The Medical Age, Volume 4George S. Davis, 1886 - Medicine |
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Page 2
... tube , and generally known as the organ of Rosenmüller , may not sometimes form a unilocular tumor of morbid size ... tubes , due to the partial development of an ovum . CORNEIL and RANVIER , in speaking of * Diseases of Women . + On ...
... tube , and generally known as the organ of Rosenmüller , may not sometimes form a unilocular tumor of morbid size ... tubes , due to the partial development of an ovum . CORNEIL and RANVIER , in speaking of * Diseases of Women . + On ...
Page 3
... tubes removed from a girl aged 14 years , for epilepsy . Bi - manual ex- amination of the pelvic region revealed en ... tube . The pedicles in these cases are exceed- ingly long and narrow , and from their point of origin they would be ...
... tubes removed from a girl aged 14 years , for epilepsy . Bi - manual ex- amination of the pelvic region revealed en ... tube . The pedicles in these cases are exceed- ingly long and narrow , and from their point of origin they would be ...
Page 20
... tube , and renders the cov- ering of the ovary so thick and tense that the ovum cannot escape , or if it does get out , the fimbriated extremity of the tube is so agglutin- ated that it cannot grasp it . We have here a small , conical ...
... tube , and renders the cov- ering of the ovary so thick and tense that the ovum cannot escape , or if it does get out , the fimbriated extremity of the tube is so agglutin- ated that it cannot grasp it . We have here a small , conical ...
Page 36
... tubes , and the germs which developed speedily after exposure to the air and light . There are men in Paris mean enough to say that the church disliked his doctrines and ex- periments , and that she purchased his silence on spontaneous ...
... tubes , and the germs which developed speedily after exposure to the air and light . There are men in Paris mean enough to say that the church disliked his doctrines and ex- periments , and that she purchased his silence on spontaneous ...
Page 41
... tubes are pictured and described in his translation of LAENNEC . Definite treatment by immersion of patients in reservoirs of compressed or rarefied air was conducted from 1850 to 1857 by TABARIÉ , " 1 Read at meeting of Section of ...
... tubes are pictured and described in his translation of LAENNEC . Definite treatment by immersion of patients in reservoirs of compressed or rarefied air was conducted from 1850 to 1857 by TABARIÉ , " 1 Read at meeting of Section of ...
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abdomen abscess action antipyrine antiseptic application attack believe bladder blood body bromide carbolic acid catarrh cause cent cervix child cholera chronic clinical cocaine cold condition cure cysts Detroit diagnosis diet digestion dilatation diphtheria disease doctor doses drachm drug effect epilepsy ergot erysipelas experience fact favor fever fluid four give given glycerin gonorrhoea grains grammes hæmorrhage Hospital increased inflammation injection intestinal intubation iodide iodoform irritation jequirity liver matter Medical Journal medicine ment method milk months mucous membrane nerve nervous observed operation organs ounce ovarian ovary ovum pain paper patient pessary physician potassium practice practitioners present produced profession pulse quinine remedy removed reported rheumatism salicylate salicylic acid skin solution stomach suffering surgeon symptoms temperature therapeutic tion tissue tracheotomy treated treatment tube tumor ulcer urethra urine uterine uterus vomiting weeks woman
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Page 325 - Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania; assisted by Louis STARR, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Vol. I. Pathology and General Diseases. Vol. II. General Diseases (continued) and Diseases of the Digestive System.
Page 233 - SURGERY (THE INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF). A Systematic Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Surgery by Authors of various Nations.
Page 136 - Provost and Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania.
Page 253 - 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 137 - A MANUAL OF AUSCULTATION AND PERCUSSION; of the Physical Diagnosis of Diseases of the Lungs and Heart, and of Thoracic Aneurism.
Page 287 - ... the result which requires but a minimum of the digestive act. Such fluid can be flavored and drank as a nutritive beverage, specially acceptable in febrile conditions. Flavored with lemon, ginger, cloves or other flavoring agents to give variety— a matter far too much neglected in the treatment of the sick — it can be largely used. Or wine, either red wine as claret, or sherry, or port, can be added to it when a little stimulant is required, and brandy when a stronger stimulant is indicated....
Page 56 - It has long been known that in the vertebrate kingdom one sex bears rudiments of various accessory parts, appertaining to the reproductive system, which properly belong to the opposite sex ; and it has now been ascertained that at a very early embryonic period both sexes possess true male and female glands. Hence some remote progenitor of the whole vertebrate kingdom appears to have been hermaphrodite or androgynous.
Page 287 - The body-temperature is kept up by the combustion of grape sugar. Grape sugar is supplied from carbo-hydrates, either the insoluble starch, or the soluble sugar. Starch forms a great portion of our food and is converted into grape sugar within the body. Where the system is unequal to the digestion of starch, as in feeble digestion, or conditions of acute disease, then predigested starch must be furnished to the organism. Otherwise the system will perish of exhaustion, just as a fire dies out when...
Page 246 - Sanitary Convention, under the auspices of the Michigan State Board of Health, held its sessions June 1 and 2, 1886.
Page 60 - Fumigate with sulphur dioxide for twelve hours, burning three pounds of sulphur for every 1000 cubic feet of air space in the room ; then wash all surfaces with one of the above-mentioned disinfecting solutions, and afterward with soap and hot water; finally throw open doors and windows and ventilate freely.