The Western Journal of Medicine and SurgeryPrentice & Weissinger, 1846 - Medicine |
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Page 28
... kind of lake , and which is often so abundant as not to entirely disap- pear by heat , until the urine is diluted by the addition of wa- ter . These deposits do not exhibit their delicate tints until af ter being collected in a filter ...
... kind of lake , and which is often so abundant as not to entirely disap- pear by heat , until the urine is diluted by the addition of wa- ter . These deposits do not exhibit their delicate tints until af ter being collected in a filter ...
Page 30
... kind . To many , this proposition may be startling ; neverthe- less , if it be carefully examined , it will be found , I doubt not , to be grounded on fact . The truth of this remark will ap- pear more evident as we proceed . " The ...
... kind . To many , this proposition may be startling ; neverthe- less , if it be carefully examined , it will be found , I doubt not , to be grounded on fact . The truth of this remark will ap- pear more evident as we proceed . " The ...
Page 33
... kind , are observed , that never occur in any other of the elementary textures and systems of the body . To this category specially belong the different species of erup- tive and scaly diseases , which have their seat , for the most ...
... kind , are observed , that never occur in any other of the elementary textures and systems of the body . To this category specially belong the different species of erup- tive and scaly diseases , which have their seat , for the most ...
Page 71
... for the purpose . This peculiar treatment has been tried and found success- ful in ulcers , some of which were of an inveterate kind ; and in one case of twenty - five years ' standing Report on the Progress of Surgery . 71.
... for the purpose . This peculiar treatment has been tried and found success- ful in ulcers , some of which were of an inveterate kind ; and in one case of twenty - five years ' standing Report on the Progress of Surgery . 71.
Page 78
... kind of apparatus employed . We may add , that the operation by the knife is one greatly dreaded in most cases by patients , and frequently deferred in consequence of that dread ; and there can be no doubt , that if the surgeon can ...
... kind of apparatus employed . We may add , that the operation by the knife is one greatly dreaded in most cases by patients , and frequently deferred in consequence of that dread ; and there can be no doubt , that if the surgeon can ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
abscess action albumen ammonia aneurism animal appearance applied arteries attended become bile bladder blood body bowels brain calomel carbon carbonic acid cause cellular character circumstances color consequence contains continued cure death deposit diet digestion discharge disease doses drachm effect emetic experience extremities fact fatal fever fibrin fluid frequent gall-bladder grains hemorrhage Hospital inflammation intestines jaundice Journal kidneys labor less liver Louisville lungs lymph matter medicine ment minutes morbid mucous membrane natural nitric acid observed occur operation opium organ pain patient physician placenta pleurisy poison practice practitioner present produced profession Professor prussic acid pulse purpurine quantity quinine remarks remedy respiration result scirrhus secretion serous serum skin slight sometimes stomach substance Surgeon Surgery symptoms tion tissues treatment tubercle tumor ulceration uric acid urine uterine uterus vessels vomiting
Popular passages
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Page 368 - ART. VIII.—A Dictionary of Practical Medicine, comprising General Pathology, the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Morbid Structures, &c. By
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Page 111 - quantity of water cannot be received into the small intestines, or the circuit through the portal system in the vena-cava ascendens, or thence through the lungs and heart into the systemic circulation, be obstructed, or if there be extensive disorganisation of the kidneys, the due secretion of urine cannot be. effected.
Page 516 - Fleischmann is a regular, well-educated physician, as capable of forming a true diagnosis as other practitioners, and he is considered by those who know him as a man of honor and respectability, and incapable of attesting a falsehood. We cannot, therefore, refuse to admit the accuracy of his statements as to matters of fact;
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Page 414 - ART. VIII.—A Dictionary of Practical Medicine, comprising General Pathology, the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Morbid Structures,
Page 413 - afterwards, when he had left the dinner-table to go to the drawing-room, he found himself lame from a violent pain in one ankle. Suddenly he became sick; the ice-cream was rejected from the stomach; and this was followed by an instantaneous relief of the pain in the foot.
Page 302 - If you put improper food in the stomach it becomes disordered, and the whole system is affected. Vegetable matter ferments and becomes gaseous; while animal substances are changed into a putrid, abominable, and acid stimulus. Now, some people acquire preposterous noses; others, blotches on the face, and different parts of the body; others inflammation of the
Page 547 - and that a committee of seven be appointed to report on this subject at the meeting to be held in Philadelphia on the first Wednesday in May, 1847. "Resolved, That it is desirable that young men, before being received as students of medicine, should have acquired a suitable preliminary education, and that a committee of seven be appointed to report on the standard of