Journal of Comparative Medicine and Surgery, Volume 7W.L. Hyde & Company, 1886 - Veterinary medicine |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid affected Anatomy animals anthrax appear bacilli Barsati become birds bitten blood body brain bronchial carnivora casein caseous cattle cause cavities cells cerebellum cerebral cetacea character color condition connection contagious diseases death decussation elephant especially evidence examination experiments fact fever fibres fluid frequently germs glanders glands horses human hydrophobia infection inoculation intestines irritation Journal lactometer latter lesions Liautard liver lungs lymph lymph glands mass material Medical medicine membrane ment method milk mucous nerve nervous nodules nucleus oblongata observations occur olivary olivary bodies olive organs paralysis Pasteur pathology patient pepsin phthisis pneumonia poison pons porpoise posterior present processes produced Prof pulmonary pyramid tract rabbits rabid dog rabies regard relation reported result specific spinal cord Spitzka substance surface symptoms tion tissue trapezium tubercle tubercular tuberculosis ulceration vein ventricle Veterinary College veterinary surgeons virus York
Popular passages
Page 420 - We have much pleasure in calling the attention of our readers to the volume produced by Dr.
Page 118 - And he took butter and milk and the calf which he had dressed, and set it before them; and he stood by them under the tree, and they did eat.
Page 118 - And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for thy food, for the food of thy household, and for the maintenance for thy maidens.
Page 421 - Students of the Department of Medicine and Surgery of the University of Michigan, on the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of his Doctorate.
Page 320 - ... cats. In the higher animals, monkeys, the operation on a young individual produces the same result as in a young dog, but, as I showed last year, an older animal, if kept under ordinary circumstances, will survive for six or seven weeks, dying at the end of that time of myxoedema.
Page 64 - It is a pale yellow, or yellowish-grey, opaque, unorganized substance, the form, consistence, and composition of which vary with the nature of the part in which it is formed, and the period at which it is examined.
Page 376 - ... the epidermic cells being an advanced stage of growth, in process towards desquamation, the inner layers the formative cells, as shown by the nuclei. Pathologically, this law is illustrated by cancer-cells, which, like the corpuscles of pus, take their rise from the preexisting cells and nuclei of the texture or organ in which the new growth originates.