Birmingham Medical Review, Volume 561904 |
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Page 391
... nature of the disease , I advocated the completion of the operation wherever it was at all possible . I narrated in , I am afraid , somewhat wearying detail three cases which had come under my own observation , and of which the ...
... nature of the disease , I advocated the completion of the operation wherever it was at all possible . I narrated in , I am afraid , somewhat wearying detail three cases which had come under my own observation , and of which the ...
Page 392
... nature , was irremovable , I agreed with Mr. Rudge as to the desirability of at least an exploratory operation , and we advised the patient and her friends accordingly . After returning home to Bristol and considering the matter , the ...
... nature , was irremovable , I agreed with Mr. Rudge as to the desirability of at least an exploratory operation , and we advised the patient and her friends accordingly . After returning home to Bristol and considering the matter , the ...
Page 394
... be made quickly and the nature of the abdominal tumour definitely ascertained . To this the patient and her sister agreed . Arrangements were accordingly made for the operation to take place 394 EXPLORATION IN SUSPECTED MALIGNANT DISEASE .
... be made quickly and the nature of the abdominal tumour definitely ascertained . To this the patient and her sister agreed . Arrangements were accordingly made for the operation to take place 394 EXPLORATION IN SUSPECTED MALIGNANT DISEASE .
Page 396
... nature , I cannot but regard even the indefinite symptoms now com- plained of with some little apprehension . Nevertheless , there remains the fact that for at any rate two years the patient has enjoyed excellent health , and that seems ...
... nature , I cannot but regard even the indefinite symptoms now com- plained of with some little apprehension . Nevertheless , there remains the fact that for at any rate two years the patient has enjoyed excellent health , and that seems ...
Page 401
... natural to her . On examination , I found the wound quite soundly healed and the uterus natural in size and mov- able . No abnormal swelling could be detected either in the pelvis or elsewhere . On November 2 , 1903 , seven years after ...
... natural to her . On examination , I found the wound quite soundly healed and the uterus natural in size and mov- able . No abnormal swelling could be detected either in the pelvis or elsewhere . On November 2 , 1903 , seven years after ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal wall abscess acid acute adhesions aged albumen albuminuria amount anæmia appears arteries attack bacillus bladder blood Bright's disease bronchiectasis capsule cardiac cause cavity cells cent cervix chronic clinical colour condition cure cysts death diabetes diagnosis diet dilatation disease duodenum dyspnoea enlarged eruption erythema evidence examination experience fibroids fluid fundus gastric glands glomerulus hæmorrhage heart hernia Hospital important incision infection inguinal intestinal kidney larynx lesions ligaments liver lungs ment method methylene blue months nephritis normal observations occur oophorectomy operation organs ovary pain pathological patient pelvis perforation peritoneum peritonitis pessary pigment pneumonia polyuria post mortem posterior pregnancy present pressure pulse quantity rash removed renal retinitis retroversion rheumatism scarlatiniform seen showed stomach suffering sugar surgeon surgery surgical sutures symptoms temperature tion tissue treatment truss tube tumour typhoid fever ulcer urine uterine uterine fibroids uterus vaginal vomiting weeks wound
Popular passages
Page 445 - A Text-Book of Diseases of Women. By BARTON COOKE HIRST, MD, Professor of Obstetrics, University of Pennsylvania ; Gynecologist to the Howard, the Orthopedic, and the Philadelphia Hospitals.
Page 442 - I should estimate the extent of infection by the milk and flesh of tuberculous cattle and the butter made of their milk as hardly greater than that of hereditary transmission, and I therefore do not deem it advisable to take any measures against it.
Page 439 - We have very carefully compared the disease thus set up in the bovine animal by material of human origin with that set up in the bovine animal by material of bovine origin, and so far we have found the one, both in its broad general features and in its finer histological details, to be identical with the other.
Page 449 - Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. With an Introductory Note by JOHN H. MUSSER, MD, Professor of Clinical Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. I2mo of 247 pages.
Page 442 - Among 933 cases of tuberculosis in children at the Emperor and Empress Frederick's Hospital for Children, Baginsky never found tuberculosis of the intestine without simultaneous disease of the lungs and the bronchial glands.
Page 713 - The increased and adequately maintained blood-supply to the kidney established by Edebohls's operation leads, most probably, to gradual absorption of the interstitial or intertubular inflammatory products and exudates, thus freeing the tubules and glomeruli from external compression, constriction, and distortion, and permitting the reestablishment in them of a normal circulation. The result of this improved circulation in and between the tubules and glomeruli is the regenerative production of new...
Page 439 - We have up to the present made use, in the above inquiry, of more than twenty different " strains " of tuberculous material of human origin, that is to say, of material taken from more than twenty cases of tuberculous disease in human beings, including sputum from phthisical patients, and the diseased parts of the lungs in pulmonary tuberculosis, mesenteric glands in primary abdominal tuberculosis, tuberculous bronchial and cervical glands...
Page 439 - ... strains, the bovine animal into which the tuberculous material was first introduced was affected to a less extent. The tuberculous disease was either limited to the spot where the material was introduced (this occurred, however, in two instances only, and these at the very beginning of...
Page 559 - ... useful for the prevention of disease and in the treatment of the sick. Edited by Solomon Solis Cohen, AM, MD...
Page 713 - ... the necessary result must be the formation on the most extensive scale possible of new vascular connections between the kidney and the fatty capsule embracing it. The fibrous capsule proper forms an almost impenetrable barrier to the passage of blood vessels between the kidney and its fatty capsule, as we have abundant opportunity to verify at operations upon the kidneys.