North American Journal of Homoeopathy1903 |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... weeks , when , if the respiratory tract is not in- volved , producing death , they usually remain stationary , for a time , and then gradually subside . The individual muscles slowly regain their normal condition . Permanent deformities ...
... weeks , when , if the respiratory tract is not in- volved , producing death , they usually remain stationary , for a time , and then gradually subside . The individual muscles slowly regain their normal condition . Permanent deformities ...
Page 5
... week , terminating in death from bulbar paralysis , or may last for five or six weeks before any marked change appears . Paralysis with atrophy and muscular contraction may last for years , but with gradual increase of the muscular ...
... week , terminating in death from bulbar paralysis , or may last for five or six weeks before any marked change appears . Paralysis with atrophy and muscular contraction may last for years , but with gradual increase of the muscular ...
Page 12
... weeks ; then began an aggravation of all the symptoms of pain . There was a flashing up of inflam- matory action , redness and fever , with extreme tenderness ; and it looked as though an active rush of cancerous degeneration was tak ...
... weeks ; then began an aggravation of all the symptoms of pain . There was a flashing up of inflam- matory action , redness and fever , with extreme tenderness ; and it looked as though an active rush of cancerous degeneration was tak ...
Page 13
... weeks for examination which he did . The growth had continued . He is to return again in a month from that time for further observation . The nose is more than an inch in length and still growing . It is conceded by every one now that ...
... weeks for examination which he did . The growth had continued . He is to return again in a month from that time for further observation . The nose is more than an inch in length and still growing . It is conceded by every one now that ...
Page 18
... weeks he was dead . The history of the tubercular process was a fairly typical one , be- ginning as it did with the pleurisy and effusion of some eight months before . It emphasizes the care which should be used in the treat- ment of ...
... weeks he was dead . The history of the tubercular process was a fairly typical one , be- ginning as it did with the pleurisy and effusion of some eight months before . It emphasizes the care which should be used in the treat- ment of ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid action acute albuminuria allopathic arteries attack believe bladder blood Boston calcarea cancer catarrh cause cent child chronic clinical condition cryoscopy cure death diagnosis diphtheria disease doses drug dyspnea edition effect enlarged especially examination experience fact fever forceps frequently gall bladder give given glands Hahnemann heart hemorrhage Hospital improvement increased infection inflammation insane Institute Journal kidneys labor liver Materia Medica Medical College medicine ment method milk months nephritis nerve nervous normal NORTH AMERICAN Obstetrics opathic operation organs pain patient pelvic Philadelphia phimosis phosphorus physician pneumonia potency practice practitioner present produced profession Professor prostate proving pruritus pulse radium remedy reported says skin smallpox stomach strychnia surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature therapeutics tion tissue treated treatment tuberculosis tumor typhoid typhoid fever urethra urine uterus vaginal vomiting WALTER SANDS weeks X-ray York
Popular passages
Page 320 - Thesaurus A THESAURUS OF MEDICAL WORDS AND PHRASES. By WILFRED M. BARTON, MD, Assistant to Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Georgetown University, Washington, DC ; and WALTER A.
Page 190 - A REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES EMBRACING THE ENTIRE RANGE OF SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL MEDICINE AND ALLIED SCIENCE. By various writers.
Page 191 - THE INTERNATIONAL TEXT-BOOK OF SURGERY. In Two Volumes. By American and British Authors. Edited by J. COLLINS WARREN, MD, LL.
Page 487 - The accepted definition of a homoeopathic physician is "one who adds to his knowledge of medicine a special knowledge of homoeopathic therapeutics and observes the law of similia. All that pertains to the great field of medical learning is his by tradition, by inheritance, by right.
Page 718 - Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology. By HENRY C. CHAPMAN, MD, Professor of Institutes of Medicine and Medical Jurisprudence, Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia.
Page 444 - Nose Atlas and Epitome of Diseases of the Mouth, Pharynx, and Nose. By DR. L. GRUNWALD, of Munich. From the Second Revised and Enlarged German Edition. Edited, with additions, by JAMES E. NEWCOMB, MD, Instructor in Laryngology, Cornell University Medical School. With 102 illustrations on 42 colored lithographic plates, 41 text-cuts, and 219 pages of text.
Page 718 - The Care of the Baby. — A Manual for Mothers and Nurses, containing Practical Directions for the Management of Infancy and Childhood in Health and in Disease...
Page 719 - AN AMERICAN TEXT=BOOK OF LEGAL MEDICINE AND TOXICOLOGY. Edited by FREDERICK PETERSON, MD, Chief of Clinic, Nervous Department, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York ; and WALTER S. HAINES, MD, Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Toxicology, Rush Medical College, Chicago.
Page 603 - ... see the person fall a lifeless corpse ; and you infer, from all these circumstances, that there was a ball discharged from the gun which entered his body and caused his death, because such is the usual and natural cause of such an effect. But you did not see the ball leave the gun, pass through the air, and enter the body of the slain ; and your testimony to the fact of killing is, therefore, only inferential, — in other words, circumstantial.
Page 192 - Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. With an Introductory Note by JOHN H. MUSSER, MD, Professor of Clinical Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.