Columbus Medical Journal: A Magazine of Medicine and Surgery, Volume 6Columbus Medical Publishing Company, 1888 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 27
Page 17
... existence of typhoid fever can be determined beyond all doubt by means of the thermometer alone , without taking into account any of the other objective symptoms ; the temperature range being of such definite uniformity as to leave no ...
... existence of typhoid fever can be determined beyond all doubt by means of the thermometer alone , without taking into account any of the other objective symptoms ; the temperature range being of such definite uniformity as to leave no ...
Page 20
... existence of such a disease as typho - malarial fever . f it resembles typhoid fever so closely in its clinical features and pathological lesion as to render it utterly impossible to discriminate between them , why should it be other ...
... existence of such a disease as typho - malarial fever . f it resembles typhoid fever so closely in its clinical features and pathological lesion as to render it utterly impossible to discriminate between them , why should it be other ...
Page 21
... existence that may have contributed thereto , arising from the bad local sanitary condi- tions as well as from the water supply , the chemical analysis of which is conclusive . I am informed , however , that at the time of the outbreak ...
... existence that may have contributed thereto , arising from the bad local sanitary condi- tions as well as from the water supply , the chemical analysis of which is conclusive . I am informed , however , that at the time of the outbreak ...
Page 22
... existence of enteric fever at East- ney Barracks , Portsmouth , appears to have been tracable to sewer air driven back into the quarters by the tide , there being no traps or venti- lating openings . Since October , 1878 , when the ...
... existence of enteric fever at East- ney Barracks , Portsmouth , appears to have been tracable to sewer air driven back into the quarters by the tide , there being no traps or venti- lating openings . Since October , 1878 , when the ...
Page 28
... existence of this significant deformity . Although there is but little doubt that most super- intendents of lunatic asylums could add examples to his list , they would still continue to look upon the " insane ear ” as an ominous sign ...
... existence of this significant deformity . Although there is but little doubt that most super- intendents of lunatic asylums could add examples to his list , they would still continue to look upon the " insane ear ” as an ominous sign ...
Contents
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578 | |
Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid albuminuria amputation antipyretics antipyrin antiseptic applied believe bladder blood bone bowel canal cause cavity cent cervix Cesarean Cesarean section child chloroform chronic clinical Columbus COLUMBUS MEDICAL JOURNAL condition contraction craniotomy cure curette danger diagnosis dilatation Discussion opened disease DOSE.-One doses drugs effect examination experience forceps fracture frequently give glands Health heat hemorrhage hernia Hospital inches incision inflammation injections injury instruments intestinal intubation iodoform irritation joint kidney ligature medicine membrane ment method micturition months mortality nervous normal Obstetrics Ohio operation ounces ovum pain patient performed perineum peritoneum Philadelphia PHOSPHORI physician pill placenta portion practice present Prof Professor pyrexia recovery rectum remedy removed reported rubber solution splint surface surgeon Surgery surgical sutures symptoms temperature thallin therapeutic tion tissue tonic tracheotomy treated treatment tube tumor typhoid fever ulcer urethra urine uterine uterus vaccination Warner wound York
Popular passages
Page 310 - A REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES. Embracing the Entire Range of Scientific and Practical Medicine and Allied Science. By Various Writers.
Page 358 - How wonderful is Death, Death, and his brother Sleep ! One, pale as yonder waning moon With lips of lurid blue ; The other, rosy as the morn When throned on ocean's wave It blushes o'er the world : Yet both so passing wonderful...
Page 512 - Nor bring, to see me cease to live, Some doctor full of phrase and fame, To shake his sapient head, and give The ill he cannot cure a name.
Page 491 - A Practical Treatise on Diseases of the Skin." By John V. Shoemaker, AM, MD. Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases in the Medico-Chirurgical College and Hospital of Philadelphia; Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital for Diseases of the Skin...
Page 307 - Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology. By HENRY C. CHAPMAN, MD, Professor of Institutes of Medicine and Medical Jurisprudence, Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia.
Page 6 - In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not.
Page 179 - A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of the Hair and Scalp. By George Thomas Jackson, MD, Instructor in Dermatology in the New York Polyclinic ; Assistant Visiting Physician to the New York Skin and Cancer Hospital ; Member of the New York Dermatological Society, etc.
Page 129 - ... of the fragmentary and imperfect manner in which the facts are usually conveyed in such advertisements, Parke, Davis & Co. propose to inaugurate rather a novel departure in advertising. It is their intention to publish in the advertising pages they occupy in medical journals a series of what they term plain talks to physicians, in each issue taking up a certain class of preparations and pointing out the reasons why they deserve to be prescribed, until all their preparations shall have thus been...
Page 445 - Fever Nursing: Designed for the use of Professional and other Nurses, and Especially as a Text-book for Nurses in Training." By JC Wilson, AM, MD, Author of "A Treatise on the Continued Fevers...
Page 42 - OUTLINES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF DIET: Or, The Regulation of Food to the Requirements of Health and the Treatment of Disease. BY ET BRUEN, MD, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA ; ONE OF THE PHYSICIANS TO THE PHILADELPHIA AND UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS.