The Canadian Medical Review, Volumes 5-6Canadian Medical Review Company, 1897 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 59
Page 4
... means be prolonged , but I think the primary cause is to be sought in the changes in the cortical cells of the brain , which cause an impairment of the digestive functions , and that it is only after these have occurred that the toxines ...
... means be prolonged , but I think the primary cause is to be sought in the changes in the cortical cells of the brain , which cause an impairment of the digestive functions , and that it is only after these have occurred that the toxines ...
Page 5
... mean to say , as some have held , that eye- strain is the sole cause of epilepsy or chorea , but to affirm that in all cases which may present themselves to the physician heterophoria is an element which must be eliminated in making the ...
... mean to say , as some have held , that eye- strain is the sole cause of epilepsy or chorea , but to affirm that in all cases which may present themselves to the physician heterophoria is an element which must be eliminated in making the ...
Page 18
... York Medical Record , we learn that the medical profession in France is by no means an El dorado . The lay press is taking a hand in the discussion of the over - crowded condition of the 18 THE CANADIAN MEDICAL REVIEW .
... York Medical Record , we learn that the medical profession in France is by no means an El dorado . The lay press is taking a hand in the discussion of the over - crowded condition of the 18 THE CANADIAN MEDICAL REVIEW .
Page 19
... means are most anxious that their sons should not study medicine . It costs , all told , $ 8,000 for the full course in France . The returns for this outlay are very poor in most cases ; and for many years at first nothing but a large ...
... means are most anxious that their sons should not study medicine . It costs , all told , $ 8,000 for the full course in France . The returns for this outlay are very poor in most cases ; and for many years at first nothing but a large ...
Page 23
... mean " specious " and " hum- bug ; " and finally , with the assistance of Locke , he gets it to be nothing less than " lying . " At the risk of being tedious , we will quote a few sentences from the June speech that the reader may get ...
... mean " specious " and " hum- bug ; " and finally , with the assistance of Locke , he gets it to be nothing less than " lying . " At the risk of being tedious , we will quote a few sentences from the June speech that the reader may get ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen abscess acid action Aikins albuminuria antiseptic antitoxin Aurist bacilli blood body British Medical British Medical Association Canada CANADIAN MEDICAL REVIEW cancer cause cent cervix child chloroform clinical condition curette diagnosis diphtheria discussion disease doctor doses eclampsia Editor effect elected electorate Executive Committee fact Fall examinations fever give given glands hæmorrhage honor injection Inner Circle interests intestine iodoform large number letter ligatures LISTERINE matter medical colleges Medical Council Medical Journal medical profession medical schools medicine meeting membrane ment method Montreal Ontario Medical Association operation organs pain paper passed patient peritonitis physician plausible poison practice practitioner present President Professor remedy removed reported Sangster serum Society statement suffering Surgeon surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue Toronto General Hospital treated treatment truth tube tuberculosis tumor University urine uterine uterus Williams wound York
Popular passages
Page 178 - Or like the sun, or like the shade, Or like the gourd which Jonas had — Even such is man, whose thread is spun, Drawn out, and cut, and so is done. The rose withers, the blossom blasteth, The flower fades, the morning hasteth, The sun sets, the shadow flies, The gourd consumes; and man he dies.
Page 68 - Autoscopy of the Larynx and the Trachea. (Direct Examination Without Mirror.) By Alfred Kirstein, MD, Berlin. Authorized Translation (Altered, Enlarged, and Revised by the Author) by Max Thorner, AM, MD, Cincinnati, O., Professor of Clinical Laryngology and Otology, Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery ; Laryngologist and Aurist, Cincinnati Hospital, etc.
Page 170 - About Children : Six Lectures given to the Nurses in the Training School of the Cleveland General Hospital in February, 1896. By Samuel W. Kelley, MD, Professor of Diseases of Children in the Cleveland College of Physicians and Surgeons (Med.
Page 98 - We mutually, jointly, and individually, pledge our word of honor not to enter into any contract or agreement, or renew any existing contract or agreement, either written, . verbal or implied, to render medical or surgical services to any lodge, society, association or organization.
Page 35 - Europe in collecting the material for this work. Medical literature of all ages and all languages has been carefully searched, as a glance at the Bibliographic Index will show. The facts, which will be of extreme value to the author and lecturer, have been arranged and annotated, and full reference footnotes given, indicating whence they have been obtained.
Page 35 - Reference this work will be of value not only to members of the medical profession, but to all persons interested in general scientific, sociologic, and medicolegal topics ; in fact, the absence of any complete work upon the subject makes this volume one of the most important literary innovations of the day. The Lancet, London " The book is a monument of untiring energy, keen discrimination, and erudition. . . . We heartily recommend it to the profession.
Page 68 - MEDICINE. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine. BY GEORGE M. GOULD, MD, and WALTER L. PYLE, MD An encyclopedic collection of rare and extraordinary cases and of the most striking instances of abnormality in all branches of Medicine and Surgery, derived from an exhaustive research of medical literature from its origin to the present day, abstracted, classified, annotated, and indexed. Handsome imperial octavo volume of 968 pages, with 295 engravings in the text, and 12 full-page plates.
Page 118 - After taking the second or third tablet the cough is usually under control, at least for that paroxysm and for the night. Should the irritation prevail morning or mid-day, the same course of administration should be observed until subdued.
Page 75 - LISTERINE is to make and maintain surgical cleanliness in the antiseptic and prophylactic treatment and care of all parts of the human body. LISTERINE is of accurately determined and uniform antiseptic power, and of positive originality.
Page 70 - The principal grievance which I have against the doctors is that they neglect the real problem, which is to seize the unity of the individual who claims their care.