American year-book of medicine and surgery. v.5, 1900, Volume 5W.B. Saunders, 1900 |
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Results 1-5 of 99
Page 11
... conclusion that the urine should receive more attention than is commonly given and should be constantly sterilized , since it is probably more active in spreading the disease than are the feces . The latter are extremely infectious in ...
... conclusion that the urine should receive more attention than is commonly given and should be constantly sterilized , since it is probably more active in spreading the disease than are the feces . The latter are extremely infectious in ...
Page 16
... conclusion that while ordinarily the tension is lowered in proportion to the severity of the disease , no dependence can be placed upon this sign , since in some cases of but moderate severity there is great lessening of the tension ...
... conclusion that while ordinarily the tension is lowered in proportion to the severity of the disease , no dependence can be placed upon this sign , since in some cases of but moderate severity there is great lessening of the tension ...
Page 25
... conclusions at which they arrived from a study of the Widal reaction in typhoid fever . They think that it is a reaction of immunity ; but that it is not quantitatively in direct relation to the degree of immunity , and that the ...
... conclusions at which they arrived from a study of the Widal reaction in typhoid fever . They think that it is a reaction of immunity ; but that it is not quantitatively in direct relation to the degree of immunity , and that the ...
Page 43
... conclusions . The disease is described as an acute infection produced by a peculiar micrococcus— the meningococcus . This organism , first recognized and described by Leichtenstern , was carefully studied by Weichselbaum . The authors ...
... conclusions . The disease is described as an acute infection produced by a peculiar micrococcus— the meningococcus . This organism , first recognized and described by Leichtenstern , was carefully studied by Weichselbaum . The authors ...
Page 47
... conclusion arrived at was that the variability was due rather to the natural fluctuation of the disease than to the effect of the puncture . Regarding lumbar puncture , the author states that " during the past 10 years no single measure ...
... conclusion arrived at was that the variability was due rather to the natural fluctuation of the disease than to the effect of the puncture . Regarding lumbar puncture , the author states that " during the past 10 years no single measure ...
Common terms and phrases
acute albumin albuminuria amount anemia animals antitoxin appeared Arch arterial attacks autopsy bacillus bacteria Band believes blood Brit cause cells Centralbl chronic cirrhosis clinical condition death degeneration describes Deutsch diabetes diagnosis digestion diphtheria diplococcus disease doses drug dyspnea eczema effect enlarged examination excretion exophthalmic fatal fluid followed gastric gland glycosuria heart Heft hemoglobin hemorrhage Hospital Ibid improvement increase injection intestinal Jour July kidney klin Lancet large numbers lesions leukocytes leukocytosis liver lungs malaria marked Méd Medical meningitis method milk nephritis normal observed occurred organs pain paralysis parasites patient Phila Physiol pneumonia postmortem present produced proteid reaction reports rheumatism Sept serum showed skin solution spinal spleen stomach substance sugar symptoms syphilis temperature tetanus thyroid tion tissue toxin treated treatment tuberculosis tuberculous tumor typhoid fever ulcer uric acid urine usually Woch
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Page 1 - A Yearly Digest of Scientific Progress and Authoritative Opinion in all branches of Medicine and Surgery, drawn from journals, monographs, and text-books of the leading American and Foreign authors and investigators.