The Aesculapian Register, Volume 1, Issues 1-24Robert Desilver, 1824 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page 2
... wish it to be understood that no paper will ever be received , which has in our opinion , the slightest tendency to awaken a display of angry feelings , or personal abuse . Questions connected with medicine , or its sister sciences ...
... wish it to be understood that no paper will ever be received , which has in our opinion , the slightest tendency to awaken a display of angry feelings , or personal abuse . Questions connected with medicine , or its sister sciences ...
Page 6
... wish ; on no ac- count would I permit the males to run abroad , for reasons that need not be pointed out ; but a sow with a number of young ones , will , without any offence to our feelings , quietly pursue their way , and devour so ...
... wish ; on no ac- count would I permit the males to run abroad , for reasons that need not be pointed out ; but a sow with a number of young ones , will , without any offence to our feelings , quietly pursue their way , and devour so ...
Page 9
... wish now to call atten- tion ; and perhaps we cannot do better than communicate the way in which we first became acquainted with the fact . In walking one day through the Hospital , under the direction of Mr. Laennec , we were arrested ...
... wish now to call atten- tion ; and perhaps we cannot do better than communicate the way in which we first became acquainted with the fact . In walking one day through the Hospital , under the direction of Mr. Laennec , we were arrested ...
Page 10
... wish to pursue the subject more in detail . The idea , of the peculiar sensations produced by the ap- plication of the loadstone , and the salutary effects of this substance , being owing to a " primitive magnetism of the human body ...
... wish to pursue the subject more in detail . The idea , of the peculiar sensations produced by the ap- plication of the loadstone , and the salutary effects of this substance , being owing to a " primitive magnetism of the human body ...
Page 24
... wishes , and those of our obliging correspondents . - ED . Notice . It is intended to devote the last cal books , either printed or in the press ; —and page of each paper to advertisements of Medi- also , any connected with the business ...
... wishes , and those of our obliging correspondents . - ED . Notice . It is intended to devote the last cal books , either printed or in the press ; —and page of each paper to advertisements of Medi- also , any connected with the business ...
Common terms and phrases
$3 per annum A.D. History animal animal magnetism apothecary appear attended Bilious Birth blood body brain BRONCHOTOMY cause child Cholera colour common Consumption cough cure dead deaths died disease doses Dropsies Dysentery effect Emperor eruption Esculapian Register experiments extract eyes fact faculty friends give head heat History of Medicine inches inflammation inoculated insane inter John July June king known lately laudanum less living LONGA lungs means measles ment month muscles nature notice observations pain Paracelsus Paris patient payable in advance persons PHILADELPHIA Phrenological Phrenological Society phrenology physi physician plague present PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY rain remarks remedy ROBERT DESILVER Rome says Sept sick Small Pox sneezing Society stone sufficient surgeon symptoms taken Thermometer thing tion Vampyres VITA BREVIS week ending whilst woman yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 38 - A physician, in his intercourse with a patient under the care of another practitioner, should observe the strictest caution and reserve. No meddling inquiries should be made ; no disingenuous hints given relative to the nature and treatment of his disorder ; nor any course of conduct pursued that may directly or indirectly tend to diminish the trust reposed in the physician employed.
Page 15 - A physician should not be forward to make gloomy prognostications, because they savor of empiricism, by magnifying the importance of his services in the treatment or cure of the disease. But he should not fail, on proper occasions, to give to the friends of the patient timely notice of danger when it really occurs ; and even to the patient himself, if absolutely necessary.
Page 178 - A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case; and the natural anxiety and solicitude which he experiences at the sickness of a wife, a child, or any one who by the ties of consanguinity is rendered peculiarly dear to him, tend to obscure his judgment...
Page 195 - ... 8. A physician, when visiting a sick person in the country, may be desired to see a neighboring patient who is under the regular direction of another physician, in consequence of some sudden change or aggravation of symptoms. The conduct to be pursued on such an occasion is to give advice adapted to present circumstances ; to interfere no...
Page 15 - Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office ; reflecting that the ease, the health, and the lives of those committed to their charge, depend on their skill, attention and fidelity. They should study, also, in their deportment, so to unite tenderness with firmness, and condescension with authority, as to inspire the minds of their patients with gratitude, respect and confidence.
Page 166 - A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable; for his attendance may continue to be highly useful to the patient, and comforting to the relatives around him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by alleviating pain and other symptoms, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance, under such* circumstances, would be sacrificing to fanciful delicacy and mistaken liberality, that moral duty, which is independent of and far superior to all pecuniary consideration.
Page 188 - SECTION 1. Diversity of opinion and opposition of interest, may, in the medical as in other professions, sometimes occasion controversy and even contention.
Page 171 - ... in the groin, or under the arm-pits, some as big as a small apple, others as an egg ; and afterwards purple spots in most parts of the body : in some cases large and but few in number, in others less and more numerous, both sorts the usual messengers of death.
Page 43 - ... to ascertain the fact. He first put his own hand into warm water to make it as sensible as possible, and then felt under the arm, and at the heart, and affirmed that he felt an unusual warmth, though no one else could. He had the body restored to a warm bed, and insisted that the people who had been invited to the funeral, should be requested not to attend. To this the brother objected as absurd, the eyes being sunk, the lips discolored, and the whole body cold and stiff.
Page 43 - In the evening, his physician and friend returned from a ride into the country, and was afflicted beyond measure at the news of his death. He could not be persuaded that it was certain; and on being told that one of the persons who had assisted in laying out the body thought he had observed a little tremor of the flesh under the arm, although the body was cold and stiff", he endeavored to ascertain the fact.