By a self-limited disease, I would be understood to express one which receives limits from its own nature, and not from foreign influences ; one which, after it has obtained foothold in the system, cannot in the present state of our knowledge be eradicated... Medical Communications - Side 353af Massachusetts Medical Society - 1866Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| 1913 - 740 sider
...diseases that then were, and still are, common in New England. He denned a self -limited disease as "one which receives limits from its own nature, and...foreign influences; one which, after it has obtained a foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge, be eradicated or abridged... | |
| Edward Hammond Clarke - 1856 - 32 sider
...from his admirable essay on self-limited diseases. " By a self-limited disease," says Dr. Bigelow, " I would be understood to express one, which receives...foreign influences ; one, which, after it has obtained a foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge, be eradicated or abridged... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1859 - 612 sider
...This is the great truth which Dr. Bigelow first unfolded to the profession twenty-four years ago. " By a self-limited disease, I would be understood to...nature, and not from foreign influences ; one which, iifter it has obtained foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge, be eradicated... | |
| 1864 - 780 sider
...full of this kind of arrant nonsense. Dr. Bigelow may be taken as a sample of other medical authors. " By a self-limited disease I would be understood to express one which receives /////// from its own nature!" (it seems this imp can map out its own sphere of action wherein to play... | |
| George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman - 1879 - 646 sider
...certain diseases, and gave to it the following definition : " By a ' self-limited ' (disease) I mean one which receives limits from its own nature, and not from foreign influences, which, after obtaining a foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge, be... | |
| Jacob Bigelow - 1867 - 404 sider
...a discourse in 1835, already alluded to, with the following definition: " A self-limited disease is one which receives limits from its own nature, and...the present state of our knowledge, be eradicated o1 abridged by art; incurable now by art, yet susceptible of recovery under natural processes, both... | |
| Jacob Bigelow - 1867 - 408 sider
...a discourse in 1836, already alluded to, with the following definition! "A self-limited disease in one which receives limits from its own nature, and not from foreign influenrm; one which, after it ha* obtained foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of... | |
| 1870 - 532 sider
...Quoting from his remarkable discourse, delivered before the Massachusetts Medical Society, in 1835, "By a self-limited disease, I would be understood...from its own nature, and not from foreign influences; and which, after it has obtained foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge,... | |
| 1885 - 360 sider
...in Disease," says: "By selflimited disease, I would be understood to express one which receives laws from its own nature, and not from foreign influences, one which, after it has obtained a foothold in the system, cannot in the present state of knowledge be embodied or abridged by art."... | |
| 1877 - 604 sider
...certain diseases, and gave to it the following definition: '• By a 'self-limited' (disease) I mean one which receives limits from its own nature, and not from foreign influences, which, after obtaining a foothold in the system, cannot, in the present state of our knowledge, be... | |
| |