Traumatic Infection |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 16
Page 18
... inoculated culture media from the peritoneal fluid in perforative peritonitis . Like others , I have obtained a growth of bacillus coli communis , not because it was the only microbe present , but because the media suited it best . In ...
... inoculated culture media from the peritoneal fluid in perforative peritonitis . Like others , I have obtained a growth of bacillus coli communis , not because it was the only microbe present , but because the media suited it best . In ...
Page 19
... Inoculated into broth , this exudation grew short bacilli , in pairs and short chains . Some of the chains might have consisted of streptococci , some of which were seen in the exudation . In the case ( Case 2 ) to which I have just ...
... Inoculated into broth , this exudation grew short bacilli , in pairs and short chains . Some of the chains might have consisted of streptococci , some of which were seen in the exudation . In the case ( Case 2 ) to which I have just ...
Page 23
... inoculation may have been the thumb ; and the abscess in the ovary , like those of the root of the tongue and of the arm , may have been an ordinary pyæmic abscess . Whichever way the ovarian abscess formed , it seems to have been the ...
... inoculation may have been the thumb ; and the abscess in the ovary , like those of the root of the tongue and of the arm , may have been an ordinary pyæmic abscess . Whichever way the ovarian abscess formed , it seems to have been the ...
Page 36
... inoculated from those contents . Barbacci has also tried to show that the bacillus coli communis is of less importance in causing perforative peritonitis than other bacteria which are present , but will not grow in cultures . Thus in ...
... inoculated from those contents . Barbacci has also tried to show that the bacillus coli communis is of less importance in causing perforative peritonitis than other bacteria which are present , but will not grow in cultures . Thus in ...
Page 38
... inoculated from the wound before opening the abscess remained sterile ; others inoculated from the pus grew the bacillus coli communis in pure culture . The pus was very thick and of a slightly greenish tinge , and occasional short ...
... inoculated from the wound before opening the abscess remained sterile ; others inoculated from the pus grew the bacillus coli communis in pure culture . The pus was very thick and of a slightly greenish tinge , and occasional short ...
Common terms and phrases
abdominal abscess acute albumen angina angina Ludovici axilla axillary bacilli bacillus coli communis bacillus septicus bacteria bacterial emboli bacterial invasion Bakteriol blood vessels cadaveric capillaries cause cells cellular tissue Centralbl clinical history clot Cloth cocci Coloured Plates contained Crown 8vo cultures Czenzynke's death described died diffuse septic peritonitis diplococci Edinburgh Royal Infirmary Edition engorged with blood Engravings erysipelas exudation fibrin fluid full-page Plates grew heart histological Hospital Illustrations inflamed inoculation intestines Jefferson Medical College kidneys Large 8vo large bacilli Lecturer liver lungs lymph paths lymphatic glands methyl blue micrococci morbid anatomy morphological nett Obstetrics operation organs pairs Parasitenk PATHOLOGY patient peritoneum peritonitis Physician pleura pneumonia pneumonic Price Professor pyæmia rabbits Royal College seems seen septicemia short bacilli short chains skin spleen stained stomach streptococci streptococcus pyogenes surface Surgeon Surgery temperature TRAUMATIC INFECTION tuberculous typhoid ulcer urine usual vasa vasorum vast numbers veins wound
Popular passages
Page 16 - BY THEOPHILUS PARVIN, MD, PROFESSOR OF OBSTETRICS AND DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE, PHILADELPHIA.
Page 14 - 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 11 - Assistant Physician to the Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, Brompton.
Page 13 - REPORTS from the LABORATORY of the ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, EDINBURGH. Edited by J. BATTY TUKE, MD, G. SIMS WOODHEAD, MD, and D. NOEL PATON, MD VOLUME FIRST, Svo, Cloth, pp.
Page 8 - MEMORANDA, CHEMICAL AND MICROSCOPICAL, FOR LABORATORY USE. By JW HOLLAND, MD, Professor of Medical Chemistry and Toxicology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged, oblong Crown Svo, Cloth, pp.
Page 12 - By CHARLES K. MILLS, MD, Professor of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous System in the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medicine ; Lecturer on Mental Diseases in the University of Pennsylvania.
Page 8 - Museum. With Lithographic Plates and Numerous Illustrations. 7th Ed. Cloth, $6.00 Landmarks. Medical and Surgical. 4th Edition. 8vo. Cloth, $1.25 HOLLAND. The Urine, the Common Poisons and the Milk. Memoranda, Chemical and Microscopical, for Laboratory Use. By JW HOLLAND, MD, Professor of Medical Chemistry and Toxicology in Jefferson Medical College, of Philadelphia.
Page 2 - DISEASES and INJURIES of the EAR: THEIR PREVENTION AND CURE. By CHARLES HENRY BURNETT, AM, MD, Aural Surgeon to the Presbyterian Hospital...
Page 2 - THE NATIONAL MEDICAL DICTIONARY. INCLUDING ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, ITALIAN, AND LATIN TECHNICAL TERMS USED IN MEDICINE AND THE COLLATERAL SCIENCES, AND A SERIES OF TABLES OF USEFUL DATA. By JOHN S. BILLINGS, AM, MD, LL.D., Harv. and Edin., DCL, Oxon., Member of the National Academy of Sciences, Surgeon, USA, &c.
Page 14 - Starr. Diseases of the Digestive Organs in Infancy and Childhood. With chapters on the Investigation of Disease, and on the General Management of Children. By Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the University of Pennsylvania.