Epilepsy and Its TreatmentW. B. Saunders, 1904 - 522 pages |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alcohol appear aura began Bourneville brain bromid catgut cause of epilepsy cells cent cerebral cerebral palsy chloroform clinical clonic coma consciousness convulsions cortex cortical Craig Colony cure death degree dentition disease disturbance doses duration effects entirely epilepsy epileptic attacks epileptic convulsions epileptic equivalent epileptic seizures especially etiology exciting fact family history Féré fever form of epilepsy frequently Gowers grand grand mal seizures Gynecology head hemiplegia hemorrhage Heredity idiopathic illustrations impairment infantile influence injury insanity instances irritation Jacksonian later lepsy lesion less manifestations marked Medical mental condition minutes months motor muscles muscular nerve nervous normal observation Obstetrics occurred onset operation palsy paralysis paroxysms pathology patient petit petit mal present psychic psychic epilepsy rare reflex sensation sensory serial attacks severe side skull spasm status epilepticus stomach surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tion tonic trauma treatment Trephined vulsions women
Popular passages
Page 520 - A Text-Book of Obstetrics. By BARTON COOKE HIRST, MD, Professor of Obstetrics in the University of Pennsylvania. Handsome octavo, 899 pages, with 746 illustrations, 39 of them in colors.
Page 519 - To this end, also, the work has been magnificently illuminated with 701 illustrations, for the most part original photographs and water-colors of actual clinical cases accumulated during the past fifteen years. The palliative treatment, as well as the radical operative, is fully described, enabling the general practitioner to treat many of his own patients without referring them to a specialist.
Page 525 - Edition, Revised. Diseases of Women. By HENRY J. GARRIGUES, AM, MD, Gynecologist to St. Mark's Hospital and to the German Dispensary, New York City.
Page 65 - Relay. filings — made with a coarse file from nickel and silver in the proportions of 90 per cent of the former and 10 per cent of the latter: the tube is then adjusted, the air is exhausted with a mercury pump, and the tip sealed off.