Philadelphia Hospital Reports, Volume 4

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Detre & Blcakburn, 1901

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Page 321 - Emeritus Professor of Diseases of the Eye, Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medicine.
Page 318 - A TREATISE ON OBSTETRICS. FOR STUDENTS AND PRACTITIONERS. By EDWARD P. DAVIS, AM, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Infancy in the Philadelphia Polyclinic, Clinical Professor of Obstetrics in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia.
Page 318 - With a special chapter on the Mental Disturbances Following Typhoid Fever. By FX Dercum, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Nervous System in the Jefferson Medical College.
Page 18 - ... until his death, in 1806, to hold that as well as other positions of honor and trust. Dr. Smith was brought up in Haverford and Radnor. He received his early education in the day schools of the neighborhood, and subsequently passed some time at the boarding school of Jonathan Gause, in Chester County.
Page 318 - MD, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine in the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Page 171 - JJ, aged thirty-two years; white; born in Scotland ; laborer; was admitted to the hospital August 9, 1888, complaining of severe headache and sleeplessness, which had existed for three months. He was obstinately constipated and had lost appetite and flesh, although he was still a large, muscular man. His breath was offensive ; his urine was normal. Knee-jerk was normal. No paralytic symptoms •were present. The right pupil was rather larger and responded to light more slowly than the left. Eight...
Page 323 - Lambert was one of the most satisfactory and successful in the history of the institution.
Page 5 - De Affectionibus,' &c. Besides this, he has left us certain rules, founded on the observation of the processes of Nature, both in inducing and removing disease. Of this sort are the ' Coacae Praenotiones,' the ' Aphorisms,' &c. Herein consisted the theory of that divine old man. It exhibited the legitimate operations of Nature, put forth in the diseases of humanity. The vain efforts of a wild fancy, the dreams of a sick man, it did not exhibit.
Page 60 - Edited by GE de Schweinitz, AM, MD, Professor of Ophthalmology in the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia...
Page 48 - The cedema is marked throughout the entire forearm, and extends into the upper arm up to the junction of the middle with the upper third of the arm.

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