New England Medical Monthly and the Prescription, Volume 101891 - Medicine |
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Page xiv
... Reason for State Aid , A , 378 373 373 271 212 97 378 433 435 45 Ringworm , Obstetrical Practice , Ergot in , Parsley , The True Active Principles of , Paste that will Adhere to Anything , A , Pasteur Institute , Pasteurism , Peculiar ...
... Reason for State Aid , A , 378 373 373 271 212 97 378 433 435 45 Ringworm , Obstetrical Practice , Ergot in , Parsley , The True Active Principles of , Paste that will Adhere to Anything , A , Pasteur Institute , Pasteurism , Peculiar ...
Page 15
... reasons for opposing it . 1. That the operation meets the de- mand in but few cases . 2. When it is considered that a ... reason that it must of necessity fail to cure many cases . At the last meeting of the Mississippi Valley Medical ...
... reasons for opposing it . 1. That the operation meets the de- mand in but few cases . 2. When it is considered that a ... reason that it must of necessity fail to cure many cases . At the last meeting of the Mississippi Valley Medical ...
Page 23
... reason of leaks , as has been found to be the case in some epidemics , unless , indeed , the contamination had occurred in the chief main or at the reservoirs ; and as no cases were known so situated as to have caused such contamination ...
... reason of leaks , as has been found to be the case in some epidemics , unless , indeed , the contamination had occurred in the chief main or at the reservoirs ; and as no cases were known so situated as to have caused such contamination ...
Page 41
... reason of the sufficiency of its numbers , its prestage from a hundred years of good and honest work , its professional , political , and social power in the community and the common wealth , and its proud and honorable record , the ...
... reason of the sufficiency of its numbers , its prestage from a hundred years of good and honest work , its professional , political , and social power in the community and the common wealth , and its proud and honorable record , the ...
Page 45
... of ninety- eight degrees , and the warmth of the body can not be restored as quickly as it is lost . For this reason drunkards are more likely to suffer from exposure to cold than temperate NEW ENGLAND MEDICAL MONTHLY . 435.
... of ninety- eight degrees , and the warmth of the body can not be restored as quickly as it is lost . For this reason drunkards are more likely to suffer from exposure to cold than temperate NEW ENGLAND MEDICAL MONTHLY . 435.
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid action alcohol antipyretic antiseptic applied Aristol believe blood bone bowels carbolic acid catarrh cause cavity child chloral chloroform chronic clinical colotomy condition cure cyst death diphtheria disease doctor doses drachm drug effect ENGLAND MEDICAL MONTHLY ether experience fact faradic favorable fracture give given gluten glycerine grains heart Hospital Hydriodic Acid inebriety injection iodine iodoform irritation laparotomy less Lithia Water M. D. Reprinted matter Medical Journal medicine ment method milk months muscles nerve nervous night observed operation ovary pain paper patient peritoneum phenacetin phthisis physician practice practitioner present profession rectum remedy respiration skin sleep Society solution Somnal stomach stricture suffering sugar Sulpho-Calcine surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis taken temperature therapeutic tion tissue treated treatment tube tumor typhoid fever ulceration urethra urine uterine uterus weeks wound York
Popular passages
Page 80 - ... midway between the anterior superior spinous process of the ilium and the umbilicus.
Page 557 - We lately visited, in a large town, a boarding-school containing forty girls ; and we learnt, on close and accurate inquiry, that there was not one of the girls who had been at the school two years (and the majority had been as long), that was not more or less crooked...
Page 284 - Therapeutic Application. — The effects of somnal in producing natural sleep suggested its use in insomnia. The first case in which I used it was in a patient suffering with acute alcoholism, who had been under treatment for a fortnight in an institution where he had a free supply of liquor, and he came out rather worse than he went in. He was 39 years of age, very tremulous, and could not sleep, or if he dozed off would immediately waken up.
Page 138 - Probably no class of people lose more money through carelessly kept accounts and overlooked or neglected bills than physicians. Often detained at the bedside of the sick until late at night, or deprived of even a modicum of rest, it is with great difficulty that he spares the time or puts himself in condition^ to give the same care to his own financial interests that a merchant, a lawyer, or even a farmer devotes. It is then plainly apparent that a system of bookkeeping and accounts that, without...
Page 17 - Physiological Effects. — In Its action It resembles chloral in quickness of effect and naturalness of the sleep produced. No marked depressing influence was exerted upon the pulse or respiration rate, though It was noticed that the breathing became slower and the pulse slower and fuller as in natural repose. No disagreeable after-effects. The head was clear and the stomach was unaffected ; the patients generally had an appetite for breakfast.
Page 231 - CHARACTERS. — Somnal is a colorless liquid, resembling chloroform in its appearance and behavior when added to cold water, in which it forms globules and refuses to mix or dissolve. When shaken with water, the mixture is milky but quickly separates. It is soluble in hot water and alcoholic solutions, and dissolves resinous substances and fats. The odor is faint, not very penetrating or disagreeable, and resembles that of the spirits of nitrous ether, or recrystallized chloral.
Page 537 - This should be painted all over the bruised surface with a camel's hair pencil and allowed^ to dry on. A second or third coating being applied as soon as the first is dry. If done as soon as the injury is inflicted this treatment will invariably prevent the blackening of the bruised tissue.
Page 121 - I had under observation a young mother with a six-months old child, who presented a very anaemic condition. I had seen her but once since the delivery of her child, and anticipating that she would not be able to nourish it sufficiently and maintain her health, I had cautioned her in regard to the most appropriate diet. Notwithstanding every care had been used, she was finally compelled to seek medical aid, or go to bed. All that this patient required was something for the purpose of increasing the...
Page 567 - A factory and a workshop shall be kept in a cleanly state and free from effluvia arising from any drain, privy, or other nuisance. A factory or workshop shall not be so overcrowded while work is carried on therein as to be injurious to the health of the persons employed therein, and...
Page 322 - York, by the adoption of a constitution and by-laws, and the election of the following officers: President, G. Betton Massey, MD, Philadelphia; Vice-presidents, William James Morton, MD, and Augustin H.