Glasgow Medical JournalRoyal Medico-Chirurgical Society of Glasgow., 1883 - Medicine |
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Page 16
... healthy surfaces are left apposed to each other , and which speedily becoming covered with granulations soon coalesce . During the process of healing the less the parts are disturbed the better , and syringing the cavity irritates the ...
... healthy surfaces are left apposed to each other , and which speedily becoming covered with granulations soon coalesce . During the process of healing the less the parts are disturbed the better , and syringing the cavity irritates the ...
Page 24
... healthy ear from an anatomical as well as a physiological and physical point of view ; in other words , let us examine briefly the general anatomical form and structure of the apparatus of hearing , and the functions of its several ...
... healthy ear from an anatomical as well as a physiological and physical point of view ; in other words , let us examine briefly the general anatomical form and structure of the apparatus of hearing , and the functions of its several ...
Page 26
... healthy organ and with reference to its pathology , we are concerned chiefly with it in regard to its structure and to its function , and less in regard to the physicist's view of it , although even this latter cannot be altogether ...
... healthy organ and with reference to its pathology , we are concerned chiefly with it in regard to its structure and to its function , and less in regard to the physicist's view of it , although even this latter cannot be altogether ...
Page 48
... healthy inflammation , they may - as the germ theorists would assert- be the immediate cause of an unduly excessive inflammation or the discharge of putrid pus . Again , the fact of one wound presenting the appearance of undue ...
... healthy inflammation , they may - as the germ theorists would assert- be the immediate cause of an unduly excessive inflammation or the discharge of putrid pus . Again , the fact of one wound presenting the appearance of undue ...
Page 64
... fluid , and complained of very great pain in the " bowels on account of their constant movement . ' Shortly after 9 A.M. Dr. Buchanan dressed the wound , which was looking healthy , and was not 64 Hospital Practice .
... fluid , and complained of very great pain in the " bowels on account of their constant movement . ' Shortly after 9 A.M. Dr. Buchanan dressed the wound , which was looking healthy , and was not 64 Hospital Practice .
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abscess acid acute admitted albuminuria Anatomy animals antiseptic appearance attack bacilli blood body bone brothels caseous cause cavity cells chloroform chronic clinical colour condition Contagious Diseases Acts corpuscles cure discharge doses dressing effect eruption erysipelas evidence examination experience fact favour fever fluid germs given glands Glasgow hæmorrhage healing healthy hernia inflammation inflammatory injection inoculation irritation Koch Lock Hospital London Lock Hospital Lowndes lung lymph matter Medical Journal menstruation mercury method micrococci microscopic months mucous membrane normal observed occur operation organisms pain passed Pasteur pathological patient Patterson phthisis pregnancy present produced Professor prostitutes pulse referred regard removed seen showed skin solution sore splenic fever sputum suppuration surface surgeon symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue tracheotomy treatment tube tubercle tubercular tuberculosis tumour ulcer urine uterus vaccination venereal disease virus vomiting women wound
Popular passages
Page 43 - Encyclopœdia of Surgery. A Systematic Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Surgery by Authors of Various Nations. Edited by John Ashhurst, Jr., MD, Professor of Clinical Surgery in the University of Pennsylvania. Illustrated with Chromo-Lithographs and Wood-Cuts. In Six Volumes. Vol. IV. New York : William Wood & Company!
Page 378 - This signifies that the development of the minute organism has ceased — in other words, all the little points which caused the turbid appearance of the liquid have fallen to the bottom of the vase, and things will remain in this condition for a longer or shorter time, for months even, without either the liquid or the deposit undergoing any visible modification, inasmuch as we have taken care to exclude the germs of the atmosphere. A little stopper of cotton sifts the air which enters or issues...
Page 120 - I raised such men as had the fear of God before them, as made some conscience of what they did ; and from that day forward, I must say to you, they were never beaten, and wherever they were engaged against the enemy, they beat continually.
Page 321 - Goethe, intends to speak as a philosopher, rather than as a poet, when he writes that " with good reason the earth has gotten the name of mother, since all things are produced out of the earth. And many living creatures, even now, spring out of the earth, taking form by the rains and the heat of the sun.
Page 379 - ... chicken cholera : that is to say, it may modify more or less the facility of its development in the body of animals. May we not be here in presence of a general law applicable to all kinds of virus ? What benefits may not be the result ? We may hope to discover in this way the vaccine of all virulent diseases...
Page 378 - ... only effects of a passing character. In fact, they no longer die from the mortal virus, and for a time sufficiently long, which in some cases may exceed a year, chicken cholera -cannot touch them, especially under the ordinary conditions of contagion which exist in fowl-houses. At this critical point of our manipulation — that is to say, in this interval of time which we have placed between two cultures, and which causes the attenuation, what occurs? I shall show you that in this interval the...
Page 439 - A SYSTEM of SURGERY, Theoretical and Practical. In Treatises by Various Authors.
Page 289 - ... wish to give ; or, if it be in a more concentrated form, the patient may add water to it. Grain doses given every half-hour in scarlet fever, diphtheria, tonsillitis, etc., will produce the same results as larger doses, without the danger of the evil effects resulting from the accumulation of the drug in the system, as sometimes happens when it is administered in the ordinary way. Indeed, I believe they will produce better results upon the throat inflammations.
Page 379 - But was there, after all, reason to be discouraged ? Certainly not ; in fact, if you observe closely, you will find that there is no real difference between the mode of the generation of the anthracoid germ by scission and that of chicken-cholera.
Page 72 - ... from the size of a pin head to that of a pea, in the left hemisphere, and a remarkable atrophy of the first left temporal convolution, which measured only four ctm.