Detroit Review of Medicine and Pharmacy, Volume 4E.B. Smith & Company, 1869 |
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Page 16
... blood of patients in the tropics was of a much brighter red than in the colder latitudes , and having natu- rally an active , inquiring mind , he was drawn to investigate the natural forces . He published , in 1842 , his first paper ...
... blood of patients in the tropics was of a much brighter red than in the colder latitudes , and having natu- rally an active , inquiring mind , he was drawn to investigate the natural forces . He published , in 1842 , his first paper ...
Page 20
... blood freely through every capillary of the system . The overloaded brain finds relief . Physical exertion , uncombined with mental activity , is like rest to a muscle when applied to the brain . It becomes torpid . A condition obtains ...
... blood freely through every capillary of the system . The overloaded brain finds relief . Physical exertion , uncombined with mental activity , is like rest to a muscle when applied to the brain . It becomes torpid . A condition obtains ...
Page 24
... blood , which coagulated in the vessel . She became faint ; was covered with a cold sweat ; said everything looked dark . She began , however , under treatment , to improve , when she " caught cold . " Her catarrhal symptoms became ...
... blood , which coagulated in the vessel . She became faint ; was covered with a cold sweat ; said everything looked dark . She began , however , under treatment , to improve , when she " caught cold . " Her catarrhal symptoms became ...
Page 25
... earlier stages , before the blood becomes so corrupt , relaxation accompanied by delirium . The only organic change is simply loss of vaso - motor power . In some cases the vaso - motor system is too active CEREBRAL PARESIS . 25.
... earlier stages , before the blood becomes so corrupt , relaxation accompanied by delirium . The only organic change is simply loss of vaso - motor power . In some cases the vaso - motor system is too active CEREBRAL PARESIS . 25.
Page 26
... blood circulating in the brain . First may be mentioned food and drink , of whose happy influence a frequent illustration is given in the case of a late supper . During digestion more blood circulates through the gastro - intestinal ves ...
... blood circulating in the brain . First may be mentioned food and drink , of whose happy influence a frequent illustration is given in the case of a late supper . During digestion more blood circulates through the gastro - intestinal ves ...
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abscess acid action albumen amount animal appearance applied blood body boiling bone Bright's diseases calabar bean carbonic carbonic acid cause chloroform Cod Liver Oil committee condition constitutional contains cornea corpuscles cure Detroit diagnosis digestion dilated doses drachm effect examination experience extract fact fever fibrin fluid fluid ounces force frequently grains heat Hospital inches increased inflammation injection Journal kidneys labor lesions less liver lung matter meat Medical College medicine morphia muscles narceine nervous nitrogenous observed operation opium organic ounce oxydation Pacinian corpuscles pain passed patient physician Pill practice preparation present produced Prof prognosis proportion quantity quinine regard remedy removed renal result salt secretion solution spermatorrhoea stomach strychnia substance sugar surgeon Surgery surgical symptoms therapeutic tion tissue tonic treatment tumor urea urethra urine uterus vessels weeks wound
Popular passages
Page 541 - ERICHSEN, Senior Surgeon to University College Hospital, and Holme Professor of Clinical Surgery in University College, London. A New Edition, being the Sixth, revised and enlarged ; with 712 Woodcuts.
Page 308 - If the place which the LORD thy God hath chosen to put his name there be too far from thee, then thou shalt kill of thy herd and of thy flock, which the LORD hath given thee, as I have commanded thee, and thou shalt eat in thy gates whatsoever thy soul lusteth after.
Page 309 - It thundered, and an oak was struck -with lightning on that part of Mount Palatine called Summa Velia, early in the afternoon. A fray happened in a tavern at the lower end of the / Banker's * Street, in which the keeper of the hog in armour tavern, was dangerously wounded.
Page 147 - Chairman ; on the Climatology and Epidemics of Maine, Dr. JC Weston; New Hampshire, Dr. PA Stackpole ; Vermont, Dr. Henry Janes ; Massachusetts, Dr. HI Bowditch ; Rhode Island, Dr. CW Parsons: Connecticut, Dr. EK Hunt; New York, Dr. WF Thorns- New Jersey, Dr. Ezra M. Hunt; Pennsylvania, Dr. DF Condie; Maryland, Dr.
Page 488 - Professor of Pathology and Therapeutics ; Director of the Medical Clinic of the University of Tubingen, A TEXT-BOOK OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY.
Page 492 - ... inconvenience, and which of itself is of trifling value, yet when many such treatises are assembled together from all parts of our country, embracing its nosology from the earliest period of its settlement, they will form a collection of the greatest importance to the profession. The Librarian of Congress has kindly consented to receive and preserve as a special deposit, in the Government fire-proof building, any collection of medical works the American Medical Association may make, and will...
Page 43 - The amount of living matter, which in the body loses the condition of life, is, in equal temperatures, directly proportional to the mechanical effects produced in a given time.
Page 148 - Secretaries of all medical organizations are requested to forward lists of their delegates as soon as elected, to the Permanent Secretary.
Page 413 - ... be drawn upon a hurdle from the Guildhall to his own house through the great street where there be most people assembled, and through the great streets which are most dirty, with the faulty loaf hanging from his neck...
Page 239 - Ccd-liver oil, when taken into the system in sufficient quantities, and for a sufficient length of time, acts as a nutrient, not only adding to the fat of the body, but also promoting the healthy growth of other tissues, and in some way, as an alterative, counteracting the morbid tendency to the proliferation of the decaying cells of pus, tubercle, and kindred cacoplastic and aplastic matters.