Buffalo Medical Journal and Monthly Review of Medical and Surgical Science, Volume 11846 |
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Page 5
... given my keys to a " commissionaire , " with orders to attend to passport , luggage , & c . I found , on returning to the " Post , " that all was ready . The luggage had been examined , but no charge made for foreign books , as at ...
... given my keys to a " commissionaire , " with orders to attend to passport , luggage , & c . I found , on returning to the " Post , " that all was ready . The luggage had been examined , but no charge made for foreign books , as at ...
Page 8
... given , was ordered every day for three days longer , when a decided amelioration of the condition of my patient was manifest . The dose was now diminished , and continued several days longer . The disease now assuming a more moderate ...
... given , was ordered every day for three days longer , when a decided amelioration of the condition of my patient was manifest . The dose was now diminished , and continued several days longer . The disease now assuming a more moderate ...
Page 12
... given belongs to this class . It is not , as yet , susceptible of positive diagnosis , but where the patient survives a number of days , it might be guessed at by the negative evidence of exclusion , with more or less certainty ...
... given belongs to this class . It is not , as yet , susceptible of positive diagnosis , but where the patient survives a number of days , it might be guessed at by the negative evidence of exclusion , with more or less certainty ...
Page 13
... given from notes which have been obligingly fur- nished by Dr. James P. White , the attending Physician . - ED . The subject was Robert Ferguson ; from Ireland ; a blacksmith ; aged twenty - eight ; had been a resident of Buffalo ...
... given from notes which have been obligingly fur- nished by Dr. James P. White , the attending Physician . - ED . The subject was Robert Ferguson ; from Ireland ; a blacksmith ; aged twenty - eight ; had been a resident of Buffalo ...
Page 20
... given great satisfaction in this city and vicinity , and we cordially com- mend him to the farther patronage of the profession . To Readers and Correspondents . Communications have been received from Drs . White , Long , and Colvin ...
... given great satisfaction in this city and vicinity , and we cordially com- mend him to the farther patronage of the profession . To Readers and Correspondents . Communications have been received from Drs . White , Long , and Colvin ...
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abscess acid appear applied become blood body bone bowels brain Buffalo Medical Journal called calomel cause cervical vertebræ chyle commenced common continued cure discharge doses dyspepsia effect Erysipelas examination existence expectoration fact faculties fever fluid Geneva Medical College Gentlemen give glands goitre gonorrhoea head Hospital inches inflammation insanity intestines labor lancet lectures less limbs liver lumbar vertebræ lungs magnetic matter medicine membrane ment Mesmerism months motion mucous mucous membrane muscles natural neck nerves New-York observed operation opinion organs pain passed patient person Phrenology physician pills plaster poles portion practice practitioner present produced profession quinine readers remedies result Rheumatism Ricord scrofulous seen serous membranes skin Society spinal spine stomach surface surgeon Surgery Surgical symptoms Syphilis thing tion tissue Total number treatment tubercles tubercula ulcers uterus vertebræ whole wound
Popular passages
Page 97 - I have put my life upon a cast, And I will stand the hazard of the die. That hazard now, thank Heaven is small —for the daily increasing number of upright and honorable practitioners who espouse my views, place me already sufficiently far above the reach of my enemies, to enable me to despise them thoroughly ; and at this moment
Page 108 - Whereas, it is believed that a National Convention would be conducive to the elevation of the standard of Medical Education in the United States, and whereas, there is no mode of accomplishing so desirable an object, without concert of action on the part of the medical Societies, Colleges, and institutions of all the States, therefore,
Page 7 - in the concealment of his disease. I then affected to lament the indecency of my ignorant examination, when he expressed his forgiveness, and said with the utmost gravity and emphasis, in the face of the whole Court, " I AM THE CHRIST," and so the cause ended. Gentlemen, this is not the only instance of the power of concealing
Page 101 - qualities, Nor nought so vile that on the earth doth live, But to the earth some special good doth give ; For aught
Page 273 - Our senses narrow, and our reason frail, Life short, and TRUTH a gem that loves the deep, And all things weighed in Custom's falsest scale. Opinion an omnipotence—whose veil Mantles the earth with
Page 103 - every man has found in Physicians great liberality and dignity of sentiment, very prompt effusion of beneficence, and willingness to exert a lucrative art where there is no hope of lucre.
Page 278 - of butchers,—take away as much blood as you like, but have done with it !' We seized the moment, (adds Mr. Millengen,) and drew about twenty ounces. On coagulating, the blood presented a strong buffy coat yet the relief obtained did NOT correspond to the hopes we had formed ; and during the night the fever became stronger than it
Page 118 - Medical Society earnestly recommend a National Convention of delegates from the Medical Societies and Colleges in the whole Union, to convene in the city of New York, on the first Tuesday in May, in the year 1846, for the purpose of adopting some concerted action on the subject set forth in the foregoing preamble.
Page 92 - Hoadly, and others, were published, that Mr. Wesley collected together the sum of what had been written on this subject, and published it with this title : " Desideratum : or Electricity made plain and useful. By a lover of mankind and common sense.
Page 118 - the following preamble and resolution: " Whereas, it is believed that a National Convention would be conducive to the elevation of the standard of Medical Education in the United States, and whereas, there is no mode of accomplishing so desirable an object, without concert of action on the part of the medical Societies, Colleges, and institutions of all the States, therefore,