Birmingham Medical Review, Volume 22

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1887

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Page 28 - A careless shoe-string, in whose tie I see a wild civility, Do more bewitch me, than when art Is too precise in every part.
Page 265 - On Children. Treatment of Disease in Children, including the Outlines of Diagnosis and the Chief Pathological Differences between Children and Adults.
Page 262 - Lectures on the Surgical Disorders of the Urinary Organs. By REGINALD HARRISON, FRCS, Surgeon to the Liverpool Royal Infirmary. Second Edition, with 48 Engravings. 8vo, I2s.
Page 96 - Assistant Physician to the Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, Brompton ; Lecturer on Materia Medica at the Charing Cross School of Medicine and Assistant Physician to the Hospital Sm.
Page 25 - My Love in her attire doth show her wit, It doth so well become her : For every season she hath dressings fit, For Winter, Spring, and Summer. No beauty she doth miss When all her robes are on : But Beauty's self she is When all her robes are gone.
Page 131 - ... and at certain periods of meningitis and encephalitis. (C) 7. The same pathological factors which cause myosis may also cause mydriasis, the degree in which these factors are present being the determining point between the former and the latter, and not merely the particular locus in the brain. 8. It is well illustrated by cases where the...
Page 131 - ... and inflammatory products. (d.) 9. When the function of one-half of the cerebrum is placed in abeyance by a superficial or cortical lesion, the pupil on the same side as the lesion is in a state of stabile mydriasis. 10. This is well illustrated in cases of intracranial sanguinolent effusion consequent on injury.
Page 262 - Lithotomy, Lithotrity, and the Early Detection of Stone in the Bladder ; with a description of a New Method of Tapping the Bladder.
Page 131 - ... function of one-half of the cerebrum is interfered with by some source of cortical irritation, the pupil on the corresponding side to the lesion is in a state of myosis. 12. This is illustrated by traumatic and pathological lesions affecting the cortex of the cerebrum.
Page 131 - When the function of the brain is interfered with by conditions usually included under the term irritation, the pupils are in a state of myosis ; sometimes labile, but generally stabile myosis. "(5) This 'irritation,' or interruption of function, may be seen...

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