Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences, Volume 1Charles Eucharist de Medicis Sajous F.A. Davis, 1889 - Medicine |
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Page 1
... TUBERCULOSIS . Etiology . - The bacillus tuberculosis , the one fixed fact in the pathology of the disease , is now universally regarded as the acknowledged centre about which all the phenomena of the disease must revolve . Thus , the ...
... TUBERCULOSIS . Etiology . - The bacillus tuberculosis , the one fixed fact in the pathology of the disease , is now universally regarded as the acknowledged centre about which all the phenomena of the disease must revolve . Thus , the ...
Page 2
... tuberculosis in some of its tissues , and that it may remain inactive for years or throughout life . Firket 7 criticises very ably the evidence in favor of the hereditary trans- mission of tubercular disease . Some observers ...
... tuberculosis in some of its tissues , and that it may remain inactive for years or throughout life . Firket 7 criticises very ably the evidence in favor of the hereditary trans- mission of tubercular disease . Some observers ...
Page 3
... tuberculosis may also traverse the placenta , but this presupposes the existence of bacilli in the blood of the mother . This brings us to the difficult question in all parasitic diseases : How and when does infection occur ? In anthrax ...
... tuberculosis may also traverse the placenta , but this presupposes the existence of bacilli in the blood of the mother . This brings us to the difficult question in all parasitic diseases : How and when does infection occur ? In anthrax ...
Page 4
... tuberculosis caused by some other microbe . Have we any evidence that new- born infants are already infected with tubercle ? Numerous observers , by inoculating with tubercles animals in young , have produced abortion or premature death ...
... tuberculosis caused by some other microbe . Have we any evidence that new- born infants are already infected with tubercle ? Numerous observers , by inoculating with tubercles animals in young , have produced abortion or premature death ...
Page 5
... tuberculosis , so that its growth is slow and languishing , and can remain in the latent state for a variable period ? Verneuil even goes so far as to admit that tuberculosis can exist throughout life in a parasitic form , to explain ...
... tuberculosis , so that its growth is slow and languishing , and can remain in the latent state for a variable period ? Verneuil even goes so far as to admit that tuberculosis can exist throughout life in a parasitic form , to explain ...
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abdominal abscess acid action acute albumen albuminuria anæmia animals antipyrin arterial attack autopsy bacillus bacteria bath bile blood Bright's disease bronchitis cardiac catarrh cause cavity cent centimetres cholera chronic condition cubic centimetres cyanosis cyst death degeneration diabetes diagnosis diarrhoea digestion dilatation diphtheria disease doses drachms dyspepsia dyspnoea effect endocarditis epidemic examination experiments favorable fermentation five fluid four frequently gangrene gastric glands grains grammes hæmorrhage heart hundred hypertrophy increased infection inflammation inhalation inoculation intestinal irritation kidney lactic lactic acid lesions liver lungs method micro-organisms microbes milk mucous membrane muscles nephritis normal observed occur organs ounces pain pancreas paralysis patient peritonitis phthisis pneumonia present produced PROF prognosis pulmonary pulse quantity regard renal reports showed sodium solution sputum stomach stools sugar symptoms temperature tion tissue treatment tubercle tubercle bacilli tubercular tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ulcer urine valves valvular vomiting
Popular passages
Page xiv - 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.
Page xiv - Essentials of Diseases of Children. By WILLIAM M. POWELL, MD, Attending Physician to the Mercer House for Invalid Women at Atlantic City, NJ ; late Physician to the Clinic for the Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Crown octavo, 222 pages. Cloth, $1.00; interleaved for notes, $1.25. [See Saunders...
Page 19 - ... from a few minutes to several hours, according to the condition of the patient, and the nature of the offending cause ; Junod observing, that the most prolonged derivations often proved the most effective.
Page 43 - the outside of a horse is the best thing for the inside of a man.
Page 9 - He was able to demonstrate the presence of tubercle bacilli in the milk or in the sediment, and with this milk or sediment he was able to produce tuberculosis both by inoculation and ingestion.
Page 72 - ... by reacting on infectious matter pass from a state of tension to a state of rest under new relations. The agency through which these changes almost universally become operative is the vapor of water. " When sulphur is burned in a...
Page 61 - This disease has no latent stages, and second and third attacks are due to reinfection. 7. One attack, as a rule, gives at least temporary immunity. 8. After the limited period of immunity has expired, the previous attack may act as a predisposing cause to other attacks, if it has left the mucous membrane of the throat in an irritated and inflamed condition. This is more likely to occur in scrofulous subjects. 9. Complications may occur from the entrance into the body of septic germs.
Page 72 - ... sulphur, and a heavy gas is the result, which tends to settle at the bottom of the chamber and to run out through the lower cracks. Any moisture present is at once seized by this rather inactive anhydride, first forming sulphurous acid, and then, by oxidation from the air, sulphuric acid.
Page 31 - As a remedial agent in typhoid and remittent fevers, it is unsurpassed, aborting them at the outset under favorable conditions, and greatly mitigating their severity and danger under circumstances less favorable.
Page 37 - The following method is a certain means of determining by which of these diseases the eruption is produced. If, upon stretching a portion of the skin the papule becomes im]>alpable to the touch, the eruption is caused by measles; if, on the contrary, the papule is still felt when the skin is drawn out the eruption is the result of small-pox. l...