The Montreal Medical Journal, Volume 19

Front Cover
George Edgeworth Fenwick, Thomas George Roddick, George Ross
Gazette Printing Company, 1891
 

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Page 855 - ... others. For, if such nostrum be of real efficacy, any concealment regarding it is inconsistent with beneficence and professional liberality; and, if mystery alone give it value and importance, such craft implies either disgraceful ignorance, or fraudulent avarice. It is also reprehensible for physicians to give certificates attesting the efficacy of patent or secret medicines, or in any way to promote the use of them.
Page 835 - A NEW MEDICAL DICTIONARY: Including all the words and phrases used in Medicine, with their proper Pronunciation and Definitions, based on Recent Medical Literature. By George M. Gould, BA, MD, Ophthalmic Surgeon to the Philadelphia Hospital, etc.
Page 930 - THE POCKET MATERIA MEDICA AND THERAPEUTICS; a resume of the Action and Doses of all Officinal and Non-officinal Drugs now in Common Use. By C. HENRI LEONARD, AM., MD, Professor of Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women and Clinical Gynaecology in the Detroit College of Medicine.
Page 49 - The Neuroses of the Genito-Urinary System in the Male. WITH STERILITY AND IMPOTENCE. By DR. R. ULTZMANN, Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases in the University of Vienna. Translated, with the author's permission, by GARDNER W.
Page 855 - It is equally derogatory to professional character, and opposed to the interests of the profession for a physician to hold a patent for any surgical instrument or medicine, or to prescribe a secret nostrum, whether the invention or discovery or exclusive property of himself or of others.
Page 534 - Illustrated Encyclopaedic Medical Dictionary : Being a Dictionary of the Technical Terms used by Writers on Medicine and the Collateral Sciences in the Latin, English, French, and German Languages.
Page 462 - Within limits, a certain degree of habituation may be perceived as soon as the tuberculous patient has been treated with increasing doses, for so soon as the point is reached at which reaction is as feeble as that of a non-tuberculous patient, then it may be assumed that all tuberculous tissue is destroyed. Then the treatment will only have to be continued by slowly-increasing doses and with interruptions in order that the patient may be protected from fresh infections while bacilli are still present...
Page 856 - I HOLD every man a debtor to his profession; from the which, as men of course do seek to receive countenance and profit, so ought they of duty to endeavour themselves, by way of amends, to be a help and ornament thereunto.
Page 837 - Frankfort-on-the-Main. Second Revised Edition. With 133 Illustrations. Translated by WILLIS HALL VITTUM, MD, St. Paul, Minn. Edited by C. EUGENE RIGGS, AM, MD, Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases, University of Minnesota ; Member of the American Neurological Association.
Page 699 - By John V. Shoemaker, AM, MD, Professor of Materia Medica, Pharmacology, Therapeutics, and Clinical Medicine, and Clinical Professor of diseases of the skin...

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