Medical notes and reflectionsLongman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1839 - 628 páginas |
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Página vii
... further would imply a more complete and consecutive work than that now offered to the public . These , I think , are all the circumstances which need be stated in explanation of the form and matter of the volume . It will deeply gratify ...
... further would imply a more complete and consecutive work than that now offered to the public . These , I think , are all the circumstances which need be stated in explanation of the form and matter of the volume . It will deeply gratify ...
Página 5
... further , and more remarkably , to the theory of their action ; and our knowledge has scarcely yet passed the threshold of this inquiry . It must be admitted , however , that the methods of research in medicine at the present time have ...
... further , and more remarkably , to the theory of their action ; and our knowledge has scarcely yet passed the threshold of this inquiry . It must be admitted , however , that the methods of research in medicine at the present time have ...
Página 6
... further advances in this direction of pursuit . A due estimate among medical men themselves of the nature of the proofs with which they have to deal is now more especially needful , when the older doctrines of physic and physiology are ...
... further advances in this direction of pursuit . A due estimate among medical men themselves of the nature of the proofs with which they have to deal is now more especially needful , when the older doctrines of physic and physiology are ...
Página 12
... further some fanciful analogies which have defaced the inquiry , we yet must admit that comparative anatomy is ever carrying us back , by successive steps , to simpler and more fundamental types of animal life ; to conditions of ...
... further some fanciful analogies which have defaced the inquiry , we yet must admit that comparative anatomy is ever carrying us back , by successive steps , to simpler and more fundamental types of animal life ; to conditions of ...
Página 15
... further than to say , that the evidence as to the agency of the solids , and the changes they severally undergo , is more distinct and complete ; but we are not justified in denying that the blood may also take on morbid conditions ...
... further than to say , that the evidence as to the agency of the solids , and the changes they severally undergo , is more distinct and complete ; but we are not justified in denying that the blood may also take on morbid conditions ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
actual admitted afford alimentary canal altered analogy animal antimonial applied attention blood body bowels brain calomel cause changes character chiefly Cholera circulation circumstances Colchicum common connexion curious degree depend difficulty direct disease disorder distinct diuretic doubt dysentery dyspepsia dyspeptic effect electricity emetics epidemic equally erysipelas especially evidence excess exist experience fact familiar fever frequent functions further gout habit hereditary Hippocrates important inference inflammation influence influenza injury inquiry instances irritation kind knowledge less matter measles medicine membranes mental metastasis mind morbid actions nature nerves nervous power nervous system noticed numerous observation obvious occur opiates opium organs particular pathology patient peculiar perhaps period phenomena phrenologists physician physiology practice presumed principle probably produced proof quantity question reason regarding relation remarkable remedy respiration scarcely secretions sensations sensorium singular sleep stomach structure sudorific symptoms texture treatment vaccination various vascular vascular system vessels virus wholly
Passagens conhecidas
Página 232 - When Nature rests, Oft in her absence mimic fancy wakes To imitate her; but, misjoining shapes, Wild work produces oft, and most in dreams ; 111 matching words and deeds long past or late.
Página 462 - Half our days we pass in the shadow of the earth, and the brother of death extracteth a third part of our lives," says Sir Thomas Browne ; a writer whose genius and eloquence give him a high place in English literature, as well as in that of the profession to which he belonged.
Página 259 - in maintaining their healthy structure, by keeping all the air passages duly open and pervious; secondly, in preventing congestion in the pulmonary circulation; thirdly, in providing more completely for the necessary chemical action on the blood, by changing at each act of respiration a sufficient proportion of the whole air contained in the lungs,
Página 263 - as to posture, articulation, and the avoidance of all excess, such exercises may be rendered as salutary to the organs of respiration, as they are agreeable in their influence on the ordinary voice. Even singing may for the same reasons be allowed in many of these cases; but within narrower limits, and under more cautious notice
Página 468 - variation consisting, not only in the different degrees in which the same sense or faculty is submitted to it, but also in the different proportions in which these several powers are under its influence at the same time. We thus associate together under a common principle all the phenomena, however remote and anomalous they may seem ; — from the
Página 465 - be, it is important in all our reasonings, practical and theoretical, upon sleep, to keep in mind that it is not a unity of state with which we are dealing, but a series of fluctuating conditions, of which no two moments perhaps are strictly alike. It may be affirmed that these variations extend
Página 9 - be that so ably developed by Dr. Prichard; viz. that all original or connate bodily peculiarities tend to become hereditary ; while changes in the organic structure of the individual from external causes during life, end with him, and have no obvious influence on his progeny.* I
Página 259 - emptied of air ? Though suggestions to this effect occur in some of our best works on consumption, as well as in the writings of certain continental physicians, they have hitherto had less than their due influence; and the principle, as such, is little
Página 169 - come under the description of what has been termed double consciousness; where the mind passes by alternation from one state to another, each having the perception of external impressions and appropriate trains of thought, but not linked together by the ordinary gradations, or by mutual memory. I have seen one or two singular
Página 260 - the blood, by changing at each act of respiration a sufficient proportion of the whole air contained in the lungs, and giving it more complete access to the vascular tissues;—all objects of great importance, and all capable of being promoted more or less by the means in question.*