking the second or third tablet the cough is usually under control, at least for that paroxysm and for the night. Should the irritation prevail in the morning or at midday, the same course of administration should be observed until subdued.
Side 47 - They are simply lengths cut from the flowing and mixed substance called Dickens — a substance of which any given length will be certain to contain a given proportion of brilliant and of bad stuff.
Side 139 - For this sixth edition Dr. Butler has entirely remodeled his work, a great part having been rewritten. All obsolete matter has been eliminated, and special attention...
Side 127 - Tablets. This remedy relieves cough by its soothing effect upon the airpassages, but does not interfere with expectoration, and, in fact, renders it easier by stimulating the respiratory muscles. Only a very...
Side 320 - Journal emphasizes the fact that the bladder, when partially paralyzed from parturition, or any other cause, can always be made to .empty itself perfectly by throwing a large amount of very warm water into the bowel, thereby doing away with the necessity of using a catheter — a most important consideration, particularly when the patient, lives at a distance from the doctor. After difficult and protracted labors...
Side 288 - Lord, this creature that you have given me makes my life miserable. She chatters incessantly and teases me beyond endurance, never leaving me alone; and she...
Side 386 - Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. With an Introductory Note by JOHN H. MUSSER, MD, Professor of Clinical Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.
Side 623 - Oft times during the summer, the physician is put to his very wit's end to find a tissue nutrient for his tubercular and debilitated patients; one that will agree with them during the hottest weather. Cord. Ext. Ol. Morrhuae Comp. (Hagee) by reason of its palatability and the ease with which it is assimilated, is the ideal agent of this character not alone in the summer but at all other seasons.