Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, Bind 52Longmans, Green and Company, 1869 |
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Side 4
... slight discharge from wound . Has not been heard of since . TABLE II . - Twelve cases of excision of the. 2 Edward Disney 8 Jan. 18 , 1866 Discharged from hospital July 4th , 1866. The head of the bone and the great trochanter were both ...
... slight discharge from wound . Has not been heard of since . TABLE II . - Twelve cases of excision of the. 2 Edward Disney 8 Jan. 18 , 1866 Discharged from hospital July 4th , 1866. The head of the bone and the great trochanter were both ...
Side 9
... slight attachment of the cartilage to the layer of bone beneath . When the cartilage is thus in great measure detached it may easily be conceived how a very slight motion would tend to detach it farther and how much pain this would ...
... slight attachment of the cartilage to the layer of bone beneath . When the cartilage is thus in great measure detached it may easily be conceived how a very slight motion would tend to detach it farther and how much pain this would ...
Side 14
... slight discharge from the wound , but there was no swelling or other indication of inflammation . As he became worse , I amputated on the fourth day . The restless- ness continued , mortification of the stump supervened , and he died ...
... slight discharge from the wound , but there was no swelling or other indication of inflammation . As he became worse , I amputated on the fourth day . The restless- ness continued , mortification of the stump supervened , and he died ...
Side 15
... slight shortening caused by the removal of the articular surfaces is no disadvantage . On the contrary , it facilitates the swing of the foot forwards in walking and running . There has been no tendency to return of disease at the part ...
... slight shortening caused by the removal of the articular surfaces is no disadvantage . On the contrary , it facilitates the swing of the foot forwards in walking and running . There has been no tendency to return of disease at the part ...
Side 19
... slight movement is then most easily detected ; and if the patient is allowed to get up while movement , however slight , takes place between the bones , the part is liable to become bent , or the process of anchylosis may be suspended ...
... slight movement is then most easily detected ; and if the patient is allowed to get up while movement , however slight , takes place between the bones , the part is liable to become bent , or the process of anchylosis may be suspended ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abdominal acetabulum acid acute symptoms adhesions affected amputation aneurism aneurismal aorta apex appears Assistant-Physician attack become diseased bladder blood bones cardiac dulness Cavendish square coats College Hospital common iliac artery condition cough cyst day of admission days before admission dilatation discharged dissected elevated epispadias examination excision femur flaps groin Grosvenor square Guy's Hospital H.M. the Queen hæmoptysis heart iliac inches Infirmary inversion iritis JOHN joint kidney knee Lecturer left side ligament ligature limb liver London Hospital lower Medical months mucous membrane muscles nerve normal occurred operation ovariotomy pain patient penis phthisis Physician pressure Professor pulsation pulse Recovered result rheumatic fever rhonchi rickety right side Royal scrotum Single Parietal skin slight spleen street subclavian artery sulpho-carbolate surface Surgery swelling Synovial syphilis systolic bruit temperature tion tissue Trans treatment tumour umbilical upper ureter urethra urine uterus vessels WILLIAM wound دو
Populære passager
Side 83 - That there is not sufficient evidence before the Profession to prove that any of the advocated remedies have power to prevent the heart becoming diseased. That in rheumatic fever the tendency is for the heart to become diseased during the first few days of the fever...
Side 85 - ... is to be attributed, not to the influence of the drugs, but to the natural course of the disease ; for the patients did not come under treatment until the rheumatic fever had been going on some days, and until the period when the heart was most liable to become diseased had passed over.
Side 86 - To regulate the temperature. To moderate excessive skin function by sponging the surface of the body. To allay pain, by placing the patient in an easy position, and sometimes by opiates. To sustain the organic nerve power by light diet, and occasionally by small doses of alcohol. To procure rest by the simplest means, especially avoiding such movements of the body as may excite the circulation. In fine, to place the patient in a physiological state of mean rest, if it may be so termed, of the nervous,...
Side 209 - It may be taken then as almost certain that the mortality of ovariotomy is but little affected by tapping — that the fact of a patient not having been tapped, or having been tapped very often, is by itself of little or no value in prognosis. I have stated elsewhere that such adhesions as are apt to follow tapping have no appreciable effect upon the mortality after ovariotomy...
Side 377 - The disease which has been described is distinct from the lardaceous or amyloid change on the one hand, and on the other, from that enlargement of the spleen and absorbent glands, which has been associated with the name of Dr.
Side 1 - Society deems it proper to state that the Society does not hold itself in any way responsible for the statements, reasonings, or opinions set forth in the various papers which, on grounds of general merit, are thought worthy of being published in its Transactions. REGULATIONS relative to the publication of the
Side 209 - ... recover; while, after tapping, sooner or later, they all die. But the very important distinction is overlooked between an operation which either cures or kills, and one which only fails to save life, or kills only under most exceptional circumstances. It is seldom that a surgeon is called upon to perform ovariotomy in order to save a patient from imminent death. But this does occasionally happen. Dr. Wiltshire and Dr. Watson have published a case, where a woman who was dying from bleeding into...
Side 4 - ... saw. It would appear that this operation has been actually performed with some degree of advantage, and I do not doubt that circumstances may occur to make it worth while to have recourse to it. But it is to be observed, at the same time, that all that can be thus accomplished is the removal of one portion of the disease, and that it is the largest portion of it, in the bone of the pelvis, which is necessarily allowed to remain. The operation cannot be performed without a certain degree of local...
Side 85 - Button's conclusions are as follows : — That when the patient's heart was healthy on admission into the hospital, it was very rare for it to become organically diseased while the patients were under treatment by mint water — or, in other words, when the rheumatic fever was allowed to run its natural course. That the evidence before the profession shows that the heart very rarely became diseased while...
Side 77 - The authors then endeavour to show that when the heart becomes diseased in rheumatic fever, it does so at an early stage of the disease ; and if it does not become diseased during the first week of the rheumatic fever, it rarely does so afterwards; and they give abstracts from twenty-two cases of rheumatic fever to demonstrate this. Drs. Gull and...