The American Medical Journal, Volume 251897 |
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Page 6
... Never use strong mineral acids in combination with other agents , unless you know exactly what reaction will ensue . They decom- pose salts of the weaker acids and form ethers with Alcohol . Never combine Free Acids with Hydrates or ...
... Never use strong mineral acids in combination with other agents , unless you know exactly what reaction will ensue . They decom- pose salts of the weaker acids and form ethers with Alcohol . Never combine Free Acids with Hydrates or ...
Page 7
... never be associated with any organic substances ; it is decomposed easily by a slight elevation of temperature , giving off its Oxygen to the organic matter , which is made up of Carbon , Hydrogen , Oxygen , and sometimes Nitrogen , and ...
... never be associated with any organic substances ; it is decomposed easily by a slight elevation of temperature , giving off its Oxygen to the organic matter , which is made up of Carbon , Hydrogen , Oxygen , and sometimes Nitrogen , and ...
Page 15
... never used tobacco ; there were twenty - two men who had used it slightly , at rare intervals , of whom six begun the practice in the last term of the Senior year ; there were seventy who used it regularly . " The growth of the men in ...
... never used tobacco ; there were twenty - two men who had used it slightly , at rare intervals , of whom six begun the practice in the last term of the Senior year ; there were seventy who used it regularly . " The growth of the men in ...
Page 21
... never be employed for tobacco . The children of this decade will be the young men and women of the next , and every consideration worthy of our manliness and womanly virtues and humanity dictates that we should train them aright , and ...
... never be employed for tobacco . The children of this decade will be the young men and women of the next , and every consideration worthy of our manliness and womanly virtues and humanity dictates that we should train them aright , and ...
Page 23
... never come when one man , or set of men , will be compelled to bow to the dictum of another . Those glorious old days of bar- barism and savagery are gone , and gone forever . There is no system of medicine perfect . Why not then lay ...
... never come when one man , or set of men , will be compelled to bow to the dictum of another . Those glorious old days of bar- barism and savagery are gone , and gone forever . There is no system of medicine perfect . Why not then lay ...
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Common terms and phrases
60 drops action Alcohol Allopathic antiseptic antitoxine applied bladder blood Board of Health body bowels canal Carbolic Acid catarrh cause cent chancroid Chloroform chronic Collinsonia color Common Name condition cough cure curette diaphoretic diluted diphtheria diploma disease diuretic doctor Doses.-Fluid extract drachms dressing drug Eclectic Medical Society effects examination fever flowers Fluid extract frequently germ give glands grains heart hemorrhage Homœopathic Hydrochloric Acid indicated inflammation injection irritation kidneys large doses liver Medical College Missouri mucous membranes Natural nerve nervous system operation organs ounces P.M.-Temperature pain patient perennial plant physician poison practice produce profession Quinine rectum remedy removed root salt skin small doses soluble solution specific medicine sponges stimulant stomach surgical symptoms syphilis teaspoonful teaspoonful every hour temperature therapeutic Tincture tion tissue tongue tonic treatment typhoid typhoid fever ulcers urine Used.-The Usual Prescription.-R uterine uterus Veratrum Viride wound
Popular passages
Page 143 - TWENTIETH CENTURY PRACTICE. An International Encyclopedia of Modern Medical Science. By Leading Authorities of Europe and America. Edited by THOMAS L. STEDMAN, MD, New York City. In twenty volumes. Volume I — Diseases of the Uropoietic System.
Page 572 - LlSTERINE is to make and maintain surgical cleanliness in the antiseptic and prophylactic treatment and care of all parts of the human body.
Page 577 - Antikamnia is an American preparation that has come into extensive use as an analgetic and antipyretic. It is a white, crystalline, odorless powder, having a slightly aromatic taste, soluble in hot water, almost insoluble in cold water, but more fully soluble in alcohol. ****** "As an antipyretic it acts rather more slowly than antipyrine or acetanilide, but efficiently, and it has the advantage of being free, or almost free from any depressing effect on the heart. Some observers even think that...
Page 575 - BLOOD CORPUSCLES filling the field, in all their integrity, fullness, and energy, ready for direct transfusion into the system by any and every mode of access known to medical and surgical practice; alimentary, rectal, hypodermical, or topical. In short, it is now an established fact, that if Nature fails to make good blood, we can introduce it. Nothing of disease, so Micro-photographed far' has seemed to stand before it.
Page 78 - ... escape of a large proportion of the contents of the bowel, operative procedure for the closure of the opening should be speedily undertaken. The histories of three cases, successfully treated by surgical measures were cited. In two instances the patients were inmates of the Hartford (Connecticut) Hospital, and were operated upon by Dr. Wiggin, by reason of an invitation which was extended to him by the medical board of that institution, after several previous unsuccessful efforts to close the...
Page 567 - AN EPITOME OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE. By Roswell Park, AM, MD, Professor of Surgery in the Medical Department of the University of Buffalo, etc.