The New-York Medical Journal, Volume 2E. B. Clayton, 1831 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 16
... organs . The first case of dysentery that I saw , was a feeble man , aged 60 years , subject to a chronic , painful and obstinate diarrhoea . After the usual premonitory symptoms of approaching fever , he was attacked with chills ...
... organs . The first case of dysentery that I saw , was a feeble man , aged 60 years , subject to a chronic , painful and obstinate diarrhoea . After the usual premonitory symptoms of approaching fever , he was attacked with chills ...
Page 22
... organ , which would be induced by the effort to vomit . Besides , in feeble constitutions , intemperate drinkers of ... organs , in which antimonial emetics were so pecu- liarly fatal , near Sackett's Harbor . The rules , then , to be ...
... organ , which would be induced by the effort to vomit . Besides , in feeble constitutions , intemperate drinkers of ... organs , in which antimonial emetics were so pecu- liarly fatal , near Sackett's Harbor . The rules , then , to be ...
Page 36
... organ , and will much more derange the functions of those , which are naturally sluggish and tardy in action . For instance : an organ which generally performs its func- tions with vigor , celerity and energy , may be considerably re ...
... organ , and will much more derange the functions of those , which are naturally sluggish and tardy in action . For instance : an organ which generally performs its func- tions with vigor , celerity and energy , may be considerably re ...
Page 37
... organs first ; and of these the colon stands as chief . When the colon , from any cause , has lost its functional ability , it becomes unable to free itself of its contents , which accumulate and indurate in its cells . This is , from ...
... organs first ; and of these the colon stands as chief . When the colon , from any cause , has lost its functional ability , it becomes unable to free itself of its contents , which accumulate and indurate in its cells . This is , from ...
Page 58
... organ , important to life , such as the heart or lungs , exists , it is dangerous to have recourse to the new lithotomy . Old men , who have long been affected with the stone , and whose urine is constantly charged with glare , are 58 ...
... organ , important to life , such as the heart or lungs , exists , it is dangerous to have recourse to the new lithotomy . Old men , who have long been affected with the stone , and whose urine is constantly charged with glare , are 58 ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid action Amussat appears arteries attended become bladder bleeding blood body bone bowels brain calomel canula cathartics cause cavity character child circumstances cold commencement consequence considerable constitution continued costive death delirium tremens derangement Dewees discharge disease doctrine doses dysentery effects emetic epidemic Erysipelas evidence excitement existence exostosis fact febrile frequently gastric heart hypersthenic inches incision inflammation instances intestines iodic acid irritation labor laudanum liver Mania matter medicine membrane ment mode months morbid mucous mucous membrane muscles nature nervous fluid observed occur operation opinion opium organ ovum oxalic acid pain paroxysm patient peculiar periosteum peritoneum physician placenta poison practice practitioner pregnancy present produced pulse quantity quinine remarks remedies skin small-pox sometimes stage stomach substance surface symptoms tion tongue treatment tumor typhus ulceration urethra urine uterus vaccination variolous vascular Velpeau violent virus vomiting womb wound
Popular passages
Page 11 - A TREATISE ON POISONS. In relation to Medical Jurisprudence, Physiology, and the Practice of Physic.
Page 494 - Edinburgh; the Association of Fellows and Licentiates of the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland...
Page 410 - ... being sent for, or showing an over-anxiety not to leave him alone with any other person, or attempting to remove or destroy articles of food or drink, or vomited matter which may have contained the poison, or expressing a foreknowledge of the probability of speedy death :— 7.
Page 231 - ... from the first possess, the power of producing by contagion a disease similar in nature to itself, but much more severe. It is undeniable, that the return of the Egyptian expedition introduced a severe contagious ophthalmia into this country, which afterwards prevailed extensively in regiments which had never served in Egypt, and which accompanied the British troops to almost every foreign station to which they were sent. For many ages this ophthalmia has prevailed in Egypt. It is more frequent...
Page 419 - a person immediately after swallowing a solution of a crystalline salt, which tasted purely and strongly acid, is attacked with burning in the throat, then with a burning in the stomach, vomiting, particularly of bloody matter, imperceptible pulse, and excessive languor, and dies in half an hour, or still more, in twenty, fifteen, or ten minutes, I do not know any fallacy which can interfere with the conclusion that oxalic acid was the cause of death. No parallel disease begins so abruptly, and terminates...
Page 134 - If it be born alive it is sufficient, though it be not heard to cry, for peradventure it may be born dumb ;" he also describes " motion, stirring, and the like," as proofs of a child having been born alive.
Page 264 - I have found abrasions of the cuticle to produce the same effect; such, for example, as we find in the nurseries of the opulent, as well as the cottages of the poor, behind the ears, and upon many other parts where the cuticle is thin.
Page 188 - July, when the convalescence having been completely established, the remedy was omitted. During this time diarrhoea set in for three or four days severely ; this was treated by the application of a few leeches to the anus, and the use of anodyne enemata. " The patient took in all one hundred and five grains of opium (exclusive of that in the injections), without ever experiencing any of the usual effects of this substance, when exhibited in large doses.
Page 188 - ... slightest pressure made the patient utter screams. The countenance was hippocratic, and the patient tormented with constant hiccup. Coldness of the extremities had commenced, and the pulse was weak and slow. Before the hour of visit, leeches had been applied to the belly without relief, the patient was then ordered one grain of opium every hour. The next day it was found that the symptoms were improved. The patient had not experienced the slightest coma, headach, or delirium. The same plan of...
Page 418 - The concentrated acid, if taken in considerable dose, may cause death in from two to twenty minutes. ' After death the stomach is found to contain black extravasated blood, exactly like blood acted on by oxalic acid out of the body ; the inner coat of the stomach is of a cherry-red colour, with streaks of black granular warty extravasation ; and in some places the surface of the coat is vary brittle and the subjacent stratum gelatinized.