A Collection of the published writings of William Withey Gull v. 1 1894, Bind 1New Sydenham Society, 1894 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 87
Side viii
... Blood- vessels • Chronic Nephritis ; viz . the Relation between the Changes of Con- nective Tissue , Parenchyma , Blood - vessels , and Heart in this Disease Parthenogenetic Tumour attached to the Muscular Tissue of the Left Ventricle ...
... Blood- vessels • Chronic Nephritis ; viz . the Relation between the Changes of Con- nective Tissue , Parenchyma , Blood - vessels , and Heart in this Disease Parthenogenetic Tumour attached to the Muscular Tissue of the Left Ventricle ...
Side 5
... blood , the seat of which is accidental . With this tendency to secondary suppuration in the brain is also to be noted the fact of its latency . A person may per- form all his duties and be in apparently good health , though for many ...
... blood , the seat of which is accidental . With this tendency to secondary suppuration in the brain is also to be noted the fact of its latency . A person may per- form all his duties and be in apparently good health , though for many ...
Side 25
... blood - vessels running through a bone may be the medium of extension of disease , and especially of acute disease , before the bone - tissue becomes carious . the diseases of the ear there are many recorded examples in proof , and Case ...
... blood - vessels running through a bone may be the medium of extension of disease , and especially of acute disease , before the bone - tissue becomes carious . the diseases of the ear there are many recorded examples in proof , and Case ...
Side 28
... blood had taken place into the ventricles . In the evening five ounces of urine was drawn off by the catheter and found to be highly albuminous . The following day he was semi - comatose . Pupils dilated . Pulse 92. A pint of urine now ...
... blood had taken place into the ventricles . In the evening five ounces of urine was drawn off by the catheter and found to be highly albuminous . The following day he was semi - comatose . Pupils dilated . Pulse 92. A pint of urine now ...
Side 32
... blood had to traverse both liver and lungs before it reached the brain , and produced its morbid effects . It is a characteristic example of the insidiousness of pyæmic suppuration in the brain . Slight facial paralysis was the first ...
... blood had to traverse both liver and lungs before it reached the brain , and produced its morbid effects . It is a characteristic example of the insidiousness of pyæmic suppuration in the brain . Slight facial paralysis was the first ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abscess acid acute symptoms admitted affected albumen aneurism apex appearance arterioles arterioles and capillaries atrophy attack become diseased blood bone brain Bright's disease capillaries cells cerebral cervical chest chronic Bright's disease clinical colour complained condition connective tissue contracted kidney cord cyst day of admission days before admission death dilated dorsal dura mater effusion exudation fibroid fibroid change fibroid material free from pain granular Guy's Hospital Guy's Hospital Reports healthy heart hyaline hyaline-fibroid hypertrophy inflammation kidneys layer left ventricle legs lesion liver lobe lungs membrane morbid changes morning muscles muscular nuclei nerve-tubules nerves nervous nitric acid normal observed organs paralysis paraplegia pathology patient perspiration pia mater post-mortem posterior columns pulse renal resp Respiration rheumatic fever right side sensation skin slight softening sound spinal substance suppuration surface systolic systolic bruit temperature thickened tion tongue treatment tubules tumour tunica intima urine vascular vessels walls whilst
Populære passager
Side 551 - ... tubercles, varying from the size of a pin's head to that of a large pea, isolated or confluent ; or, secondly, as yellowish patches of irregular outline, slightly elevated, and with but little hardness.
Side 86 - ... thin and transparent, except at the point of rupture. Further, also, when death has taken place from changes around the aneurism, as by pressure or softening, the sac itself may present such appearances that unless a minute dissection be made of it, its true nature may not be discovered.
Side 132 - Hebdomadaire, and having witnessed it myself in the months of July and Augiist of the same year, I can bear testimony to the ability and accuracy of his description. It began (frequently in persons of good constitution) with sensations of pricking...
Side 555 - ... discussion. On its first appearance, some suspected it to have a secondary venereal affection ; but there was nothing in the case, nor indeed in the character of the eruption, when carefully examined, to support this view. The only cutaneous affection with which we could associate it, was that of a young woman, whose case we have given above, where the tubercles had occurred in the face only.
Side 545 - 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 557 - Sheriff's case. They are firm, rather irregular on the surface; have much the appearance, at first sight, of small compound follicles, but on closer inspection are proved to depend upon a change in the cutis. On the surface small venous capillaries may be here and there seen, producing a mottled appearance. In the hands we pass insensibly from the tubercles on the back of the joints to the state described in Mrs.
Side 574 - Gull read a paper on the injurious effects of ether inhalation, and ended his communication with queries as to the " desirability of removing pain," &c.1 Mr. Bransby Cooper, Surgeon to Guy's Hospital, afterwards affirmed it as his opinion, " that pain was a premonitory condition, no doubt fitting parts, the subject of lesion, to reparatory action, and, therefore, he (Mr.
Side 547 - ... 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 307 - ... slow pulse, slow breathing. In the stage of greatest emaciation one might have been pardoned for assuming that there was some organic lesion, but from the point of view indicated such an assumption would have been unnecessary.
Side 132 - ... parts to be touched by the bedclothes. After some time, a few days or even a few hours, a diminution or even abolition of sensation took place in the affected members ; they became incapable of distinguishing the shape, texture, or temperature of bodies, the power of motion declined, and, finally, they were observed to become altogether paralytic. The injury was not confined to the hands and feet alone, but, advancing with progressive pace, extended over the whole of both extremities. Persons...