The Western Journal of Medicine and SurgeryPrentice & Weissinger, 1846 - Medicine |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 91
Page 30
... as we proceed . " The second proposition that may be stated is , that every inflammation , irritation , or morbid action , is originally of a local nature ; that is to say , it always 30 Gross's Elements of Pathological Anatomy :
... as we proceed . " The second proposition that may be stated is , that every inflammation , irritation , or morbid action , is originally of a local nature ; that is to say , it always 30 Gross's Elements of Pathological Anatomy :
Page 31
local nature ; that is to say , it always makes its impression in the first instance upon some particular part , texture , or organ . After this inflammation has continued for a longer or shorter period , it often happens that it ...
local nature ; that is to say , it always makes its impression in the first instance upon some particular part , texture , or organ . After this inflammation has continued for a longer or shorter period , it often happens that it ...
Page 55
... say that the slow and tranquil state of the pulse in this case , was not a good sign . But my impression is that , cæteris paribus , the quieter the pulse in pneumonia , the bet- ter . It indicates a disease of less violence , and much ...
... say that the slow and tranquil state of the pulse in this case , was not a good sign . But my impression is that , cæteris paribus , the quieter the pulse in pneumonia , the bet- ter . It indicates a disease of less violence , and much ...
Page 64
... say , that in all stages and conditions of this disease , where the equalizing and revellent effect of emesis is alone desired , I have never regretted having used the turpeth mineral , in preference to all other emetics . These remarks ...
... say , that in all stages and conditions of this disease , where the equalizing and revellent effect of emesis is alone desired , I have never regretted having used the turpeth mineral , in preference to all other emetics . These remarks ...
Page 70
... say the diminution of carbon , in the interdiction of grease , sugar , and alcohol . If I were asked what one organ has most frequently appeared to take the lead , I should say the liver . " We have thus given as fair a statement of Mr ...
... say the diminution of carbon , in the interdiction of grease , sugar , and alcohol . If I were asked what one organ has most frequently appeared to take the lead , I should say the liver . " We have thus given as fair a statement of Mr ...
Contents
232 | |
240 | |
277 | |
289 | |
315 | |
344 | |
347 | |
354 | |
91 | |
141 | |
147 | |
153 | |
159 | |
169 | |
177 | |
183 | |
185 | |
196 | |
225 | |
361 | |
368 | |
369 | |
387 | |
395 | |
401 | |
409 | |
414 | |
444 | |
452 | |
458 | |
Other editions - View all
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
Page 530 - Elements of the Natural History of Insects: comprising an account of noxious and useful Insects, of their metamorphoses, food, stratagems, habitations, societies, motions, noises,
Page 368 - ART. VIII.—A Dictionary of Practical Medicine, comprising General Pathology, the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Morbid Structures, &c. By
Page 171 - his visit on the following day, when the same ceremony was performed, and repeated every succeeding day for a fortnight, the patient gradually improving during that period, when he was dismissed as cured, no other application having: been
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;
Page 531 - Renous himself, two or three years before, left in a house at S. Fernando some caterpillars, under charge of a girl to feed, that they might turn into butterflies. This was rumored through the town, and at last the
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