The Australian Medical Journal, Volume 17Stillwell & Company, 1895 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 10
... surface , then waiting a few days before incising and evacuating . Probably , however , both patient and operator will prefer to get the whole operation over at once , unless it shall be proved that it is much more hazardous to do so ...
... surface , then waiting a few days before incising and evacuating . Probably , however , both patient and operator will prefer to get the whole operation over at once , unless it shall be proved that it is much more hazardous to do so ...
Page 11
... surfaces by a number of silkworm - gut sutures . That done , a fine needle trocar was passed in several directions . some clear watery fluid escaped , and presently , opaque fluid . As only opaque fluid had been seen on aspiration when ...
... surfaces by a number of silkworm - gut sutures . That done , a fine needle trocar was passed in several directions . some clear watery fluid escaped , and presently , opaque fluid . As only opaque fluid had been seen on aspiration when ...
Page 14
... surface is an important element in the successful treatment of hydatid tumours . If we agree that good reason is shown for attacking these tumours ( which reach high up and displace the lung ) through the chest and not through the ...
... surface is an important element in the successful treatment of hydatid tumours . If we agree that good reason is shown for attacking these tumours ( which reach high up and displace the lung ) through the chest and not through the ...
Page 34
... surface , and much that lies beneath , till almost everything , except man himself , has become " a drug in the market . " In looking from a medical aspect at this development of 34 JAN . 20 , 1895 Australian Medical Journal .
... surface , and much that lies beneath , till almost everything , except man himself , has become " a drug in the market . " In looking from a medical aspect at this development of 34 JAN . 20 , 1895 Australian Medical Journal .
Page 37
... surface was not free , but that it was intimately blended with the mesentery and flattened- out coils of small intestine , and the hand passed into the pelvis behind these . The adhesions were separated by the fingers until the lower ...
... surface was not free , but that it was intimately blended with the mesentery and flattened- out coils of small intestine , and the hand passed into the pelvis behind these . The adhesions were separated by the fingers until the lower ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abscess animals antitoxin appeared Association attack Australian Medical Journal B.S. Melb bacilli births blood bowels cause cavity cent child Children's Hospital chloroform chronic clinical Collins Street complete condition cyst deaths diagnosis diarrhoea diphtheria discharge disease doses Edin election examination fluid forms gauze glands growth hæmorrhage hernia hydatid inches incision increase inguinal inguinal canal inguinal hernia injection interesting intestinal iodoform kidney large number laryngeal ligature liver M.B. et Ch M.B. Melb Medical Society Melbourne Hospital membrane method milk months mortality naso-pharynx normal occurred opening operation organisms ovary pain passed pathological patient peritoneum peritonitis phthisis posterior present pulse rectum regard registered removed result right side Ryan serum showed skin slight suppuration surface surgeons surgery sutures Syme symptoms temperature throat tion tissue tracheotomy treatment tube tubercle tuberculosis tumour typhoid fever ulceration urine uterus vomiting weeks wound
Popular passages
Page 472 - 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 96 - AN AMERICAN TEXT-BOOK OF THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. By American Teachers. Edited by Louis STARR, MD, assisted by THOMPSON S. WESTCOTT, MD In one handsome royal-8vo volume of 1190 pages, profusely illustrated with wood-cuts, half-tone and colored plates.
Page 522 - Board of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Surgeons of London, England.
Page 11 - ... an opening during the rest of the life of the sufferer, ready at all times to give rise to a hernia, which may become strangulated and destroy the patient, unless relieved by an operation as yet unperformed, but to which attention is especially directed. A fact first pointed out by me early in the war in the Peninsula.
Page 221 - The experiments with the dried sputum are the most interesting, as they conform most closely to what would be met with in practice. The specimens were exposed for short periods only, two, three, and seven days, though control specimens were kept for long periods of time, in darkness and with very slight access of air. It was observed that, in all the specimens exposed in the dark, tuberculosis was the result even in free currents of air. The...
Page 472 - In this work, the author has endeavored to furnish a reliable guide for mothers anxious to inform themselves- with regard to the best way of caring for their children in sickness and in health.
Page 228 - Being the Morison Lectures delivered before the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in 1902 and 1903.
Page 232 - In all the above instances the augmented cancer mortality has coincided with progressive population, increased national wealth, and marked improvement in the general well-being.
Page 185 - ... transversely. Edebohls6 calls attention to the coexistence of movable kidney and appendicitis. After his attention as to the possibility of a relation between both had been aroused, he made it a rule to examine every patient for movable kidney, and for the presence or absence of a diseased appendix. He found that over 60 per cent, of patients with movable right kidney producing symptoms were at the same time the possessors of more or less diseased appendices vermiformes. The appendicitis varied...
Page 29 - It has been to diseases of the womb what the printing press is to civilization, what the compass is to the mariner, what steam is to navigation, what the telescope is to astronomy, and grander than the telescope because it was the work of one man.