TherapeuticsJ.B. Lippincott, 1888 - 908 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 89
Page 10
... spinal cord , but destroys the conducting power of the nerve - trunks . It is evident that as one or the other of these influences predominates , will there be convulsions or paralysis . Now , if for any reason one animal be exceedingly ...
... spinal cord , but destroys the conducting power of the nerve - trunks . It is evident that as one or the other of these influences predominates , will there be convulsions or paralysis . Now , if for any reason one animal be exceedingly ...
Page 25
... spinal cord are especially implicated , massage is of great importance . In acute cases it should be commenced as soon as the subsidence of fever and other symptoms of constitutional irritation marks the passage of the first stage of ...
... spinal cord are especially implicated , massage is of great importance . In acute cases it should be commenced as soon as the subsidence of fever and other symptoms of constitutional irritation marks the passage of the first stage of ...
Page 55
... spinal cord , from falling of the bodily temperature , the animal which in a warm room will live indefinitely dying very shortly in a temperature of forty degrees . The cause of the inability of the animal to resist external cold after ...
... spinal cord , from falling of the bodily temperature , the animal which in a warm room will live indefinitely dying very shortly in a temperature of forty degrees . The cause of the inability of the animal to resist external cold after ...
Page 89
... spinal cord , and consequently the electro - contractility of its trib- utary muscles , is exceedingly rare , and , if it occurred , could only be confounded with spinal congestion complicated with hemorrhage . In infantile palsy the ...
... spinal cord , and consequently the electro - contractility of its trib- utary muscles , is exceedingly rare , and , if it occurred , could only be confounded with spinal congestion complicated with hemorrhage . In infantile palsy the ...
Page 90
... spinal cord . In regard to certain so - called functional palsies : in diphtheritic paraly sis the irritability of the muscles is often diminished and sometimes destroyed ; in lead palsy it is generally lost , and , curiously enough ...
... spinal cord . In regard to certain so - called functional palsies : in diphtheritic paraly sis the irritability of the muscles is often diminished and sometimes destroyed ; in lead palsy it is generally lost , and , curiously enough ...
Common terms and phrases
According aconitine action acts alcohol alkaloid amount animals antipyretic antipyrin arrest arterial pressure asphyxia asserted atropine blood Calabar bean carbolic acid carbonic cardiac cause centres chloral chloroform chronic circulation cold convulsions death diastolic digitalis dilatation disease diuretic dogs drachm drug effect emetic employed ergot especially ether evidence experiments fatal fever frog galvanic given grains heart hypodermic increased inflammation influence ingestion injection intestinal irritation Journ kidneys Klin large doses lessened Méd medicine mercury minutes motor mucous membrane muscles muscular nerves nervous nitrite of amyl occurs officinal opium ounce oxide pain paralysis paralyzed patient peripheral Pharm physiological poisoning potassium probably produced Professor prussic acid pulse purging quinine rabbits reflex remedy respiration salicylic acid salt skin soluble solution sometimes spasm spinal cord stimulant stomach strychnine substance sulphate symptoms taste temperature Therap therapeutic tincture tion tissues urine vaso-motor veratrine violent vomiting
Popular passages
Page 8 - Looking at the revolutions and contradictions of the past — listening to the therapeutic Babel of the present — is it a wonder that men should take refuge in nihilism, and like the lotos-eaters dream that all alike is folly; that rest and quiet and calm are the only human fruition?
Page 549 - They are covered by an external brown membrane, and an inner reddish-yellow one, and are an inch and a half to two and a half inches in length, with a longitudinal groove. Internally, they are white, fleshy, and solid, and contain an acrid, bitter, milky juice. As found in the shops, they are in the dried state, sometimes whole, but...
Page 733 - Ten drops of turpentine every two hours during the day and every three hours during the night will in the majority of cases remove these threatening symptoms.
Page 693 - ... articles of food rich in phosphates, such as oat-meal, disagree ; where, from the character of the motions, there is a deficient or defective secretion of bile It is thus of service in cases of chalky stools or white fluid motions. I have also found it of service in many cases of green stools.
Page 9 - Niemeyer's assertion, that experiments made with medicaments upon the lower animals or upon healthy human beings have, as yet, been of no direct service to our means of treating disease, and that a continuation of such experiments gives no prospect of such service, it is certain that in these experiments is the only rational scientific groundwork for the treatment of disease. We must discover what influence a drug exerts when put into the body of a patient before we can use it rationally; and we...
Page 8 - Experience is said to be the mother of wisdom. Verily she has been in medicine rather a blind leader of the blind; and the history of medical progress is a history of men groping in the darkness, finding seeming gems of truth one after another, only in a few minutes to cast each back to the vast heap of forgotten baubles that in their day had also been mistaken for verities. In the past, there is scarcely a conceivable absurdity that men have not tested by experience and for a time found to be the...
Page 8 - What has clinical therapeutics established permanently and indisputably? Scarcely anything beyond the primary facts that quinia will " arrest an intermittent, that salts will purge, and that opium will quiet pain
Page 9 - Evidently, it is his especial province to find out what are the means at command, what the individual drugs in use do when put into a human system. It is seemingly self-evident that the physiological action of a remedy can never be made out by a study of its use in disease.
Page 495 - ... produce any very obvious symptoms. These drugs may perhaps neither stimulate nor depress, so far as can be perceived, any function of the body ; their action may be silent and imperceptible, their mode of influence may be unknown : but their therapeutic effects are among the most assured of clinical facts.