The Medical Summary: A Monthly Journal of Practical Medicine, New Preparations, Volume 36R. H. Andrews 1915 - Medicine Edited by R.H. Andrews. |
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Page 2
... acute disease , the di- gestion and assimilation of other food than water and fresh air is simply impossible . Hence food is ingested into the stomach for pure and simple putrescence , and instead of ' keeping up the strength ' it keeps ...
... acute disease , the di- gestion and assimilation of other food than water and fresh air is simply impossible . Hence food is ingested into the stomach for pure and simple putrescence , and instead of ' keeping up the strength ' it keeps ...
Page 3
... acute infectious diseases . The warmth and moisture of the mouth , with the tend- ency of its remote recesses to catch and hold detritus of all sorts , make it a most fertile breeding ground for organisms . What is the remedy ? Teach ...
... acute infectious diseases . The warmth and moisture of the mouth , with the tend- ency of its remote recesses to catch and hold detritus of all sorts , make it a most fertile breeding ground for organisms . What is the remedy ? Teach ...
Page 5
... acute cases regardless of the indications as noted by disease expressions . The laity , too , go armed with a bottle of old Sampson , and take it and give it for a cause and for want of a cause ; and very strange they are scarcely ever ...
... acute cases regardless of the indications as noted by disease expressions . The laity , too , go armed with a bottle of old Sampson , and take it and give it for a cause and for want of a cause ; and very strange they are scarcely ever ...
Page 8
... acute diseases where medical treatment is the prime factor , — this very hospital , and let us say it openly , is but the portal to the grave for the poor consumptive , who , surrounded by such an anti - hygienic atmosphere as prevails ...
... acute diseases where medical treatment is the prime factor , — this very hospital , and let us say it openly , is but the portal to the grave for the poor consumptive , who , surrounded by such an anti - hygienic atmosphere as prevails ...
Page 9
... acute in- fections has required a making over of the text - books , and has had much to do with the placing of internal medicine on a more scientific basis . It has taught the doctor that he must have recourse to the labora- tory in the ...
... acute in- fections has required a making over of the text - books , and has had much to do with the placing of internal medicine on a more scientific basis . It has taught the doctor that he must have recourse to the labora- tory in the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid acute agents alcohol antiseptic applied attack believe better blood body bowel Bright's disease calcium calomel catarrh cause cells cent chloroform chronic clinical constipation cough cure D. L. FIELD diagnosis diet digestion diphtheria disease doctor doses drug Editor Medical Summary effect experience fact fever gelsemium give given glycerin gonorrhea grains headache Hospital hypodermic infection iodine irritation Jeffersonville Journal kidneys lobelia malaria matter medi medicine ment method milk morphine nervous never operation organs ounces pain patient pellagra phylacogen physician pneumonia poison practice practitioner present Price profession pulse quinine remedy rheumatism salts scopolamine sick skin sodium solution stomach suffering symptoms tablets temperature therapeutic thing throat tincture tion tissue to-day tonsils toxins treat treatment trouble tuberculosis Twilight Sleep typhoid typhoid fever urine usually veratrine
Popular passages
Page 20 - Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased ; Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow ; Raze out the written troubles of the brain ; And, with some sweet oblivious antidote, Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon the heart ? Doct.
Page 21 - Is fall'n into the sear, the yellow leaf ; And that which should accompany old age, As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends, I must not look to have ; but, in their stead, Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath, Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.
Page iv - DOSAGE: The adult dose of the preparation is one teaspoonful. repeated every two hours or at longer intervals, according to the requirements of ? the individual case. For Children of tenor more years. from one-quarter to one-half teaspoonful. For children of three or more years.from five to ten drops. FOR SAMPLES AND LITERATURE ADDRESS: MARTIN H SMITH CO., New YORK.
Page 21 - I have lived long enough: my way of life Is fallen into the sear, the yellow leaf...
Page 272 - ... one body giving any quantity of motion to another, is said to lose so much of its own. The sloth is by no means a small animal, and yet it can travel only fifty paces in a day ; a worm crawls only five inches in fifty seconds ; but a lady-bird can fly twenty million times its own length in less than an hour.
Page 277 - The consumptive, whose traits no professional acumen is required to recognize, frequents our crowded thoroughfares, sits beside us in unventilated street cars, and at the hotel table, occupies Pullman sleeping berths, and shares the steamship state-room, wholly unrestrained and innocently ignorant that he or she may be sowing the seeds of disease among delicate women and children. Any one may verify this who uses his eyes for the purpose along the railway and coastwise steamer routes to our invalid...
Page 350 - The Cancer Problem. By WILLIAM SEAMAN" BAINBRIDGE, AM, Sc.D., MD, Professor of Surgery, New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital; Surgeon and Secretary of Committee of Scientific Research, New York Skin and Cancer Hospital ; Consulting Surgeon.
Page 185 - Mothersf made it a merit, and a part of their religion, to view this barbarous spectacle with dry eyes, and without so much as a groan ; and if a tear or a sigh stole from them, the sacrifice was less acceptable to the deity, and all the effects of it were entirely lost.
Page 126 - Treatment, by Louis Faugeres Bishop, AM, MD, Clinical Professor of Heart and Circulatory Diseases, Fordham University, School of Medicine, New York City; Physician to the Lincoln Hospital...
Page 313 - ... the rupture of the membranes and the birth of the child was as follows :— Under 1 hour in 136 cases.