The Medical Standard, Volume 20G.P. Engelhard & Company, 1898 |
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Page 3
... experience of Dr. Gurlt of Berlin showed- Chloroform ... Ether ..... 1 in 2,614 1 in 8,431 M. Landau quoted German statistics : Chloroform . Ether .. and the English as : Chloroform . Ether . .1 in 3 111 ..1 in 14 640 1 in 3,749 1 in ...
... experience of Dr. Gurlt of Berlin showed- Chloroform ... Ether ..... 1 in 2,614 1 in 8,431 M. Landau quoted German statistics : Chloroform . Ether .. and the English as : Chloroform . Ether . .1 in 3 111 ..1 in 14 640 1 in 3,749 1 in ...
Page 9
... experienced a most distressing result . Some bacteria are useful , some harmless , and some only mildly virulent . The gonococcus , for example , is more general and therefore more disabling than the staphylococcus . The strepto- Some ...
... experienced a most distressing result . Some bacteria are useful , some harmless , and some only mildly virulent . The gonococcus , for example , is more general and therefore more disabling than the staphylococcus . The strepto- Some ...
Page 14
... experience of morbid anatomy or the profuseness of the blood loss makes an arterial source certain , ergot is distinctly contra- indicated . 4. That complete rest , opium and iodide of potassium are our most powerful and trust- worthy ...
... experience of morbid anatomy or the profuseness of the blood loss makes an arterial source certain , ergot is distinctly contra- indicated . 4. That complete rest , opium and iodide of potassium are our most powerful and trust- worthy ...
Page 19
... experience embraces many hundred cases , and of this number no death has occurred where the operation was done immediately after the onset . The ultimate results of inflammation of this organ more than justify operative interference ...
... experience embraces many hundred cases , and of this number no death has occurred where the operation was done immediately after the onset . The ultimate results of inflammation of this organ more than justify operative interference ...
Page 20
... experience , covering both operative cases and those in which the so - called con- servative treatment was practiced . It is that the number of cases of appendicitis that become perfectly well , cases that do not suffer during the ...
... experience , covering both operative cases and those in which the so - called con- servative treatment was practiced . It is that the number of cases of appendicitis that become perfectly well , cases that do not suffer during the ...
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abdominal acid acute alcohol annual antiseptic appendicitis asepsis bacillus bile bladder blood Board of Health burns cancer catarrh cause cent cervix Chicago cholelithiasis chronic clinical condition County Medical Society cured curette diagnosis dilated diphtheria discharge disease disinfection doses drug effect elected Dr endometritis endometrium examination favor gall stones gonococcus gonorrhea hand hemorrhage Hospital hysterectomy infection inflammation insanity intestinal iodoform irritation Journ kidneys lesions lymph Medical Association Medical College medicine meeting membrane menstruation ment method metritis mucosa mucous mucous membrane muscular nerve nervous normal occur officers operation organs pain pathology patient pelvic peritoneum physician poison practice practitioner pregnancy present president pyuria quarantine recently removed renal reported secretary session skin stomach surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue treasurer treated treatment tube tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever urine uterine uterus utricular glands vaccine vagina vessels vice-president women yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 196 - RCS (Hon.), Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, etc.
Page 67 - A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by Hobart Amory Hare, MD, Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia. Octavo, handsomely bound in cloth, 440 pages, 28 illustrations. Per volume, $2.50, by express prepaid to any address. Per annum, in four cloth-bound volumes, $10.00. Lea Brothers & Co., Publishers, Philadelphia and New York.
Page 101 - A TEXT-BOOK OF LEGAL MEDICINE AND TOXICOLOGY. Edited by Frederick Peterson, MD, Chief of Clinic, Nervous Department of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York; and Walter S. Haines, MD, Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Toxicology, Rush Medical College, in affiliation with the University of Chicago. Two imperial octavo volumes of about 750 pages each, fully Illustrated.
Page 11 - If any man or woman be a Witch, (that is) hath, or consulteth with a Familiar spirit, they shall be put to death.
Page 183 - How this chlorotic condition can best be corrected is the next question and one which because of its frequency concerns every practicing physician. Countless remedies have been presented to the profession, but far and foremost above them all is iron, notwithstanding certain high authority to the contrary. Arsenic is certainly valuable, but it ranks far below Iron or even manganese in the therapeutics of anemia. In order to be most efficacious, however, the iron should be in its most readily assimilable...
Page 101 - American Text-Book of Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat. Edited by GE DE SCHWEINITZ, MD, Professor of Ophthalmology in the University of Pennsylvania ; and B.
Page 159 - Annual Meeting of the Conference of State and Provincial Boards of Health of North America will be held in Detroit, Michigan, August 9, 10, and n, 1898. The " Quarter Centennial Celebration of the Establishment of the Michigan State Board of Health " will be in progress at the above named time.
Page 139 - A Textbook on Surgery, General, Operative and Mechanical. By John A. Wyeth, MD, Professor of Surgery in, and President of the Faculty of the New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital ; late Surgeon to Mount Sinai Hospital, and Consulting Surgeon to St.
Page 101 - Translated and edited by Augustus A. Eshner, MD, Professor of Clinical Medicine in the Philadelphia Polyclinic.
Page 74 - ... if the state or municipal authorities shall fail or refuse to enforce said rules and regulations, the President shall execute and enforce the same, and adopt' such measures as in his judgment shall be necessary to prevent the introduction or spread of such diseases, and may detail or appoint officers for that purpose.