Medico-chirurgical Transactions, Volume 261843 - Medicine |
From inside the book
Page 3
... pain and inconvenience and although the sore afterwards got well , a simi- lar ulceration on the leg again broke out in 1838 , when it was followed , in the same year , by a large chronic ulcer on the posterior part of the pharynx . It ...
... pain and inconvenience and although the sore afterwards got well , a simi- lar ulceration on the leg again broke out in 1838 , when it was followed , in the same year , by a large chronic ulcer on the posterior part of the pharynx . It ...
Page 4
... pains in the head , which occasionally became so severe , as even to oblige him to stop in the street , and to lean against the rails for support . These symptoms were also frequently accompanied by sickness and conside- rable ...
... pains in the head , which occasionally became so severe , as even to oblige him to stop in the street , and to lean against the rails for support . These symptoms were also frequently accompanied by sickness and conside- rable ...
Page 5
... pain at the time , he was nevertheless quite unable to control any of these vehement involuntary movements of the ... pains of the head , and in the nape of the neck . He soon afterwards became unable to walk steadily without support ...
... pain at the time , he was nevertheless quite unable to control any of these vehement involuntary movements of the ... pains of the head , and in the nape of the neck . He soon afterwards became unable to walk steadily without support ...
Page 6
... pain about the fourth cervical vertebra , increased in severity on merely bending his head backwards ; but this sensation felt however less painful when rotatory motion of the neck was only attempted . About the end of autumn in 1840 ...
... pain about the fourth cervical vertebra , increased in severity on merely bending his head backwards ; but this sensation felt however less painful when rotatory motion of the neck was only attempted . About the end of autumn in 1840 ...
Page 8
... pain , were always produced ; the patient's sense of feeling being , at the same time , so accurate , that he could distinctly tell the particular point of his body to which the attendant's finger was applied . The circulation still ...
... pain , were always produced ; the patient's sense of feeling being , at the same time , so accurate , that he could distinctly tell the particular point of his body to which the attendant's finger was applied . The circulation still ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid adherent adventitious structures appearance artery bands of adhesion basis of skull Bethlem Hospital blood Blood-vessels of brain bone brain and membranes brane cavitas tympani cavitas tympani.-The cerebral hemispheres character chest colour congested considerable contained cough cranium cysts disease dissections dura mater effusion Eustachian tube examination external face fatty fenestra fluid globules growth head healthy hernia hydrocele incus infiltration of pia inflammation insane jaws kidney left lung lining membrane lobe lunatics lymph Male Blood-vessels matter maxillary meatus externus membrana tympani microscope mucous membrane mucus nucleated cells numerous observed old adhesions opaque pain patient peritoneum Physician pia mater pleura Pneumonia portion posterior present quantity rickets Right ear right lung sion slight soft stapes substance surface Surgeon symptoms teeth thick thickened tion tissue trachea tubercles tumour turgid tympanic cavity tympanum ulceration upper urate of ammonia uric acid urine vascular Viscera whilst
Popular passages
Page xvii - MDFRS &c. Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Physician Extraordinary to the Queen, and Physician in Ordinary to His Royal Highness Prince Albert.
Page xxviii - Hospital; 39, Bedford-place. 1829 Robert Willis, MD, 25, Dover-street. 1831 *WJ Wilson, Esq., Surgeon to the Manchester Infirmary. 1816 *Sir Isaac Wilson, MD, FRSL and ED., Domestic Physician to the Duchess of Kent ; Fareham. 1835 John Wilson, MD, Physician to the Middlesex Hospital ; 51, Oxford
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Page xxiv - Wellington-street, Strand. 1821 Charles Skene, MD, Professor of Anatomy and Surgery; Marischal College, Aberdeen. 1827 George Skene, Esq., Bedford. 1812 Joseph Skey, MD, Inspector- General of Hospitals. 1824 Frederick C. Skey, Esq., FRS, Assistant Surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital; Surgeon...
Page xvii - MD, Professor of the Practice of Physic in the University of Edinburgh. HEAT. By TS TRAILL, MD, Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in the University of Edinburgh. HELMINTHOLOGY. By JAMES WILSON, FRSE HEMP. By TC ARCHER, Author of "Popular Economic Botany,
Page 373 - ... for breath. It was impossible fairly to compare the motion to anything else. They evidently possessed the power of changing their form; they would at one time materially elongate, and at another time shorten their bodies. In their vigorous state their movements were very similar to that of a common tadpole. In the fluid of this case there were likewise a few blood globules, transparent cysts, and small granular bodies; also portions of epithelium, or what very much resembled it. The 3rd case...
Page 223 - Secondly, what connexion subsists betwixt the seminiferous tubes and their cysts. Thirdly, whether or not dilatation of parts of the epididymis or vas deferens, obstruction or otherwise, may not, in some instances, give rise to these collections. If so, this being a pouch lined by mucous membrane, we should have an easy solution of the difficulty regarding a radical cure, not following injection as in the serous cyst. The microscopic examination of the lining membrane of a recent cyst would easily...
Page xi - Cavendish-square. 1827 Sir James Clark, Bart., MD, FRS, Physician to the Queen, Physician in Ordinary to His Royal Highness Prince Albert, and Consulting Physician to their Majesties the King and Queen of the Belgians; Lower Brook-street. 1839 F. Le Gros Clark, Esq., Lecturer on Anatomy and Physiology at St. Thomas's Hospital; 3, Baker-street, Portmansquare.
Page 290 - He had placed himself in the prone position, with his sternum resting on a chair, and his head and neck inclined downwards, and, having done so, he immediately had a distinct perception of a loose body slipping forward along the trachea. A violent convulsive cough ensued. On resuming the erect posture, he again had the sensation of a loose body moving in the trachea, but in the opposite direction, that is, towards the chest.