American Journal of Dental ScienceWilliam Gird Beecroft., 1887 - Dentistry |
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Page 4
... less the extraction and replanting of the tooth , which would have been as likely to produce death , as those which followed the case first described . Supposing that this lady , already physically debilitated by protracted disease ...
... less the extraction and replanting of the tooth , which would have been as likely to produce death , as those which followed the case first described . Supposing that this lady , already physically debilitated by protracted disease ...
Page 7
... less true because in their united judgment they do not always correctly diagnos or succeed in warding off the more serious effects of a failure to comprehend the true nature of a lesion or its cause . And that this is not mere corollary ...
... less true because in their united judgment they do not always correctly diagnos or succeed in warding off the more serious effects of a failure to comprehend the true nature of a lesion or its cause . And that this is not mere corollary ...
Page 8
... less than ten days the abscess was well , with- out further treatment , leaving no sign save the scar that it had ever existed . One of the many points of interest attached to this case is its refutation of the frequently ex- pressed ...
... less than ten days the abscess was well , with- out further treatment , leaving no sign save the scar that it had ever existed . One of the many points of interest attached to this case is its refutation of the frequently ex- pressed ...
Page 14
... less concealed from view , and generally cannot be corrected except by taking out all or a part of the filling . Some one remarks that it is difficult , if not impossible , to adapt two hard substances such as dentine and extra ...
... less concealed from view , and generally cannot be corrected except by taking out all or a part of the filling . Some one remarks that it is difficult , if not impossible , to adapt two hard substances such as dentine and extra ...
Page 17
... less reason to be lost in wonder that teeth decay so readily and so rapidly around gold which worked so beautifully . True , cohesive gold is relatively soft and ductile , and when used in the form of ribbons , even though made from ...
... less reason to be lost in wonder that teeth decay so readily and so rapidly around gold which worked so beautifully . True , cohesive gold is relatively soft and ductile , and when used in the form of ribbons , even though made from ...
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Common terms and phrases
abscess acid action alloy alveolar abscess alveolar process alveolus amalgam appearance ARTICLE artificial teeth asphyxia bicuspid blood bone boric acid brush carbolic acid caries catarrh cause cavity cementum chemical clean clinic cohesive gold Committee condition decay Dental Association dental college Dental Department dental schools Dental Science Dental Surgery dentine dentist dentistry deposit digestion disease effect enamel examination extracted fact filling give graduate gums hæmorrhage incisors inflammation injection iodoform irritation Journal mallet matter McKellops medicine ment mercury metal method molar mouth mucous membrane naphthol necrosis never nitrous oxide observed operation organs oxygen pain paper pathology patient periosteum physician plate pluggers powder practice practitioner present President produce profession protoplasm pulp pyorrhoea pyorrhoea alveolaris removed root rubber salivary Society socket solution student success surface Thackston tion tissues tooth treatment ulcers vulcanizer
Popular passages
Page 140 - They looked very happy, and outside it was very wet and dismal. I thought I would try a cigar. (Murmurs.) I did so. (Great expectations.) I smoked that cigar, it was delicious! (Groans.) From that moment I was a changed man ; and...
Page 139 - Revised and Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia. Containing many Prescriptions and Formulae, conforming to the US Pharmacopoeia, Directions for making Artificial Human Milk, for the Artificial Digestion of Milk, etc.
Page 140 - They looked very happy and outside it was very wet and dismal. I thought I would try a cigar. [Murmurs.] I did so. [Great expectations.] I smoked that cigar; it was delicious! [Groans.]. From that moment I was a changed man: and now I feel that smoking in moderation is a comfortable and laudable practice, and is productive of good. [Dismay and confusion of the antitobacconists. Hoars of laughter from the smokers.] There is no more harm in a pipe than there is in a cup of tea. You may poison yourself...
Page 565 - THE twenty-first annual meeting of the Illinois State Dental Society will be held at Peoria, 111., commencing Tuesday, May 12, 1885, and continuing four days.
Page 514 - April 30 wishing to bring forward a subject not upon the programme must give notice of his intention to the SecretaryGeneral at least twenty-one days before the opening of the Congress. The...
Page 238 - ... otto of roses, half a drop. The boric acid in solution gets between the teeth and the edges of the gums, and there it discharges its antiseptic functions; the chlorate and guaiacum contribute their quota to the benefit of the gums and mucous membrane generally ; the chalk is the insoluble powder to detach the particles of tartar which may be present, and the magnesia the more soluble soft powder which cannot harm the softest enamel.
Page 40 - ... coffee is usually made of greater percentage strength than tea, its effect must ordinarily be greater. Cocoa also had much the same effect if used of the same strength as tea or coffee ; but when of the strength ordinarily employed, its effect was inconsiderable. Strong coffee — cafe noir — had a very powerful retarding effect, and persons of weak digestion should avoid the customary cup of ' black coffee
Page 96 - Wylie, of New York, has produced excellent results with the following method of treatment : So soon as the first pain is felt, the patient is to take a pill, or capsule, containing one grain of inspissated ox-gall and one drop of oil of gaultheria, every hour until relief is felt, or until six have been taken. Dr. Wylie states that...
Page 236 - ... medicine; and one of these is in diseases of the mouth. It is the benefit of its local action we usually wish to gain, for, though sometimes given internally — as in irritable conditions of the bladder — its topical antiseptic effect is more often desired. In connection with its local application in various diseased conditions of the mouth, its solubility in water and glycerine, its unirritating character, its comparatively innocuous nature, and its almost tastelessness, ate greatly in its...
Page 238 - I refer to the condition in which we frequently find the moulh, tongue, and teeth in severe cases of typhoid fever. The mouth is hot ; the lips dry, cracked, and glued to the sordes-covered teeth by inspissated mucus and saliva; the tongue dry, or even glazed and hard, brown or black, crusted with a foetid fur.