Merck's Archives of Materia Medica and Drug Therapy, Volume 3Merck & Company, 1901 - Chemotherapy |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 4
... usually administer 4 grn . of morphine sulphate combined with1 / 120 grn . of atropine sulphate . Some physicians give the atro- pine as high as 1/40 or even 1/30 of a grain , but I have never employed such high doses and do not ...
... usually administer 4 grn . of morphine sulphate combined with1 / 120 grn . of atropine sulphate . Some physicians give the atro- pine as high as 1/40 or even 1/30 of a grain , but I have never employed such high doses and do not ...
Page 21
... usually results from from increased amounts of the ordinary analgesics , and is worthy of extended use . REPORT ON STYPTICIN LED by the many excellent reports re- garding the hemostatic power of stypticin , Prof. H. Walther , ' of ...
... usually results from from increased amounts of the ordinary analgesics , and is worthy of extended use . REPORT ON STYPTICIN LED by the many excellent reports re- garding the hemostatic power of stypticin , Prof. H. Walther , ' of ...
Page 26
... usually efficient ; where these fail , potassium tellurate at night , in 1⁄2- grn . doses , may prove effective . For hem- optysis , the author insists on rest and use of opium or morphine , with iced com- presses to the chest . For ...
... usually efficient ; where these fail , potassium tellurate at night , in 1⁄2- grn . doses , may prove effective . For hem- optysis , the author insists on rest and use of opium or morphine , with iced com- presses to the chest . For ...
Page 28
... usually be taken for long periods without any untoward effects , though oc- casionally it causes vesical tenesmus . These drugs , the author says in conclusion , if combined with plenty of fresh air and an abundant diet - which should ...
... usually be taken for long periods without any untoward effects , though oc- casionally it causes vesical tenesmus . These drugs , the author says in conclusion , if combined with plenty of fresh air and an abundant diet - which should ...
Page 49
... Usually benign , epistaxis sometimes assumes the formidable rôle of announcer of the hemorrhagic form of ty- phoid . It is much more frequent in chil- dren ; this seems to show that scratching of the nose may have something to do with ...
... Usually benign , epistaxis sometimes assumes the formidable rôle of announcer of the hemorrhagic form of ty- phoid . It is much more frequent in chil- dren ; this seems to show that scratching of the nose may have something to do with ...
Common terms and phrases
2½ dr acetanilid acid action acute administered alcohol antipyretic antiseptic applied asthma atropine Bismuth blood bowels bromides calomel camphor capsule carbonate catarrh cause cent chloral chloride chronic cocaine codeine condition cough creosote cure daily diarrhea diet digestion digitalis digitoxin dionin disease drops drug effect fever formaldehyde gastric gelatin give given gland glycerin guaiacol heart hemorrhage Hydrochlorate hypodermically ichthyol increased injections intestinal iodide iodine iodipin iodoform irritation Jour kidneys large doses medicine ment menthol MERCK'S ARCHIVES mercury method methylene blue milk mixture morphine mucous nervous ointment opium orexine pain patient physician pneumonia poisoning potassium powder produce pulse quinine relieve remedy salicylate salicylic acid salt skin small doses sodium Sodium Bicarbonate solution stimulant stomach strychnine sulphate sulphur symptoms Syrup teaspoonful temperature therapeutic therapy thiocol tient Tinct tincture tion tissues toxic treated treatment tuberculosis typhoid ulcers urine vomiting
Popular passages
Page 82 - The golden age of English oratory, which extends over the last quarter of the eighteenth and the first quarter of the nineteenth centuries, produced no speaker, either in Parliament or at the Bar, superior in persuasive force and artistic finish to Thomas Lord Erskine.
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Page 120 - This arrangement has a two-fold advantage. To the physician who uses the entire book, it offers an increased amount of matter in the most convenient form for easy consultation, and without any increase in price ; while...
Page 452 - 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 372 - Lieutenant-Colonel of United States Volunteers and Chief of the operating-staff with the Army in the field during the Spanish-American War. Third Edition. Thoroughly revised with 230 Wood-engravings, Half-tones, and colored Illustrations.
Page 411 - In keeping with the above expressed feeling, a cordial invitation is herewith extended to those members of the profession who have the inclination and opportunity to investigate this method of treating phthisis, and to whom a reprint on the subject, with full information and blanks to report cases, will be cheerfully sent on application. THOMAS J.
Page 411 - ... that treatment and in introducing it to the profession of this country. That research was based on the conviction that no remedy can be called truly successful until it has passed the exacting crucible of clinical experience, and it is now proposed to apply the same ordeal to the...
Page 330 - Don't think every systolic murmur at the apex indicates mitral regurgitation ; every systolic murmur at the aortic interspace, aortic stenosis. The former may be trivial ; the latter may be due to atheroma of the arch of the aorta. Don't say every sudden death is due to heart disease.
Page 75 - If the case to be mentally treated is consumption, take up the leading points included (according to belief) in this disease. Show that it is not inherited ; that inflammation, tubercles, hemorrhage, and decomposition are beliefs, images of mortal thought, superimposed upon the body; that they are not the truth of man ; that they should be treated as error, and put out of thought. Then these ills will disappear.
Page 314 - Thirty-five cases are reported in tabulated form, showing that the usual effect of the aqueous extract of the suprarenal gland was obtained. A few operative cases bled freely, but in every instance the hemorrhage was promptly checked by a second application of adrenalin. The adrenalin was used not only as a hemostatic, but for the relief of nasal congestion, as a diagnostic aid, and for the continuous treatment of acute inflammatory affections of the accessory sinuses. The author arrives at the following...