The Medical Summary: A Monthly Journal of Practical Medicine, New Preparations, Volume 31R. H. Andrews 1909 - Medicine Edited by R.H. Andrews. |
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Page 10
... effect except to regulate the ac- tion of the heart . Both physicians and myself had about concluded that it was a case of ascites , and that tapping would have to be done as a dernier resort . I said to the doctors that I had derived ...
... effect except to regulate the ac- tion of the heart . Both physicians and myself had about concluded that it was a case of ascites , and that tapping would have to be done as a dernier resort . I said to the doctors that I had derived ...
Page 12
... effect , for who has not seen the anxious expression on the face of the sufferer who , with good reason , fears that all may be over before the mes- senger returns from the pharmacy . In case both the physician and his prescrip- tion ...
... effect , for who has not seen the anxious expression on the face of the sufferer who , with good reason , fears that all may be over before the mes- senger returns from the pharmacy . In case both the physician and his prescrip- tion ...
Page 26
... effects of the two are closely analogous , both being applicable in the whole line of paretic maladies , tor- pidity , and atony of the whole body or of any special member or organ ... effect is evident . Those who 26 THE MEDICAL SUMMARY .
... effects of the two are closely analogous , both being applicable in the whole line of paretic maladies , tor- pidity , and atony of the whole body or of any special member or organ ... effect is evident . Those who 26 THE MEDICAL SUMMARY .
Page 27
... effect is evident . Those who employ this method of dosage soon learn that comparatively feeble doses often suffice to restore normal equilibrium and the control of the nerve centers , and apparently serious pertubations subside ...
... effect is evident . Those who employ this method of dosage soon learn that comparatively feeble doses often suffice to restore normal equilibrium and the control of the nerve centers , and apparently serious pertubations subside ...
Page 28
... effect thorough elimination . Free catharsis must be employed , as the con- stant swallowing of mucus coats the stom- ach over , and more or less re - absorption occurs , with gastric disorders . Atropine and veratrine may be given to ...
... effect thorough elimination . Free catharsis must be employed , as the con- stant swallowing of mucus coats the stom- ach over , and more or less re - absorption occurs , with gastric disorders . Atropine and veratrine may be given to ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acetanilid aconite aconitine acute ANTIKAMNIA antiseptic applied atropine bath believe better bismuth blood bowels brucine called calomel carbolic acid cause cavity cent chloroform cholera chronic clinical codeine cold condition cough cure curette danger death diagnosis diarrhea digestion disease doctor drug dysmenorrhoea eczema Editor Medical Summary effect employed fluid fractures give given glycerin grains heart hemorrhage hydrophobia hypnotism hypodermic indicated infection intestinal irritation journals medicine ment method milk morphine nerve nervous never normal organs ounce pain patella patient perforation Phenol Phenol Sodique Philadelphia physician pneumonia podophyllin practice practitioner present profession pruritus remedy removed rheumatism salts sick skin small doses sodium solution stomach strychnine surgery suture symptoms tablet teaspoonful therapeutic thing tincture tion tissues tonic toxins treat treatment trouble typhoid fever urine usually uterine uterus veratrine wounds
Popular passages
Page 62 - CONSERVATIVE GYNECOLOGY AND ELECTRO-THERAPEUTICS. A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of Women and Their Treatment by Electricity. By G. Betton Massey, MD, Attending Surgeon to the American Oncologic Hospital, Philadelphia; Fellow and Ex-President of the American Electro-Therapeutic Association; Member of the Societe Francaise d'Electro-Therapie, American Medical Association, etc.
Page 35 - Crown may commute the sentence of death passed upon any person convicted of a capital offence to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life, or for any term of years not less than two...
Page 62 - SURGICAL SUGGESTIONS. Practical Brevities in Surgical Diagnosis and Treatment.
Page 64 - Especially useful in dysmenorrhoea, utero-ovarian pain, and pain in general caused by suppressed or irregular menses. This tablet controls the pains of these disorders in the shortest time and by the most natural and economic method. The synergetic action of these drugs is ideal, for not only are their sedative and analgesic properties unsurpassed, but they are followed by no unpleasant effects. The efficacy of this tablet in all neuroses of the larynx is also well known.
Page 26 - For of the most High cometh healing, and he shall receive honour of the king. The skill of the physician shall lift up his head : and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration.
Page 86 - FEW practitioners appreciate the exceedingly great value of agaricin as a remedy in night sweats, especially those of phthisis. The most profuse sweat is checked almost by magic, with a single dose. It operates by diminishing thirst and increasing the secretion of urine. The dose may be pushed to the extent of one grain in the course of twenty-four hours. The single dose for an adult is from one-eighth to one-fourth of a grain.
Page 41 - This morbidity, this mortality, increases in they intra-peritoneal, be they extra-peridirect ratio with the inexperience, the carelessness, the surgical uncleanliness of the operator. The expert recognizes at once the making of a false passage and institutes proper treatment. High surgical skill may convert (as...
Page 80 - ... small to be directly sutured to the larger fragment. 3. In fractures with many fragments or with comminution. 4. In cases of abnormal friability of the patella. It has been and is still extensively employed in...
Page 81 - ... patella is circumferentially looped by a ligature passed close to its periphery. This ligature is passed so as to be close to the periphery of the bone, so as to hug it, as it were. It is inserted in such a way that it lies imbedded in the substance of both quadriceps tendon and ligamentum patellae midway between their anterior and posterior surfaces.
Page 99 - If given during digestion, the acids and starch alter and weaken their action. Acids as a rule, should be given between the digestive acts, because the mucous membrane of the stomach is in a favorable condition for the diffusion of the acid into the blood.