Physician and Surgeon: A Professional Medical Journal, Volume 25J. W. Keating., 1903 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page vii
... infection , 87 . Progress in spelling reform , 283 . Rabies , 138 . Relation of the physician to the community , 43 . Roentgen rays and ultraviolet rays , 371 . Role of radium in medicine , 281 . Sanitary supervision of public water ...
... infection , 87 . Progress in spelling reform , 283 . Rabies , 138 . Relation of the physician to the community , 43 . Roentgen rays and ultraviolet rays , 371 . Role of radium in medicine , 281 . Sanitary supervision of public water ...
Page 25
... Infection in the gall - bladder may not be as bad as pictured , normal bile being free from organisms , or infection once present may die out . The presence of infection may induce contraction of the canal and pre- vent the passage of ...
... Infection in the gall - bladder may not be as bad as pictured , normal bile being free from organisms , or infection once present may die out . The presence of infection may induce contraction of the canal and pre- vent the passage of ...
Page 26
... Infection according to kind and extent may go on to the formation of abscess or induce acute degeneration of the liver . The principles underlying the operation are infection , whether it be acute or chronic , and involvement or ...
... Infection according to kind and extent may go on to the formation of abscess or induce acute degeneration of the liver . The principles underlying the operation are infection , whether it be acute or chronic , and involvement or ...
Page 28
... infectious matter . The gloves can be boiled , put on in bichlorid solu- tion , and offer no impediment whatever to the conduct of the case . moderately heavy glove is preferable . ) The author urges the same strict asepsis in the use ...
... infectious matter . The gloves can be boiled , put on in bichlorid solu- tion , and offer no impediment whatever to the conduct of the case . moderately heavy glove is preferable . ) The author urges the same strict asepsis in the use ...
Page 40
... infection remains yet to be determined . This poison stimulates the phagocytes of the spleen , lymph and hemo- lymph glands to increased hemolysis , or the red cells are so changed by the poison that they themselves stimulate the ...
... infection remains yet to be determined . This poison stimulates the phagocytes of the spleen , lymph and hemo- lymph glands to increased hemolysis , or the red cells are so changed by the poison that they themselves stimulate the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abscess acid ANN ARBOR apple sauce bacilli baked potato beef tongue Beefsteak blood board of health boiled potato Boston brown bread bread and butter carcinoma catarrh cause cells cent cervix cheese chowchow clinic coffee and cream coffee and milk Cold ham COLLEGE OF MEDICINE condition cure dextrosed and cream dextrosed and milk diagnosis disease Doctor eggs English breakfast tea examination false casts fatty epithelia French fried potatoes fried potatoes ginger-bread glands growth Hamburg steak hospital hundred hyperchlorhydria inches infection insanity iodin lemon leukocytes Medical Journal Medical Society method mince pie mutton normal operation organs pain patient pelvic Philadelphia physician practice present prolapse pudding rays reaction removed reported roast Slight albumin Soup stew stomach surgeon surgery surgical suture symptoms syphilis tea and milk therapeutic tion tissue tonsil treatment tuberculosis tumor typhoid ulcer UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ureter ureteral uterine uterus vaginal wheat mush dextrosed whole wheat mush York
Popular passages
Page 239 - 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.
Page 376 - There is no profession, from the members of which greater purity of character, and a higher standard of moral excellence are required, than the medical ; and to attain such eminence, is a duty every physician owes alike to his profession and to his patients.
Page 233 - Dermatology, Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, and other Topics of Interest to Students and Practitioners by leading Members of the Medical Profession throughout the World. Edited by Henry W. Cattell, AM, MD, Philadelphia, USA, with the Collaboration of John B.
Page 427 - ... and when pestilence prevails, it is their duty to face the danger, and to continue their labors for the alleviation of the suffering, even at the jeopardy of their own lives. 2. Medical men should also be always ready, when called on by the legally constituted authorities, to enlighten coroners...
Page 234 - Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia ; Corresponding Member of the Societe de Chirurgie, Paris ; Honorary Member of the Societe Beige de Chirurgie, etc.
Page 521 - Tell me what company you keep and I will tell you what you are ' ; and the other one, ' Not with whom you are bred, but with whom you are fed.
Page 425 - It often happens in cases of sudden illness, or of recent accidents and injuries, owing to the alarm and anxiety of friends, that a number of physicians are simultaneously sent for. Under these circumstances, courtesy should assign the patient to the first who arrives, who should select from those present any additional assistance that he may deem necessary. In all such cases, however, the...
Page 1 - Is a well-proven antiseptic agent — an antizymotic — especially useful in the • -* management of catarrhal conditions of the mucous membrane, adapted to internal use and to make and maintain surgical cleanliness — asepsis — in the treatment of all parts of the human body, whether by spray, injection, irrigation, atomization, inhalation, or simple local application, and therefore characterized by its particular adaptability to the field of PREVENTIVE MEDICINE-INDIVIDUAL PROPHYLAXIS.
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Page 384 - A SYSTEM OF PHYSIOLOGIC THERAPEUTICS. A Practical Exposition of the Methods, Other than Drug-Giving, Useful in the Prevention of Disease and in the Treatment of the Sick. Edited by Solomon Solis Cohen, AM, MD, Professor of Medicine and Therapeutics in the Philadelphia Polyclinic; Lecturer on Clinical Medicine at Jefferson Medical College; Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital and to the Rush Hospital for Consumption, etc.