Medical Art and Indianapolis Medical Journal, Volume 21, Issue 5

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1918
 

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Page 207 - Especially useful in ANEMIA of All Varieties: CHLOROSIS: AMENORRHEA: BRIGHT'S DISEASE: CHOREA: TUBERCULOSIS: RICKETS: RHEUMATISM: MALARIA: MALNUTRITION: CONVALESCENCE: As a GENERAL SYSTEMIC TONIC After LA GRIPPE, TYPHOID, Etc. DOSE: One tablespoonful after each meal. Children in proportion.
Page 194 - Physicians will find the Polyclinic an excellent means for posting themselves upon modern progress in all branches of medicine and surgery. The specialties are fully taught, including laboratory work. For further information address New Orleans Polyclinic, Postoffice box 797, New Orleans, La. SANDER & SONS EUCALPTOL (pure volatile Eucalypti Extract) In an article on inhalations of Eucalpytus in Diphtheria, by Prof.
Page 233 - ... of officers have been convened for the purpose of examining candidates for commission in the Medical Reserve Corps of the Army. An applicant for the Reserve should apply to the board nearest his home. 5. The requirements for commission in the Medical Reserve Corps...
Page 260 - Infant Feeding.— By Clifford G. Grulee, A. M., MD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Rush Medical College, Attending Pediatrician to Cook County Hospital.
Page 211 - ' shell shock ' ' has been adopted officially by the British War Office as the diagnostic term to cover all neuroses arising among officers and soldiers of the armies. This term has an advantage in its picturesqueness that has helped to stimulate popular as well as professional interest, but it is a term which can be defended with difficulty from a purely medical standpoint. There are two reasons why this is so. In the first place it implies a single etiology — the physical effects of high explosive...
Page 215 - ... to the Journal of the American Medical Association ' in which he mentions neuropathic make-up as one of the three great causes for the invariable rejection of recruits. In personal conversation he gave numerous illustrations of the burden which the acceptance of neurotic recruits had unnecessarily thrown upon an army struggling to surmount the difficult medical problems inseparable from the war.
Page 223 - FT have I walked these woodland paths, Without the blest foreknowing That underneath the withered leaves The fairest buds were growing. To-day the...

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