A Text-book Upon the Pathogenic Bacteria... |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 83
Page 27
Joseph McFarland. 1704 , contained a description of a new and secret method of treating wounds , by which healing ... methods of study employed in Henle's time prevented him from demonstrating the accuracy of his belief . " It would ...
Joseph McFarland. 1704 , contained a description of a new and secret method of treating wounds , by which healing ... methods of study employed in Henle's time prevented him from demonstrating the accuracy of his belief . " It would ...
Page 75
... method is simple , it cannot be recommended , for if the specimen should need to be kept for a time . much ... METHODS OF OBSERVING BACTERIA . 75.
... method is simple , it cannot be recommended , for if the specimen should need to be kept for a time . much ... METHODS OF OBSERVING BACTERIA . 75.
Page 79
... method of cleaning them is to wipe them as clean as possible , seize them in fine - pointed forceps , pass them ... METHODS of obserVING BACTERIA . 79.
... method of cleaning them is to wipe them as clean as possible , seize them in fine - pointed forceps , pass them ... METHODS of obserVING BACTERIA . 79.
Page 81
... method employed is one which must be modified according to the kind of organism to be stained . Very much , too , depends upon the preservation of the tissue to be studied . As bacteria disintegrate rapidly in dead tissue , the specimen ...
... method employed is one which must be modified according to the kind of organism to be stained . Very much , too , depends upon the preservation of the tissue to be studied . As bacteria disintegrate rapidly in dead tissue , the specimen ...
Page 82
... Method of Staining Bacteria in Tissue.- Gram was the fortunate discoverer of a method of stain- ing bacteria in such a manner as to saturate them with an insoluble color . It will be seen at a glance what a marked improvement this is on ...
... Method of Staining Bacteria in Tissue.- Gram was the fortunate discoverer of a method of stain- ing bacteria in such a manner as to saturate them with an insoluble color . It will be seen at a glance what a marked improvement this is on ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid agar-agar alcohol alkaline animals anthrax antitoxin apparatus appear aqueous bacteria bacterium blood blood-serum body boiling bouillon c.cm Canada balsam cause cells cent cholera cholera spirillum Clinical cocci coccus colonies color containing cover-glass culture-media diphtheria diplococcus disease disinfection examination fever filter flagella Fränkel Fränkel and Pfeiffer gelatin gelatin plates gelatin puncture-cultures germs glanders glycerin Gram's method granular grow growth guinea-pigs immunity incubator injected inoculation intestinal Jefferson Medical College Kitasato Koch large number lepra lesions leucocytes liquefaction liquefied liquid Löffler Medical College Medicine medium methylene blue mice micro-organisms microscope minutes motile observed occurs organism oxygen Pasteur pathogenic peculiar Philadelphia pneumonia potato practitioner present produce puncture pure culture rabbits resembling saprophytes seems serum skin solution sometimes species Specimen Illustration spirilla spirillum spores sputum stain sterile substance suppuration surface Surgery susceptible temperature tetanus text-book tion tissues toxic toxin tube tubercle bacillus tuberculosis typhoid virulence washed
Popular passages
Page 362 - Treatment, including a large number of approved formulae. The recent advances made in the study of the bacterial origin of various diseases are fully described, as well as the bearing of the knowledge so gained upon prevention and cure. The subjects of Bacteriology as a whole and of Immunity are fully considered in a separate section.