Southern Practitioner: An Independent Monthly Journal Devoted to Medicine and Surgery, Volume 201898 |
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Results 1-5 of 54
Page 24
... improvement both in the increase in the amount of hæmaglobin as well as increase in the number of red blood corpuscles . The average increase of the hæmoglobin was 2.2 per cent . , and of the red blood - corpuscles 1,258,000 . " Dr ...
... improvement both in the increase in the amount of hæmaglobin as well as increase in the number of red blood corpuscles . The average increase of the hæmoglobin was 2.2 per cent . , and of the red blood - corpuscles 1,258,000 . " Dr ...
Page 26
... improved . Says that he feels better than he has done for years , is strong , or seems so , and resumed his occupa ... improvement , I was much gratified at the results from Pepto - Mangan , Gude , which I commenced in July last . Her ...
... improved . Says that he feels better than he has done for years , is strong , or seems so , and resumed his occupa ... improvement , I was much gratified at the results from Pepto - Mangan , Gude , which I commenced in July last . Her ...
Page 29
... improvement in digestion , which always follows its use , is one of its prominent features , and it is there- fore also adapted to all forms of mal - nutrition in old or young . It is not my purpose in this paper to quote particular ...
... improvement in digestion , which always follows its use , is one of its prominent features , and it is there- fore also adapted to all forms of mal - nutrition in old or young . It is not my purpose in this paper to quote particular ...
Page 31
... improvement was uninterrupted and in ten days the patient pronounced himself cured . certainly somewhat remarkable to see an old , chronic rheumatic patient , who has been bedridden for months , able to walk com- fortably , as if by ...
... improvement was uninterrupted and in ten days the patient pronounced himself cured . certainly somewhat remarkable to see an old , chronic rheumatic patient , who has been bedridden for months , able to walk com- fortably , as if by ...
Page 42
... improvement in the health affairs of this country as long as they are administered by a department of the Govern- ment , the prime function of which is the looking after the finances of the nation . Gov. Bloxham , of Florida , fully ...
... improvement in the health affairs of this country as long as they are administered by a department of the Govern- ment , the prime function of which is the looking after the finances of the nation . Gov. Bloxham , of Florida , fully ...
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abdominal abortion acid acute alcohol American antiseptic antitoxin bacilli Belle Plaine blood bowels cause cavity cent cervix chemical chronic clinical condition cord cure curette cyst diagnosis diphtheria disease doses drug effect Eucaine Eucalyptol examination excellent fluid grains Gynecology hematocele hemorrhage Hospital Hydrozone immunity incision infection injury intestinal irritation kryofine lesion Louis Louisville Medical Association Medical Department Medical Journal Medical Society Medicine meeting membrane ment method muscles Nashville nerve nervous neuritis normal obstruction operation organs pain pancreatic pancreatic cyst paper paralysis pathology patient pelvic peritoneum peritonitis Philadelphia physician practical practitioner preparation present profession Professor pulse quinine reflex remedy removed rheumatic salts sepsis serum skin stomach strychnia surgeon surgery surgical symptoms temperature Tenn Tennessee therapeutic tion tissue Tongaline treated treatment tubercular tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ulcer Universities of Bonn uric acid urine usually uterus vaginal vomiting weeks York
Popular passages
Page 234 - Be not the first by whom the new is tried, nor yet the last to lay the old aside.
Page 213 - A Yearly Digest of Scientific Progress and Authoritative Opinion in all branches of Medicine and Surgery, drawn from journals, monographs, and text-books of the leading American and Foreign authors and investigators. Arranged with critical editorial comments, by eminent American specialists, under the editorial charge of GEORGE M. GOULD, MD Y ear-Book of 1901 in two volumes — Vol. I. including General Medicine; Vol.
Page 486 - Essentials of Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Prescription Writing, arranged in the form of Questions and Answers. Prepared especially for Students of Medicine...
Page 65 - January, 1894, number of The Quarterly Journal of Inebriety, published under the auspices of The American Association for the Study and Cure of Inebriates, Hartford, Conn., USA, says...
Page 180 - THERE are three lessons I would write — Three words, as with a burning pen, In tracings of eternal light, Upon the hearts of men. Have Hope. Though clouds environ...
Page 389 - If it be true that the materies morbi of these diseases belong to the bacillus group, the remedies manifestly are an antiseptic and an antipyretic. As an intestinal antiseptic we have nothing better than salol. The consensus of opinion is in this direction. When we add the antipyretic and anodyne...
Page 299 - IN prescribing the products of Manufacturing Pharmacists, we should be guided to a great extent by the business standing of the manufacturers. No other house in the South or West has a better reputation for strict integrity than the Kobinson-Pettet Company, Louisville, Ky.
Page 169 - ... Otology in the University of California, San Francisco, in an article in The Medical News, writes as follows, in reference to the treatment of pain in otitis: "At my first visit I found a copious discharge of bloody serum from the ear with hardly a trace of pus. He suffered from severe cephalalgia, but there was no special tenderness in or about the ear, and no swelling. Thorough cleansing of the meatus with dry cotton relieved the pain in the head remarkably, and with a dose of antikamnia, 10...
Page 484 - Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia.
Page 345 - ... clinical teachers. While appreciating the value of such colored plates, the profession has heretofore been practically debarred from purchasing similar works because of their extremely high price, made necessary by a limited sale and an enormous expense of production.