Daniel's Texas Medical Journal, Volume 38Ferdinand Eugene Daniel 1922 - Medicine |
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Page 1
... close of the war they settled in some city , largely as special- ists in the profession . In doing this they merely followed the general ex- ample set by the soldier from the coun- try . Most of the war veterans are now located in the ...
... close of the war they settled in some city , largely as special- ists in the profession . In doing this they merely followed the general ex- ample set by the soldier from the coun- try . Most of the war veterans are now located in the ...
Page 3
... close to muffled drums that I can't waltz around and cheer when ' er the circus comes . I hope I'll never wither up nor yet so foundered be , that I won't gambol with a pup when it would play with me . I hope I'll not , while yet alive ...
... close to muffled drums that I can't waltz around and cheer when ' er the circus comes . I hope I'll never wither up nor yet so foundered be , that I won't gambol with a pup when it would play with me . I hope I'll not , while yet alive ...
Page 27
... close the bladder completely and depend on the catheter drain . The catheter is liable to plug with clots , is painful , difficult to replace , and may cause epididymitis . It is un- wise to pass a sound , as was the custom in the early ...
... close the bladder completely and depend on the catheter drain . The catheter is liable to plug with clots , is painful , difficult to replace , and may cause epididymitis . It is un- wise to pass a sound , as was the custom in the early ...
Page 33
... close the abdomen can be accomplished in a very short time . The question of -operating or waiting where no radial pulse can be felt must be left to the judgment of the operator . This is a question on which there is a difference of ...
... close the abdomen can be accomplished in a very short time . The question of -operating or waiting where no radial pulse can be felt must be left to the judgment of the operator . This is a question on which there is a difference of ...
Page 48
... close to Washington affairs . A German delegation recently arrived in this country to look over the ground and to suggest ways and means of again shackling the American dye and chem- ical industry . Almost immediately fol- lowing this ...
... close to Washington affairs . A German delegation recently arrived in this country to look over the ground and to suggest ways and means of again shackling the American dye and chem- ical industry . Almost immediately fol- lowing this ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid acute American anesthesia applicant Arsphenamine atropine attack bismuth bladder blood body cancer cause cells cent cervix chemical child chloroform chronic City clinical companies condition cure danger death diagnosis diarrhoea diet disease doctor dose drug effect examination exophthalmic experience fact fluid frequently give given glands goiter Hayfever heart heart murmur hemorrhage hernia hospital ical impairments important incision increase infection intestinal intravenous kidney laboratory lesions living lung Medical Director medical profession Medicine and Surgery ment method Mitral Mitral Regurgitation mortality muscle nerve normal nurse operation organ pain patient physical physician pneumonia Practical Medicine present pressure radium rectum removed renal reported scopolamin skin solution sphincter strychnin surgeon surgical symptoms syphilis Texas therapeutic tient tion tissue tive tonsil toxemia treat treatment tube tuberculosis tumor urine usually uterus vaccines York
Popular passages
Page 277 - Great wits are sure to madness near allied; And thin partitions do their bounds divide: Else why should he, with wealth and honour blest, Refuse his age the needful hours of rest?
Page 282 - Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us; The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in, The priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us, We bargain for the graves we lie in; At the devil's booth are all things sold, Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold...
Page 197 - With arms held straight, swing forward slowly, so that the weight of your body is gradually brought to bear upon the patient. The shoulder should be directly over the heel of the hand at the end of the forward swing. Do not bend your elbows. This operation should take about two seconds.
Page 441 - But a certain Samaritan as he journeyed came where he was, and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine, and set him on his own beast and brought him to an inn and took care of him.
Page 515 - Many feeble-minded persons eventually become permanent public charges. Many run the gauntlet of the police, the courts, the penal institution.s, the almshouses, the tramp shelters, the lying-in hospitals, and often many private societies and agencies, perhaps, eventually to turn up in the institutions for the feeble-minded. At any given time it is a matter of chance as to what state or local or private organization or institution is being perplexed by the problems they present.
Page 276 - 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 122 - ... unless it is found in the interest of the service to fill any vacancy by reinstatement, transfer, or promotion.
Page 206 - To collect, collate and disseminate information concerning the symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of cancer ; to investigate the conditions under which cancer is found and to compile statistics in regard thereto.
Page 120 - ... intestines, while in the feces and in the urine we find a great quantity of uric acid. These conditions secure the attainment of the desired effect, which is to expel from the organism all those agents, the accumulation and retention of which in the blood are the cause of rheumatism, neuralgia, grippe, gout, nervous headache, malaria, sciatica, lumbago, tonsillitis, heavy colds and excess of uric acid.
Page 196 - ... explosions, or mine fires, or in tunnels from automobile exhausts or from coal or oil burning locomotives. Carbon monoxide exerts its extremely dangerous action on the body by displacing oxygen from its combination with hemoglobin.