The American Medical Intelligencer: A Concentrated Record of Medical Science and Literature, Volume 4Robley Dunglinson J.J. Haswell, 1841 - Medicine |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 93
Page 14
... profession at large in this city . Resolved , That we deplore the loss of a physician , whose long career in the practice of his art , has been distinguished by the most brilliant success , accompanied by a modesty , and ingenuousness ...
... profession at large in this city . Resolved , That we deplore the loss of a physician , whose long career in the practice of his art , has been distinguished by the most brilliant success , accompanied by a modesty , and ingenuousness ...
Page 15
... profession , but to the community at large , and above all to ourselves , who have been instructed by his precepts , and fos- tered by his kindness . Resolved , That an intimacy of many years continuance , has tended more and more to ...
... profession , but to the community at large , and above all to ourselves , who have been instructed by his precepts , and fos- tered by his kindness . Resolved , That an intimacy of many years continuance , has tended more and more to ...
Page 17
... profession may not have paid any atten- tion . to it . Some , from theory only , never having made trial of inhaling , or even witnessed its effects , condemn it , as a hurtful irritant to the lungs . Some , on the other hand , also ...
... profession may not have paid any atten- tion . to it . Some , from theory only , never having made trial of inhaling , or even witnessed its effects , condemn it , as a hurtful irritant to the lungs . Some , on the other hand , also ...
Page 18
... profession who , having witnessed very un- toward effects from the internal administration of iodine , or occasionally , even from its excessive employment externally , dread its use even in the way of inhalation ; and , as I now and ...
... profession who , having witnessed very un- toward effects from the internal administration of iodine , or occasionally , even from its excessive employment externally , dread its use even in the way of inhalation ; and , as I now and ...
Page 29
... profession to which we belong is elevated and noble ; how much re- sponsibility rests upon its members not to sully its fair banner ; yet how often have we to deplore the obliquities of some of them . Nor is this sur- prising . The ...
... profession to which we belong is elevated and noble ; how much re- sponsibility rests upon its members not to sully its fair banner ; yet how often have we to deplore the obliquities of some of them . Nor is this sur- prising . The ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen abscess acute affected albumen AMERICAN MEDICAL INTELLIGENCER anasarca anatomy animal aorta appearance applied asphyxia attended bladder blood body bone bowels brain Bright's disease calomel cartilage cause cavity chest child chronic colour commenced conjunctiva consequence contained cure death discharge disease doses dropsy dyspnoea effusion examination existence experiments external favour fever fibrine fluid frequently heart Hospital inches increased inflammation insane intestines iodine irritation Jefferson Medical College kidneys labour larynx lectures liver lungs matter medicine membrane months morbid mucous mucous membrane muscles muscular natural nerves observed occurred operation opinion organs pain patient pericardium Philadelphia physician placenta portion practice practitioners present produced profession Professor pulmonary artery pulse quantity Rayer remarkable remedy respiration result side skin sound strabismus substance surface surgeon Surgery symptoms synovial synovial membrane tion tissue treatment tumour ulceration urine uterus valves vascular ventricle vessels wound
Popular passages
Page 15 - Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be presented to the family of the deceased and published in the papers of the city.
Page 100 - In the beginning," he observes, (Medical Works, Dublin, 1767, p. 332,) " as it flowed out of the orifice of the wound, it might be seen to run in different shades of light and dark streaks. When the malady was increased, it ran thin, and seemingly very black ; and after standing some time in the porringer, turned thick, of a dark muddy colour, the surface in many places of a greenish hue, without any regular separation of its parts. In the third degree of the disease it came out as black as ink ;...
Page 11 - Agglutinins begin to appear in the blood serum about the end of the first, or the beginning of the second, week of the disease, with low titers of 1:20 to 1:40.
Page 43 - Three for one year, three for two years, and three for three years, and members shall be eligible for reappointment.
Page 43 - Superintendent, who shall be a skillful physician and surgeon, subject to removal or re-election no oftener than in periods of ten years, except by infidelity to the trust reposed in him, or for incompetency.
Page 40 - ELEMENTS OF PHYSICS; OR, NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, GENERAL AND MEDICAL. WRITTEN FOR UNIVERSAL USE, IN PLAIN, OR NON-TECHNICAL LANGUAGE. BY...
Page 117 - ... drugs, of which they know little, into a body, of which they know less...
Page 262 - We may further deduce, from the facts which have been detailed, that the spinal marrow, and not the cerebrum, is the special source of the power in the nerves of exciting muscular contraction, and of the irritability of the muscular fibre ; that the cerebrum is, on the contrary, the exhauster, through its acts of volition, of the muscular irritability.
Page 359 - But no form of strait-waistcoat, no hand-straps, no leg-locks, nor any contrivance confining the trunk or limbs, or any of the muscles, is now in use. The coercion chairs, about forty in number, have been altogether removed from the wards; no chair of this kind has been used for the purpose of restraint since the middle of August.
Page 306 - Whenever an unskillful practitioner in administering medicine or using the puncturing needle, proceeds contrary to the established forms, and thereby causes the death of a patient, the magistrate shall call in other practitioners to examine the medicine or the wound, and if it...