The Chicago Medical Journal and Examiner, Volume 47W. B. Keen, Cooke, 1883 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
abdominal acid action acute albumen albuminuria anæmia antiseptic appearance arterial ARTICLE asylum attack attended blood Board body bowels brain Bright's disease calomel carbolic carbolic acid cause cavity CHICAGO MEDICAL child cholera chronic clinical condition convulsions cure death diarrhoea diphtheria disease doses effect epithelium especially examination fact favor female fever glands hæmorrhage heat Hospital inch increased inflammation injections insane intestinal iodoform irritation kidneys labor lectures lesion lymphatic matter Medical College Medical Journal Medical Society medicine ment mental micrococci months mucous membrane muscles nephritis nerves nervous neuralgia occurred operation organs ovaries pain paper parasite pathological patient physician picric acid poison practice present produced Prof profession pulse quinine remedy removed result scrotum septicemia skin solution stomach suffering Surgeon surgical symptoms temperature tion tissue treated treatment tumor typhoid fever urethra urine uterine uterus varicocele vessels wound
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Página 477 - cup in the end, with fire, and the dried herbs put together, do suck through the cane the smoke thereof, which smoke satisfieth their hunger, and therewith they live four or five days without meat or drink, and this all the Frenchmen used for this purpose ; yet do they hold
Página 192 - No one can be considered as a regular practitioner, or a fit associate in consultation, whose practice is based on an exclusive dogma." Prior to this it is stated that " a regular medical education is presumptive evidence of professional abilities and acquirements ;
Página 560 - JULIUS ALTHAUS, MD, Senior Physician to the Hospital for Epilepsy and Paralysis, Regent's Park, deprecates the abuse of massage, a practice often now employed where it can be of no service. " It is well known that at various times epilepsy, idiocy, and some forms of insanity, have been treated by massage and gymnastics ; but
Página 476 - in such fear that many never thought to have reached the Indies without great death of negroes and of themselves ; but the Almighty God who never sufFereth his elect to perish, sent us on the 16th of February, the ordinary breeze, which
Página 481 - in ordinary potable water containing nitrogenous organic impurities, alkaline carbonates, etc. ; (2) in decomposing animal and vegetable matter possessing an alkaline reaction ; (3) in the alkaline contents of the intestinal portion of the alimentary canal. V. The period of morbific activity of the poison—which lasts, under favorable conditions, about three days for a given
Página 481 - or material containing such, is harmless, both before the appearance and after the disappearance of bacteria, but is actively poisonous during their presence. VI. The morbific properties of the poison may be preserved in posse for an indefinite period in cholera-ejections dried during the period of incubation, or of
Página 481 - dried during the period of incubation, or of infection matter dried during the period of activity. VII. The dried particles of cholera poison may be carried (in clothing, bedding, etc.) to any distance, and when liberated may find their way direct to the alimentary canal through
Página 476 - Near about this place inhabited certain Indians, who the next day after we came thither came down to us, presenting mill and cakes of bread, which they had made of a kind of corn called maize, in bigness of a pease,
Página 639 - The Conference of Charities and Corrections, convened at Louisville, Ky., September 24-28, 1883, and representing the organized and individual charities and penal and reformatory institutions in the several States and in the District of Columbia, calls the attention of the President and Congress of the United States, and of the Governor and Legislature of each
Página 482 - them, with acids ; (2) by such acid (gaseous) treatment of contaminated atmosphere; (3) by establishing an acid diathesis of the system in one who has received the poison. For the non-professional reader the pith of these propositions is contained in the last two—the eighth and ninth. Nothing