Albany Medical Annals, Volume 21Medical Society of the County of Albany, 1900 - Medicine |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 63
Page 42
... believe , as with Kumol . I shudder when I think of the care of instruments for office - work a number of years ago . Even now we see cases of infection of the scrotum after tapping with a dirty trocar , or of abdominal wounds after ...
... believe , as with Kumol . I shudder when I think of the care of instruments for office - work a number of years ago . Even now we see cases of infection of the scrotum after tapping with a dirty trocar , or of abdominal wounds after ...
Page 62
... believe that follicular conjunctivitis becomes trachoma , but that it already is trachoma . From this standpoint he believes that regions said to be free from trachoma are becoming rare , and that places should be described as having ...
... believe that follicular conjunctivitis becomes trachoma , but that it already is trachoma . From this standpoint he believes that regions said to be free from trachoma are becoming rare , and that places should be described as having ...
Page 70
... believe that it was partly responsible for failure in my first case ; it did not prevent the pus from invading the larynx , and the scene was abruptly closed by an asphyxia which a generalized bronchitis had rendered already too ...
... believe that it was partly responsible for failure in my first case ; it did not prevent the pus from invading the larynx , and the scene was abruptly closed by an asphyxia which a generalized bronchitis had rendered already too ...
Page 115
... believe that the gonococci can live in a mucous membrane without causing an inflam- mation of the same . The grade of inflammation often varies , and a care- ful examination must often be made to detect it , but it can always be found ...
... believe that the gonococci can live in a mucous membrane without causing an inflam- mation of the same . The grade of inflammation often varies , and a care- ful examination must often be made to detect it , but it can always be found ...
Page 119
... believe uremia to be due to an excess of potassium salts . 2d . Those who believe it to be due to a decrease in the alkalinity of the blood . 3d . Those who believe uremia to be due to organic urinary poisons , i . e . , Bouchard's ...
... believe uremia to be due to an excess of potassium salts . 2d . Those who believe it to be due to a decrease in the alkalinity of the blood . 3d . Those who believe uremia to be due to organic urinary poisons , i . e . , Bouchard's ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abscess acid acute Albany Hospital Albany Medical College Alumni animals anisometropia antitoxin appear Assembly Bill Association attack autopsy bacilli blood Blumer Board carcinoma cause cells cent chronic clinical committee condition consumption cough culture death diagnosis diphtheria disease doses effect endocarditis epidemic epiglottis examination experience fact frequently gangrene gastric glaucoma gonococcus gonorrhoea gonorrhoeal hemorrhage hydrochloric acid increased infection inflammation inoculated insane intestinal lactic acid large number lesions lungs Medical Society medicine ment method milk months mucous membrane muscles nerve nervous normal nurses observed occurred operation organs pain pathological patient Philadelphia physician practice present President profession Professor pulse pylorus removed reported showed skin sputum sterilized stomach surgeon Surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tetanus tion tissue treatment tubercle tubercle bacilli tuberculin tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ulcer urethra urine Vander Veer vomiting weeks whooping cough writer York
Popular passages
Page 178 - Medical Record, New York. JACKSON'S DISEASES OF THE EYE. A Manual of Diseases of the Eye. By EDWARD JACKSON, AM, MD, Emeritus Professor of Diseases of the Eye, Philadelphia Polyclinic...
Page 649 - RCS (Hon.), Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, etc.
Page 583 - Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Chicago Post-Graduate Medical School. Author of "Bright's Disease and Allied Affections of the Kidneys;" also of "Diabetes : Its Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment.
Page 647 - The Student's Medical Dictionary. INCLUDING ALL THE WORDS AND PHRASES GENERALLY USED IN MEDICINE, WITH THEIR PROPER PRONUNCIATION AND DEFINITIONS, BASED ON RECENT MEDICAL LITERATURE. With...
Page 357 - From wandering on a foreign strand ? If such there breathe, go mark him well : For him no minstrel raptures swell ; High though his titles, proud his name, Boundless his wealth as wish can claim ; Despite those titles, power and pelf, The wretch, concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored and unsung.
Page 179 - Operative Surgery. By JOSEPH D. BRYANT, MD, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery, Operative and Clinical Surgery, University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College; Visiting Surgeon to Bellevue and St. Vincent's Hospitals ; Consulting Surgeon to the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled, Woman's Hospital, and Manhattan State Hospital...
Page 434 - Iron and Manganese. THE TONICS— Quinine and Strychnine. AND THE VITALIZING CONSTITUENT — Phosphorus; the whole combined in the form of a syrup with a slightly alkaline reaction. It differs in its effects from all analogous preparations, and it possesses the important properties of being pleasant to the taste, easily borne by the stomach, and harmless under prolonged use. NOTICE— CAUTION. The success of Fellows' Syrup of Hypophosphites has tempted certain persons to offer imitations of it for...
Page 473 - Many members of the medical profession are interested in the study of American Ethnology and Archaeology, and not a few have valuable collections of Indian relics and skeletons .from Indian graves. Those not directly interested in this study, are so circumstanced as to be aware of the hobbies of their neighbors and could doubtless furnish the address of collectors. I should be greatly obliged for information and for the loan of collections for the use of this department of the exposition.