Cincinnati Medical and Dental Journal, Volume 1M.A. Spencer, 1886 |
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Page 13
... solution of the chloride of zinc ( forty grains to an ounce ) . Two large drainage tubes were secured on each side of the stump , and brought out below the angle of the jaw , so as to secure perfect drainage by occupying the most ...
... solution of the chloride of zinc ( forty grains to an ounce ) . Two large drainage tubes were secured on each side of the stump , and brought out below the angle of the jaw , so as to secure perfect drainage by occupying the most ...
Page 16
... solution of the bacterium ter mo . The result was quite gratifying , the cough and expectora- tion diminished , the fever rapidly declined , the bodily weight in- creased , the bacillus of tubercle disappeared from the sputa , and at ...
... solution of the bacterium ter mo . The result was quite gratifying , the cough and expectora- tion diminished , the fever rapidly declined , the bodily weight in- creased , the bacillus of tubercle disappeared from the sputa , and at ...
Page 37
... solution of the hydrochlorate of cocaine thrown over the fauces , will , in a few minutes , render the pharynx perfectly indifferent to the presence of instruments . Patients with throats so irritable that they could not otherwise be ...
... solution of the hydrochlorate of cocaine thrown over the fauces , will , in a few minutes , render the pharynx perfectly indifferent to the presence of instruments . Patients with throats so irritable that they could not otherwise be ...
Page 38
... solution of boracic acid ; and a few drops of a four grain solution of eserine was instilled . The eye was now carefully dressed by a compress bandage , and the patient sent home . On the following day the dressing was removed , the ...
... solution of boracic acid ; and a few drops of a four grain solution of eserine was instilled . The eye was now carefully dressed by a compress bandage , and the patient sent home . On the following day the dressing was removed , the ...
Page 39
... solutions . An operation for the removal of the nucleus of the lens , accompanied by an artifi- cial pupil , will undoubtedly restore the normal acuity of vision , making allowance for the loss of the lens . SELECTIONS . BRITISH MEDICAL ...
... solutions . An operation for the removal of the nucleus of the lens , accompanied by an artifi- cial pupil , will undoubtedly restore the normal acuity of vision , making allowance for the loss of the lens . SELECTIONS . BRITISH MEDICAL ...
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acute alcohol amalgam filling antiseptic aphonia applied become carbolic acid catarrh cause cavity cent cervix chloroform chronic Cincinnati CINCINNATI Medical clinical cocaine cold Committee condition consanguineous cornea corundum cure Dental Journal dentist dentistry dilated disease doses drug effect examination extract fever frequently G. W. Smith give gold grains H. A. Smith Herbst hydrogen inflammation injection instrument iodoform irritation labor Lancet larynx Medical and Dental Medical College medicine membrane meningitis mercury method milk months mouth mucous mucous membrane nasal naso-pharynx nerve nervous Ohio operation organs oxide oxygen pain paper passed patient perineum peroxide pharynx physician plate poisoning posterior practice practitioner present profession pulp Pyorrhoea regard remedies removed result rheumatism rhinoscopy root rubber salicylates Society solution suffering surface surgeon symptoms teeth temperature tion tissue tooth treated treatment tumor ulcer uterus
Popular passages
Page 275 - By Louis STARR, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania ; Physician to the Children's Hospital.
Page 49 - General Meetings of the Congress, shall be promptly given in writing to the Secretary-General; and all papers presented and discussions held at the meetings of the Sections shall be promptly given in writing to the Secretaries of the proper Sections. No communication shall be received which has already been published, or read before a society. The Executive Committee, after the final adjournment of the Congress, shall direct the editing and the publication of its
Page 50 - Congress and the Officers of the Sections shall be nominated to the Congress at the opening of its first session. 14. The Executive Committee shall, at some convenient time before the meeting of the Congress, prepare a list of foreign Vice-Presidents of the Congress and foreign VicePresidents of the Sections, to be nominated to the Congress at the opening of its flist session. 15. There shall be a standing Committee on Finance, composed of one representative from each State and Territory, the District...
Page 322 - It exhaled the odor of spirit most distinctly, and its membranes and minute structures were vascular in the extreme. It looked as if it had been recently injected with vermilion.
Page 276 - THE STUDENT'S MANUAL OF VENEREAL DISEASES. Being a Concise Description of those Affections and of their Treatment.
Page 202 - During the war of the rebellion he was one of the first to respond to his country's call, and one of the last to leave its ranks.
Page 148 - ... retired from his editorial connection with the Journal of Cutaneous and Venereal Diseases. The Journal will be continued under the sole editorial charge of Dr. P. A. Morrow. We may remind our readers that this is the only publication in the English language devoted to Skin and Venereal Diseases, and during the three years of its existence it has won for itself a high reputation for scientific excellence as well as practical utility. In addition to presenting all that is new and valuable in these...
Page 307 - Consanguineous marriages which bring together persons having a disease or morbid tendency in common are dangerous to the offspring. Not, however, one whit more so than the marriage of any other two persons not related, yet having an equal amount of tendency to disease in common. Conditions present in both parents, good or bad, are simply augmented, and the result would have been the same were they not related. 11. Given a malformation or disease firmly established, we have a tendency to breed true....
Page 48 - Rules" were unanimously adopted : RULES. 1. The Congress shall consist of members of the regular profession of medicine, who shall have inscribed their names on the register and shall have taken out their tickets of admission; and of such other scientific men as the Executive Committee of the Congress may see fit to admit.
Page 49 - 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 Officers of each Section shall decide as to the acceptance of any communication offered to their Section, and shall fix the time of its presentation. No communication will be received which has been already published, or read before a Society.