of the wind of Carpue, Mr. his restoration of a lost nose Carson, Dr. obscurity of his opi- nions on the motion of the ar- terial blood, 10; his observa- tion on adhesive inflammation 11 CASES of stone in the bladder,
36; injury to the head ending fatally after forty years had elapsed, 49; another after six years, 50; of diseases of the neck and inflammation of the trachea, 51; spasmodic affec- tion of the larynx, 52; serous effusion of the lungs, 55; on diseases of the uterus, 58; spontaneous cure of an ingui- nal aneurism, 60; of shaking palsy, 74; of impregnation, 76; of a woman who wanted the left ovarium, 77; of croup, 126; of extraordinary perio- dical sickness, 129; of the swallowing of sulphuric acid, ib.; of lusus naturæ, 130; of vermis lumbricus in the intes- tinal canal, ib.; of diseased action of the heart, ib.; case of yellow fever, 146; of morbus cæruleus, 152; of hydrocepha- lus, 165, 166; of lithotomy, 168; of strangulation of the intestines, 169; history of an exophthalmia fungosa, with an engraving, 177; history of paralysis of the heart, 186; of phthisis pulmonalis, 191; of chronic diarrhoea, 193; of an aged person who cut new teeth at the end of life, 234; of dis- eased spine, 246; of catarrhus hepaticus, 249; of the re-union
of the toes, 250; of a nose re- stored artificially, 251; of hy- datid in the brain, 257; of hydrophobia by the bite of a cat, 258; of wounds by the wind of a cannon-ball, 266; of fatal aneurism after tying the internal iliac artery, 268; of placental presentation, 274; of obstinate constipation, 280; of an accident to the ear, 283; of disordered pupil by fits, 284; of a blind person, 291; of the death of Madame de Stael, 293; of elephantiasis,
298; of accidents in a mine, 303; of a fœtus with a dou- ble head and heart, 338; of cataracts, ib.; of a woman who lived without food eleven years, 341; of reversed vagina, 342; of cancer of the right loin, 344; of irregular conform ation of the heart, ib.; of wounded bladder, 346; of calcareous matter in horses, 348; of morbus pediculosus, 350; of an osteo-steatomatous swelling, with an engraving, 355; farther particulars of ex- traordinary perception in a blind lady, 368,430; of wounds in the stomach, 371; of knives swallowed, 372; of fractured skull by the wind of a ball, 373; of injury of the spinal cord, 406; of gun-shot wounds, 412; of lithotomy performed on a child, 420; extraordinary effects of cold in typhus, 433; of hydrophobia cured by alisma plantago, 435; of typhus, 437; of phthiriasis, 438; of puer- peral fever cured by spirits of turpentine, 448; of rupture of the brain and its membranes in hydrocephalus internus, 464; of the efficacy of the nitro- muriatic acid, 466; of fractured ribs, 475; anus at the groin, 476; of a tumour of the face, 482; of stricture of the rectum, 488; of the discharge of part of the ileum, ib.; of tetanus, ib.; of colica stercorea, ib.; of fe- moral aneurism, 489; of dis- eased brain, 491; of an epide mic fever, 493; of injury to the nerves producing spasms, 504; of tetanus without a previous wound, 506; of her Royal Highness the Princess Char- lotte, with remarks, 513; of poison from vipers, 517; of an enormous tumour on the head, ib.; of death by lightning, ib.; of a blind person restored to sight, 518.
Cat, hydrophobia occasioned by the bite of one Cataract, observations on
on the operation of it
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