Cleveland Medical and Surgical Reporter, Volume 171906 |
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Page 11
... disease is had when a patient , otherwise in apparently good health , has been examined for life insurance and has been turned down because the examining physician has found albumen in the urine . Such cases are exceptional , however ...
... disease is had when a patient , otherwise in apparently good health , has been examined for life insurance and has been turned down because the examining physician has found albumen in the urine . Such cases are exceptional , however ...
Page 13
... disease ; 2. Anemia ; 3. A history of persistent digestive disorders ; 4. Insomnia ; 5. Headaches , without apparent ... DISEASES OF THE NOSE AND THROAT IN CONNECTION WTH DISEASED CONDITIONS OF OTHER ORGANS OF THE BODY . * BY GEORGE H ...
... disease ; 2. Anemia ; 3. A history of persistent digestive disorders ; 4. Insomnia ; 5. Headaches , without apparent ... DISEASES OF THE NOSE AND THROAT IN CONNECTION WTH DISEASED CONDITIONS OF OTHER ORGANS OF THE BODY . * BY GEORGE H ...
Page 16
... disease but in hyperaemia of the lungs , liver , kidneys , etc. Nose bleed may at times be the forerunner of extravasation of blood into the brain and of retinal apoplexy in connection with renal lesions . Whenever we meet with ...
... disease but in hyperaemia of the lungs , liver , kidneys , etc. Nose bleed may at times be the forerunner of extravasation of blood into the brain and of retinal apoplexy in connection with renal lesions . Whenever we meet with ...
Page 25
... disease itself , though perhaps in a less degree . This is the first example of artificial immunity being successfully established in man and has come into almost universal practice . Yet we know nothing about the nature of the virus ...
... disease itself , though perhaps in a less degree . This is the first example of artificial immunity being successfully established in man and has come into almost universal practice . Yet we know nothing about the nature of the virus ...
Page 29
... diseases , namely the defense a man puts up against the germs . But we must not forget that the in- vading bacteria are ... disease can be measured . When the opsonic power is high , the pa- tient has good defensive power against that ...
... diseases , namely the defense a man puts up against the germs . But we must not forget that the in- vading bacteria are ... disease can be measured . When the opsonic power is high , the pa- tient has good defensive power against that ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acute aged antiseptic bladder blood Board body cause cavity cent cervix Cesarean section Chicago child chronic Cleveland Cleveland Homeopathic Medical clinical condition constipation cough cure curette death diagnosis died dilatation diphtheria Discussion opened disease doctor dose drugs examination fever frequently give given graduate Hahnemann Medical College hemorrhage Homeopathic Medical College homeopathic physicians Hospital immunity incision indicated infection intestinal irritation Journal kidney Materia Medica medicine meeting ment mental method milk months mucous mucous membrane nervous normal Ohio opathic operation opsonic opsonins organs pain patient pelvic perforation peritoneal peritoneum physicians placenta placenta previa pneumonia practice pregnancy present Prof profession Professor prostate remedy removed reported Rose Bldg Rose Building sepsis Silicea skin surgeon Surgery surgical symptoms therapeutics tion tissues Toledo treated treatment tuberculosis tumor typhoid ulcer uremia urine usually uterine uterus vaccine vaginal weeks York
Popular passages
Page 445 - And only the Master shall praise us, and only the Master shall blame; And no one shall work for money, and no one shall work for fame, But each for the joy of the working, and each, in his separate star, Shall draw the Thing as he sees It for the God of Things as They are!
Page 142 - Dr. Howell has had many years of experience as a teacher of physiology in several of the leading medical schools, and is therefore exceedingly well fitted to write a text-book on this subject. Main emphasis has been laid upon those facts and views which will be directly helpful in the practical branches of medicine. At the same time, however, sufficient consideration has been given to the experimental side of the science. The entire literature of physiology has been thoroughly digested by Dr.
Page 86 - Emeritus Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia.
Page 143 - DISEASES OF THE GENITO-URINARY ORGANS AND THE KIDNEY.— By Robert H. Greene, MD, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery at the Fordham University, New York; and Harlow Brooks, MD, Assistant Professor of Pathology, University and Bellevue Hospital Medical School.
Page 149 - Later it was clear that its power as a nerve calmative was due, as Bartholow says, to its special action on the pneumogastric nerve. Codeine stands apart from the rest of its group, in that it does not arrest secretion in the respiratory and intestinal tract.
Page 381 - Therefore, we conclude that to remove the cause, to render the intestinal canal antiseptic, we have an invaluable remedy in Salol ; while to remove accompanying pain, to quiet the nervous system, and to reduce any fever which may be present, we have a remedy equally efficacious in Antikamnia ; an ideal combination for the treatment of this large class of diseases, and we may specially cite typhoid fever. These two drugs are put up in tablet form, called " Antikamnia and Salol Tablets," each tablet...
Page 65 - Medical Gynecology. By S. WYLLIS HANDLER, MD, Adjunct Professor of Diseases of Women, New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital. Octavo of 790 pages, with 150 original illustrations.
Page 142 - A TEXT-BOOK OF PHYSIOLOGY, for Medical Students and Physicians. By William H. Howell, Ph. D., MD, LL.D., Professor of Physiology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Page 530 - The President of the American Gynecological Society has appointed a committee to report at the next annual meeting in Washington, on the "Present Status of Obstetrical Teaching in Europe and America," and to recommend improvements in the scope and character of the teaching of Obstetrics in America. The committee consists of the Professors of Obstetrics in Columbia University, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard, Jefferson Medical College, Johns Hopkins University, Cornell University and the University...
Page 379 - They produce their results by stimulating normal secretions, rapidly increasing the fluid content of the feces and gently increasing peristalsis. They are extremely palatable, easily taken by even young children, and when brought in contact with the secretions rapidly disintegrate and produce their specific medicinal effect.