Medical News and Abstract, Bind 27–28Lea Brothers & Company, 1869 |
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Side 1
... four men , so that any of the more delicate operations could not be Published monthly by HENRY C. LEA , No. 706 & 708 Sansom Street , Philadelphia , for One Dollar a year ; also , furnished GRATUITOUSLY to all sub- scribers of the ...
... four men , so that any of the more delicate operations could not be Published monthly by HENRY C. LEA , No. 706 & 708 Sansom Street , Philadelphia , for One Dollar a year ; also , furnished GRATUITOUSLY to all sub- scribers of the ...
Side 5
... four ounces of meconium with flatus . The passage was further distended by larger instruments , until a free passage was afforded . No further treatment was In relation to one point in the treatment , found necessary . The vomiting ...
... four ounces of meconium with flatus . The passage was further distended by larger instruments , until a free passage was afforded . No further treatment was In relation to one point in the treatment , found necessary . The vomiting ...
Side 8
... four drachms , and theverted , as they are hardly able to lay hold greatest twenty - eight drachms . This last of any object to assist them . During this was taken in thirty - three hours by a man sleep the urine and feces escape ...
... four drachms , and theverted , as they are hardly able to lay hold greatest twenty - eight drachms . This last of any object to assist them . During this was taken in thirty - three hours by a man sleep the urine and feces escape ...
Side 10
... four years , was brought send out their proper fruit - a method which to him for treatment . On examination , the was successful in the case of yeast , which right humerus was found to present a uni- } consists of more than one fungus ...
... four years , was brought send out their proper fruit - a method which to him for treatment . On examination , the was successful in the case of yeast , which right humerus was found to present a uni- } consists of more than one fungus ...
Side 24
... Four conditions are necessary for the production of the perfect first sound : 1 . Sufficient viscidity of the blood . 2. Suf- ficient pressure upon the blood . 3 Suffi- cient force in the circulation . 4. The ab- On the Sounds of the ...
... Four conditions are necessary for the production of the perfect first sound : 1 . Sufficient viscidity of the blood . 2. Suf- ficient pressure upon the blood . 3 Suffi- cient force in the circulation . 4. The ab- On the Sounds of the ...
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abscess acute aged American ammonia amputation Anatomy aneurism applied artery bladder blood bone Calabar bean carbolic acid carbuncle cause cavity chest chloral chloroform Clinical Lecture condition course cure death delirium tremens disease doses drachm Edition effect effusion employed erysipelas experience extra cloth femur fluid fracture given grains Guy's Hospital hæmoptysis heart hemorrhage incision inflammation injected joint Journ Journal Lancet ligature limb lung Medical College medicine membrane ment milk months morphia NOTES AND GLEANINGS observed occurred operation opium ounces Ovariotomy Paget pain passed patient Philadelphia Physicians poison practice practitioner present produced Prof profession Professor pulse quantity quinia remarkable remedy rheumatism scarlet fever Sciences skin sleep smallpox splint strychnia suffering suppuration surgeon Surgery swelling symptoms tetanus tion tissue treated treatment tumour ulcer urethra urine uterus vaccination vagina vessels wards weeks wound
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Side 16 - A Dictionary of Medical Science: Containing a concise explanation of the various Subjects and Terms of Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Hygiene, Therapeutics, Pharmacology, Pharmacy, Surgery, Obstetrics, Medical Jurisprudence and Dentistry, Notices of Climate and of Mineral Waters, Formulae for Officinal, Empirical and Dietetic Preparations, with the Accentuation and Etymology of the Terms, and the French and other Synonymes, so as to constitute a French as well as an English Medical Lexicon.
Side 48 - A Practical Treatise on the Diagnosis, Pathology and Treatment of Diseases Of the Heart.
Side 32 - A Treatise on the Diseases of Infancy and Childhood. By J. LEWIS SMITH, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York.
Side 89 - That measures of capacity be abandoned in the Pharmacopoeia, and that the quantities in all formulas be expressed both in weights and in equal parts by weight.
Side 64 - Essays on Conservative Medicine, and kindred topics. By AUSTIN FLINT, MD, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine in Bellevue Hosp.
Side 83 - It is as unethical for colleges to underbid each other pecuniarily as it is for practitioners to do so. Resolved, That hereafter no medical school in this country, other than those fully endowed, be entitled to representation in this Association if the amount charged by such schools for a single course of regular lectures be less than one hundred and forty dollars.
Side 152 - The medical profession, and scholars generally, are aware of the ephemeral form in which most of the early American contributions to the literature of medicine were given to the world, and, indeed, in which many of the more recent are being published. This condition of much of our professional literature is deeply regretted by all, and particularly by those whose taste and research lead them to refer to this class of works, when the fact is made apparent that whole editions of tracts and books have...
Side 171 - Draw an imaginary transverse line from the anterior superior spine of the ilium to the linea alba. Midway between this line on both sides an area (approximately 2 inches in circumference) is found which discharges positive energy*.
Side 152 - ... which it is believed all the current medical literature of our country will be cheerfully, promptly and constantly contributed. It is designed that this repository shall contain copies of every contribution by American physicians to the literature and science of medicine, from the earliest settlement of our country, no matter how or where published, including all the books, pamphlets, journals, and even unpublished manuscripts, that can be collected. Nearly all physicians have some book or pamphlet...
Side 63 - It should have little or no odour, and the odour should not be disagreeable ; for diseased meat has a sickly cadaverous smell and sometimes a smell of physic. This is very discoverable when the meat is chopped up and drenched with warm water.