Clinical lectures and essaysD. Appleton, 1875 - 428 sider |
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Side 4
... wounds heal steadily and quickly ; they escape erysipelas and spreading suppurations and secondary hæmorrhages ; and often , when , to save any piece of a hand , we leave bits of skin that seem as if they could not live , they yet do ...
... wounds heal steadily and quickly ; they escape erysipelas and spreading suppurations and secondary hæmorrhages ; and often , when , to save any piece of a hand , we leave bits of skin that seem as if they could not live , they yet do ...
Side 5
... wound heals without inflammation and without fever , we may speak of others as good , or not bad , or bad , or very ... wounds - a strange contrast to their liability to it in association with acute necrosis.1 1 See Note I. But the chief ...
... wound heals without inflammation and without fever , we may speak of others as good , or not bad , or bad , or very ... wounds - a strange contrast to their liability to it in association with acute necrosis.1 1 See Note I. But the chief ...
Side 7
... wounds heal in them lazily ; and hence a prolonged liability to secondary hæmorrhage and other mischiefs of open wounds . Their stomachs , too , are apt to knock - up with what may seem to be no more than necessary food , though indeed ...
... wounds heal in them lazily ; and hence a prolonged liability to secondary hæmorrhage and other mischiefs of open wounds . Their stomachs , too , are apt to knock - up with what may seem to be no more than necessary food , though indeed ...
Side 8
... wounds that may not lead to long suppurations . You must keep them warm , and not feed them beyond their real necessities , nor keep them long recumbent . Your cares must be doubled when your operations are on the lower limbs , or the ...
... wounds that may not lead to long suppurations . You must keep them warm , and not feed them beyond their real necessities , nor keep them long recumbent . Your cares must be doubled when your operations are on the lower limbs , or the ...
Side 9
... wounds heal very slowly ; the cellular tissue is apt to become very oedematous and ' gummy ; ' the scars are thin , and often break down and ulcerate ; the deeper cuttings become sinuous , with tedious discharges of thin pus , and ...
... wounds heal very slowly ; the cellular tissue is apt to become very oedematous and ' gummy ; ' the scars are thin , and often break down and ulcerate ; the deeper cuttings become sinuous , with tedious discharges of thin pus , and ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abscess acute inflammation albuminuria amputation aneurism appeared artery axillary glands become believe bladder blood bone-setters bones bowels cancer carbuncle characters chloroform chronic commonly condition constitutional disease cure diagnosis disorder disturbance doubt emissions erysipelas especially evidence feeble femoral hernia fluid followed frequent gout gouty hæmorrhage healing Hospital hypochondriacs hysterical imitated incision increased inflammation injury insanity instances intestine irritable joint lectures less limb lithotomy mental mimic mischief morbid muscles muscular nearly necrosis nervous mimicry nervous system nocturnal emissions occurred oedema operation ordinary organic disease pain patient peritonitis persons phlebitis probably pulse pyæmia rare real disease recovery reduction rest rheumatic risk rule scarlet fever scrofulous seems seen sexual organs signs of strangulation sloughing sometimes speak spinal spine strangulated hernia stricture suppose suppuration surgery swelling symptoms syphilis tell thigh things tion tissue treatment tumour ulceration urethra urine varicocele veins vomiting wound
Populære passager
Side 9 - The old people that are thin and dry and tough, clear-voiced and bright-eyed, with good stomachs and strong wills, muscular and active, are not bad ; they bear all but the largest operations very well. But very bad are they who, looking somewhat like these, are feeble and soft-skinned, with little pulses, bad appetites, and weak digestive power, so that they cannot, in an emergency, be well nourished.
Side 271 - Ignorance about sexual affairs seems to be a notable characteristic of the more civilized part of the human race. Among ourselves it is certain that the method of copulating needs to be taught, and that they to whom it is not taught remain quite ignorant about it.
Side 256 - I have seen carbuncles spread in as large a proportion of cases after incisions as in cases that have never been incised at all. I have in my mind a striking case that occurred to me early in practice, when I followed the routine, and, in a friend of my own, divided a carbuncle most freely. I cut it after the most approved fashion in depth and length and width, and then it spread. After two or three days more all the newly-formed part was cut as freely as the first, and then it spread again, and...
Side 412 - If there is any difference from its usual appearance, it is, that the ligament of the patella appears rather more relaxed than in the sound limb. The leg is readily bent or extended by the hands of the surgeon, and without pain to the patient: at most, the degree of uneasiness caused by this flexion and extension is trifling. But the patient himself cannot freely bend, nor perfectly extend, the limb in walking ; he is compelled to walk with an invariable and small degree of flexion. Though the patient...
Side 199 - edited by Howard Marsh, p. 197 : ' Among all the joints, the hip and the knee, which are the most frequent seats of real disease, are equally so of the mimicry — a fact not easy to account for. It may be due to mental association, perhaps unconsciously, or to a mingled inheritance — for instance, to an inheritance of nervous constitution and of relative weakness in the joint or joints most weak in progenitors.
Side 330 - You will find, in every day's practice, that fatigue has a larger share in the promotion or permission of disease than any other single casual condition you can name.
Side 16 - The worst of this class are such as have soft, loose, flabby, and yellow fat ; and I think you may know them by their bellies being pendulous and more prominent than even their thick, subcutaneous fat accounts for ; for this shape tells of thick omental fat ; and, I suppose, of defective portal circulation. I know no operations in which I more nearly despair of doing good than in those for umbilical hernia or for compound fractures in people that are over-fat after this fashion. Nothing short of...
Side 288 - Chastity does no harm to mind or body ; its discipline is excellent ; marriage can be safely waited for...
Side 262 - ... his occipital spine to the third cervical vertebra. He measured it for his own amusement, and it was fourteen inches over its surface transversely, and nine inches vertically — a carbuncle, then, of the largest size, and one, it might have been supposed, attended with considerable risk to life. I urged him very strongly to take a large quantity of what is called " support," for I was at that time under an impression of its necessity.
Side 264 - This should be spread large enough to cover the whole carbuncle, and over it should be laid a poultice of half linseed-meal and half bread. And, if you want to exercise your skill, learn to make that poultice well, and to put it on well, and to keep it in its place well. That mode of dressing the carbuncle, so far as the materials are concerned, will last through its whole course...