Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, Bind 8Longmans, Green and Company, 1817 |
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Side 7
... for the suffering which the patient must un- dergo . The difficulty of keeping the separated ends in apposition on board of ship ; the large formations of matter ; the tedious and troublesome exfoliations , ON BOARD THE LEANDER . 7.
... for the suffering which the patient must un- dergo . The difficulty of keeping the separated ends in apposition on board of ship ; the large formations of matter ; the tedious and troublesome exfoliations , ON BOARD THE LEANDER . 7.
Side 8
Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London. formations of matter ; the tedious and troublesome exfoliations , and the imminent risk of being forced to have recourse to amputation at last ; together with the probability of the poor ...
Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London. formations of matter ; the tedious and troublesome exfoliations , and the imminent risk of being forced to have recourse to amputation at last ; together with the probability of the poor ...
Side 13
... matter , or was a part of the brain itself . In the greater num ber of instances , however , in which the latter has been supposed to be the case , the opinion appears to have been founded on no better evidence than the resemblance ...
... matter , or was a part of the brain itself . In the greater num ber of instances , however , in which the latter has been supposed to be the case , the opinion appears to have been founded on no better evidence than the resemblance ...
Side 15
... matter in its cen- tre , and hence inducing a belief that the whole mass was formed by protruded brain , it was sug- gested that the only plan of treatment by which a chance of recovery could be afforded , consisted in removing the ...
... matter in its cen- tre , and hence inducing a belief that the whole mass was formed by protruded brain , it was sug- gested that the only plan of treatment by which a chance of recovery could be afforded , consisted in removing the ...
Side 16
... matter being readily seen , with the con- volutions and pia mater dipping down between them . During the remainder of the day on which the operation had been performed , the boy was upon the whole more tranquil . For the next two days ...
... matter being readily seen , with the con- volutions and pia mater dipping down between them . During the remainder of the day on which the operation had been performed , the boy was upon the whole more tranquil . For the next two days ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abdomen absorption affected amputation aneurism appearance arteries attack Barbadoes bath bladder blood body bone bowels brain canals cause cavity chancre cicatrix circumstances colour consequence considerable constitution continued corona glandis cure degree deposit died discharge disease dura mater effusion enlarged eruption exhibited exostosis external femur fluid formed glands Guadaloupe hæmorrhage healed healthy Hospital idem inches increased inflammation instance irritation John limb liver lymph M.D. Physician mass medullary medullary cavity membrane ment mercury months morbid natural nitro-muriatic acid observed occurred operation ossific matter pain particular patient pellagra periosteum peritoneum pia mater portion prepuce produced protrusion pulsations pulse quantity regiment remarkable remedy remittent removed Saint Bartholomew's Hospital secondary symptoms sensible shew skin skull sore stomach Street structure substance suffered surface Surgeon swelling syphilis texture thickened tion tumor ture ulcer urea urethra urine vascular ventricle vessels vomit whole wound yellow fever
Populære passager
Side 596 - Physiological Lectures, exhibiting a general view of Mr. Hunter's Physiology, and of his Researches in comparative Anatomy ; delivered before the Royal College of Surgeons, by J.
Side 325 - ... suffering, such as I have rarely had occasion to witness elsewhere. These unhappy objects seem under the influence of an invincible despondency ; they seek to be alone, scarcely answer the questions put to them, and often shed tears without any obvious cause. Their faculties and senses become alike impaired, and the progress of the disease, where it does not carry them off from debility and exhaustion of the vital powers, generally leaves them incurable idiots, or produces occasionally maniacal...
Side 562 - Although the secondary symptoms do for the most part yield to simple remedies, such as venaesection, sudorifics, the warm bath, sarsaparilla, &c. without much loss of time, that is, in the course of from one to four and six months; yet, as in the primary ulcers, a gentle course of mercury will frequently expedite, and in particular persons and states of constitutions is necessary to effect a cure; and that a repetition of it will even, in some cases, be requisite to render it permanent.
Side 327 - ... spring, and disappearing again in the autumn. In other cases, where it has been found possible to remove the patient to a new situation and mode of life, the disease is still further arrested in its progress. It rarely happens, however, that these means can be practically adopted; and the constitutional malady is generally so far established in the third or fourth year, that little hope remains of benefiting the patient, either by medicine, or change in the mode of life.
Side 248 - ... up the back of the arm to the neck and head, producing a sensation at the roots of the hairs as if they had become erect. To these feelings succeeded a dimness of sight, and the pain afterwards went suddenly into the stomach, followed by sickness and vomiting.
Side 217 - ... and pubic bones. But in the median you have to extract towards the summit of this space, at the apex of a narrow triangle having the transverse muscles forming a tense bar along its base, and offering a material obstacle to the introduction of the forceps and the extraction of the stone. The second obstacle lies in the prostate ; but as it is easily removable by dilatation, it cannot be considered a serious one. The third, the deepest and most important, is situated at the neck of the bladder....
Side 179 - ... past has not been the case with me. " 6th. I have not bathed again, but I still feel the effects of the bath in my mouth. My appetite is now good, and I sleep with tranquillity, which I had not done of late. With all this my pulse is quicker than usual, and I am sensible of some degree of languor. It is, however, to be observed, that the weather is very hot; the thermometer being, during the day, in the shade, from 92 to 96 degrees of Fahrenheit.
Side 560 - We reluctantly pass over several other remarks, to find room for the author's concluding paragraphs : — " 1. Every kind of ulcer of the genitals, of whatever form or appearance, is curable without mercury. This I consider to be established as a fact, from the observation of more than 500 cases •which I am acquainted with, exclusive of those treated in the different regiments of Guards, and which occurred in consequence of promiscuous intercourse.
Side 596 - On the Phenomena of Insanity : being a Supplement to Observations on the Casual and Periodical Influence of peculiar States of the Atmosphere on Human Health and Disease. By THOMAS FOHSTEU, MB No.
Side 324 - The constitutional malady shews itself under a variety of forms ; some of the symptoms having considerable analogy to those of scorbutus ; all of them indicating a general cachexy of habit, and more particularly a lesion of all the voluntary functions. The debility now becomes extreme : the...