Buffalo Medical Journal and Monthly Review, Volume 41849 |
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Page 44
... cause of the attack was traceable to sleeping in crowded lodging - houses , the usual abode of fever in large cities , the proxi- mate causes , doubtless , were over - fatigue , and insufficient and unwholesome food . The term " hunger ...
... cause of the attack was traceable to sleeping in crowded lodging - houses , the usual abode of fever in large cities , the proxi- mate causes , doubtless , were over - fatigue , and insufficient and unwholesome food . The term " hunger ...
Page 55
... cause of death in these cases being due to the coagulation of the blood , is one which is disproved . - St . Louis ... causing from ten to fifteen deaths daily . On the whole , this intelligence is highly favorable . - London Med . Gaz ...
... cause of death in these cases being due to the coagulation of the blood , is one which is disproved . - St . Louis ... causing from ten to fifteen deaths daily . On the whole , this intelligence is highly favorable . - London Med . Gaz ...
Page 74
... cause children to breed their teeth easily , ( p.198 ) —or dog's teeth calcined and so mixed ; of oil of bricks ; a quintes- sence , an ingredient of which is the left hind foot of an elk , rasped . ( p.509 . ) Of the aqua divina , toe ...
... cause children to breed their teeth easily , ( p.198 ) —or dog's teeth calcined and so mixed ; of oil of bricks ; a quintes- sence , an ingredient of which is the left hind foot of an elk , rasped . ( p.509 . ) Of the aqua divina , toe ...
Page 75
... cause or effect , similia similibus curantur , that which causes , or its like , cures , is the pass - word , the open seseme to this new school . Once entered if we follow its founder we have soon started another hypothesis , ( the ...
... cause or effect , similia similibus curantur , that which causes , or its like , cures , is the pass - word , the open seseme to this new school . Once entered if we follow its founder we have soon started another hypothesis , ( the ...
Page 76
... cause may by improper or unskilfull use beget a new , yet similar disease , the excess of potency first killing out , as originally taught , the little whelp of a disease and substituting the potent roaring lion , uncaged like the seven ...
... cause may by improper or unskilfull use beget a new , yet similar disease , the excess of potency first killing out , as originally taught , the little whelp of a disease and substituting the potent roaring lion , uncaged like the seven ...
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Popular passages
Page 431 - Like the vase in which roses have once been distilled — You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will, But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.
Page 514 - MEDICAL LEXICON ; a Dictionary of Medical Science. Containing a concise explanation of the various subjects and terms of Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Hygiene, Therapeutics, Pharmacology, Pharmacy, Surgery, Obstetrics, Medical Jurisprudence, and Dentistry.
Page 16 - s the disease he means ? Mai. 'T is call'd the evil ; A most miraculous Work in this good king : Which often, since my here-remain in England, I have seen him do. How he solicits heaven, Himself best knows : but strangely-visited people, All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye, The mere despair of surgery, he cures ; Hanging a. golden stamp about their necks, Put on with holy prayers : and 't is spoken, To the succeeding royalty he leaves The healing benediction.
Page 40 - ... the palm of the hand or the sole of the foot The trouble and anxiety which attend such cases, are familiar to every surgeon.
Page 220 - No other component part of the organism can be compared to the blood, in respect of the feeble resistance which it offers to exterior influences. The blood is not an organ which is formed, but an organ in the act of formation ; indeed, it is the sum of all the organs which are being formed. The chemical force and the vital principle hold each other in such perfect equilibrium, that every disturbance, however trifling, or from whatever cause it may proceed, effects a change in the blood.
Page 310 - THE CAUSES AND TREATMENT OF ABORTION AND STERILITY : being the result of an extended Practical Inquiry into the Physiological and Morbid Conditions of the Uterus, with reference especially to Leucorrhoeal Affections, and the Diseases of Menstruation.
Page 69 - Perkins's last publication, to about five thousand. Supposing that not more than one cure in three hundred which the Tractors have performed has been published, and the proportion is probably much greater, it will be seen that the number, to March last, will have exceeded one million five hundred thousand...
Page 750 - ... return of the blood from the lungs, occasion an engorgement of the right side of the heart and of the venous system, and in the end, cyanotic phenomena, with an extension of the hypertrophy and dilatation to the right side of the heart Further, those conditions of extreme thickness of the lung, continued compression of it, (by exudations) atelectasis, catarrh and bronchial dilatation, emphysema, pneumonia and extensive...
Page 168 - Joshua H. Worthington, of the Friends' Asylum at Frankford, Pa. ; Dr. NC Benedict, of the Blockley Insane Asylum at Philadelphia; Dr. Fonerden, of the Maryland Hospital at Baltimore ; Dr. Wm. M. Awl, of the Ohio Lunatic Asylum at Columbus; Dr. John M. Gait, of the Eastern Asylum of Virginia at Williamsburg; and Dr.
Page 107 - During the whole of this time the symptoms remained precisely as they were the moment he first observed them ; but as he was walking along, on his return, they suddenly increased, the numbness being accompanied by a sense of want of power, and a sort of dragging of the muscles of the legs, which soon became so great, that, as he describes it, he had to put his hands at the back of his thighs in order to push h'is legs along.