British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review: Or, Quarterly Journal of Practial Medicine and Surgery, Volume 321863 - Medicine |
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Page 18
... operation is admissible , are disposed of by the author as groundless , where pus has been proved to be present by the use of the grooved needle . Indeed , the little reason for alarm on the score of the entry of air into the cavity is ...
... operation is admissible , are disposed of by the author as groundless , where pus has been proved to be present by the use of the grooved needle . Indeed , the little reason for alarm on the score of the entry of air into the cavity is ...
Page 30
... operation in acute pleurisy , while he by no means peremptorily forbids it in all cases , stating , however , that only twice in eleven years of extensive practice has he felt called upon to perform it . In the operation he has always ...
... operation in acute pleurisy , while he by no means peremptorily forbids it in all cases , stating , however , that only twice in eleven years of extensive practice has he felt called upon to perform it . In the operation he has always ...
Page 41
... operation being of course repeated on the child after birth . 7. That during the development or just after the completion of the vaccine vesicle , an eruption of supernumerary pustules , in every respect re- sembling that produced by ...
... operation being of course repeated on the child after birth . 7. That during the development or just after the completion of the vaccine vesicle , an eruption of supernumerary pustules , in every respect re- sembling that produced by ...
Page 51
... operation sixty - four times for rheumatism . Another member of the profession ( M. Labrosse ) , who died refusing to be bled , is thus gibbeted in Patin's correspondence : " He did us the honour to call us sanguinary pedants , and said ...
... operation sixty - four times for rheumatism . Another member of the profession ( M. Labrosse ) , who died refusing to be bled , is thus gibbeted in Patin's correspondence : " He did us the honour to call us sanguinary pedants , and said ...
Page 58
... operation of one of these causes has , perhaps , rendered the larger and more important of these works less elaborate as a compilation than its author would doubtless have made it had he had at his command those sources of information ...
... operation of one of these causes has , perhaps , rendered the larger and more important of these works less elaborate as a compilation than its author would doubtless have made it had he had at his command those sources of information ...
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action affected albuminuria ammonia animals appears arteries asylum atavism attacked bile blood body Calabar bean calomel cancer carbonic acid cause cells cervix character child cinchona coagulation colour condition connexion cornea death died dilatation disease doses dysentery endemic enteric fever epidemic existence experiments fact favour female fibres fluid force forceps glands gout grammes hæmorrhage hemeralopia hereditary hereditary disease Hospital inflammation influence of sex injection insane intestinal ipecacuanha Journal kidney labour less liver male matter Méd medicine Molière mother mucous membrane muscle nature nerves notice observed occur operation organic pain papillæ pathology patient peculiar period phenomena phthisis physician physiology poison practice present produced pupil quantity regards remarks Report secretion skin substance suffered surface surgeon symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue treatment tumour typhus ulceration urine uterine uterus vessels vital whilst
Popular passages
Page 460 - a hill retired, In thoughts more elevate, and reason'd high Of providence, foreknowledge, will, and fate, Fix'd fate, free will, foreknowledge absolute ; And found no' end, in wand'ring mazes lost.
Page 404 - But it is manifest that Plato, in his opinion of ideas, as one that had a wit of elevation situate as upon a cliff, did descry that forms were the true object of knowledge...
Page 80 - Replace the patient on the face, raising and supporting the chest well on a folded coat or other article of dress.
Page 400 - We carry with us the wonders we seek without us: there is all Africa and her prodigies in us; we are that bold and adventurous piece of Nature, which he that studies wisely learns in a compendium what others labour at in a divided piece and endless volume.
Page 283 - PRACTICAL LITHOTOMY AND LITHOTRITY ; or, An Inquiry into the best Modes of removing Stone from the Bladder.
Page 409 - PAYEN, and other solid colloidal hydrates, all of which are, strictly speaking, insoluble in cold water, are themselves permeable when in mass, as water is, by the more highly diffusive class of substances. But such jellies greatly resist the passage of the less diffusive substances, and cut off entirely other colloid substances like themselves that may be in solution.
Page 409 - For the mineral forms of silicic acid, deposited from water, such as flint, are...
Page 231 - Edenhuizen infers from his researches that in the healthy state, a small quantity of nitrogen in a gaseous form is given off by the skin, and that this function being suppressed, the nitrogen is retained in the blood in the form of ammonia, which is then deposited as triple-phosphate in the subcutaneous areolar tissue, and in the peritoneum. The nitrogenous compound retained in the blood acts as an irritant to the nervous system, producing rigors, palsies, cramps, and tetanic attacks.
Page 409 - Every physical and chemical property is characteristically modified in each class. They appear like different worlds of matter, and give occasion to a corresponding division of chemical science. The distinction between these kinds of matter is that subsisting between the material of a mineral and the material of an organized mass.
Page 264 - He makes extension backwards and downwards, while the assistant draws laterally. The dislocation is thus reduced with surprising facility, the agency of chloroform not being required. The advantage of this modification is that extension backwards may be far more easily executed than when the patient is in the supine position ; and this is the direction required in dislocation forwards, which prevails in the great majority of cases. For dislocation backwards, which is very rare, Cooper's procedure...