The Hahnemannian Monthly, Volume 22LaBarre Printing Company, 1887 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 49
Page 2
... direct result of one of these causes : overstrain , or lack of sufficient blood supply . Before proceeding to the consideration of our subject it will be well to impress upon the mind of the reader the differentiation between the ...
... direct result of one of these causes : overstrain , or lack of sufficient blood supply . Before proceeding to the consideration of our subject it will be well to impress upon the mind of the reader the differentiation between the ...
Page 3
... direct cause of pathological changes in every organ of the body . I shall therefore cite a few cases which have occurred in my own practice , afterwards commenting upon them and endeavoring to explain the causes of accompanying symptoms ...
... direct cause of pathological changes in every organ of the body . I shall therefore cite a few cases which have occurred in my own practice , afterwards commenting upon them and endeavoring to explain the causes of accompanying symptoms ...
Page 35
... Direct ; ( b ) Re- flex ; ( c ) Central . I. By direct irritation of the nerve is meant simply the effects of pressure , by any body or fluid , which encroaches upon the path that the phrenic nerve takes in its passage to the diaphragm ...
... Direct ; ( b ) Re- flex ; ( c ) Central . I. By direct irritation of the nerve is meant simply the effects of pressure , by any body or fluid , which encroaches upon the path that the phrenic nerve takes in its passage to the diaphragm ...
Page 49
... direct its energies . Cour- teous discussion of questions in dispute will be not only accepted but invited . The journal holds the view that scien- tific questions are open questions and that they always will be . Its sharpest volleys ...
... direct its energies . Cour- teous discussion of questions in dispute will be not only accepted but invited . The journal holds the view that scien- tific questions are open questions and that they always will be . Its sharpest volleys ...
Page 66
... direct result of in- juries are escaped white globules , " and that no increased activity and multiplication of the tissue cells occur ; the chief opponents to this view are Stricker and Böttcher who , however , admit the possibility of ...
... direct result of in- juries are escaped white globules , " and that no increased activity and multiplication of the tissue cells occur ; the chief opponents to this view are Stricker and Böttcher who , however , admit the possibility of ...
Contents
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767 | |
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid action acute affected alcohol allopathic anæmia appear attack belladonna blood body brain Bureau cardiac catarrh cause cent cerebral chorea chronic clinical cold College Committee condition constipation cough cure diagnosis dilatation discharge disease doses drug dyspnoea eczema epilepsy especially examination feeling fever fibres frequently give Hahnemann HAHNEMANNIAN headache heart hemorrhage Homœopathic hospital increased indicated inflammation Institute iodoform irritation journal labor lesion liver lungs Materia Medica medicine meeting membrane ment method milk months mucous mucous membrane muscles nerve nervous nose observed operation organs pain paper paralysis pathic Pathology patient Philadelphia phthisis physicians practice present produce profession pulsatilla pulse relieved remedy result rheumatism sensation side Society stomach suffering symptoms syphilis temperature therapeutics tincture tion tissue treated treatment tube tumor typhoid typhoid fever urea urethra urine uterine uterus vomiting weeks York
Popular passages
Page 106 - For them no more the blazing hearth shall burn. Or busy housewife ply her evening care; No children run to lisp their sire's return, Or climb his knees the envied kiss to share.
Page 440 - POCKET ANATOMIST. Founded upon Gray. By C. HENRI LEONARD, AM, MD, Professor of the Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women and Clinical Gynaecology, in the Detroit College of Medicine.
Page 107 - The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, Await alike the inevitable hour: The paths of glory lead but to the grave.
Page 56 - VON ZEISSL, MD, Privat-Docent for Diseases of the Skin and Syphilis at the Imperial Royal University of Vienna. Translated, with Notes, by H.
Page 180 - The Diseases of Women. Including Diseases of the Bladder and Urethra. By DR. F. WINCKEL, Professor of Gynaecology and Director of the Royal University Clinic for Women, in Munich.
Page 179 - A REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES EMBRACING THE ENTIRE RANGE OF SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL MEDICINE AND ALLIED SCIENCE. By various writers.
Page 249 - ... with a view of moving the bowels, strong tea, and much hot liquid of any kind, with meals'. 5. Walk at least half an hour twice daily. 6. Avoid sitting and working long in such a position as will compress or constrict the bowels. 7. Solicit the action of the bowels every day after breakfast, and be patient in soliciting. If you fail in procuring relief one day. wait until the following day, when you will renew the solicitation at the appointed time. And if you fail the second day, you may, continuing...
Page 472 - That the charge made at a later date by the American Medical Association that members of the homoeopathic school "practiced upon an exclusive dogma, to the rejection of the aids furnished by experience, and by the sciences of anatomy, chemistry, physiology, etc.," is absolutely devoid of foundation in fact.
Page 713 - A MANUAL OF THE PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS OF THORACIC DISEASES, by E. Darwin Hudson, Jr., AM, MD, late Professor of General Medicine and Diseases of the Chest in the New York Polyclinic; Physician to Bellevue Hospital, etc.
Page 335 - Knowledge and Wisdom, far from being one, Have ofttimes no connection. Knowledge dwells In heads replete with thoughts of other men ; Wisdom in minds attentive to their own.