The Medical World, Volume 12Roy Jackson., 1894 |
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Results 1-5 of 75
Page 2
... taken more frequently but less in amount than when in the prime of life . A Caution in Local Applications . It should be well known to all practicing physicians physicians that no local applications of mercury in any form - calomel ...
... taken more frequently but less in amount than when in the prime of life . A Caution in Local Applications . It should be well known to all practicing physicians physicians that no local applications of mercury in any form - calomel ...
Page 5
... taken in four doses . " I took three doses , one hour apart , but lost con- consciousness before the fourth dose was taken . Was insensible for twelve hours , but on return- ing consciousness found my drawers saturated with blood . On ...
... taken in four doses . " I took three doses , one hour apart , but lost con- consciousness before the fourth dose was taken . Was insensible for twelve hours , but on return- ing consciousness found my drawers saturated with blood . On ...
Page 13
... taken night and morning , enough to produce two operations a day . To build up the whole system I gave McAr- thur's hypophosphites , a dessertspoonful after each meal . The first month there was but little improve- ment in the sores ...
... taken night and morning , enough to produce two operations a day . To build up the whole system I gave McAr- thur's hypophosphites , a dessertspoonful after each meal . The first month there was but little improve- ment in the sores ...
Page 27
... taken as the basis of my paper chiefly my experience of seventeen years at Bethlem , leaving out tables of all patients over sixty THE MEDICAL WORLD . 27 88 Treatment of Scabies 123 A Case of Pneumomia Cured the Subcutaneous Injection ...
... taken as the basis of my paper chiefly my experience of seventeen years at Bethlem , leaving out tables of all patients over sixty THE MEDICAL WORLD . 27 88 Treatment of Scabies 123 A Case of Pneumomia Cured the Subcutaneous Injection ...
Page 34
... taken up these important questions with the ability born of wide reading and an analytical mind . However , we cannot help thinking that he has undertaken this task with a mind largely biased in favor of capital , as he seems to incline ...
... taken up these important questions with the ability born of wide reading and an analytical mind . However , we cannot help thinking that he has undertaken this task with a mind largely biased in favor of capital , as he seems to incline ...
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acetanilid action alcohol Alkaloidal antiseptic applied atropine attack bath believe blood bowels called calomel cancer carbolic acid catarrh cause cent child chloroform chronic cold condition cough cure diagnosis diarrhea diphtheria disease doctor doses drams drops drug eczema Editor MEDICAL WORLD:-I effect ergot Eucalyptol examination experience five fluid four gave give given glycerine gonorrhea grains granules headache hemorrhage hypodermic injection iodide irritation journal labor MEDICAL WORLD medicine membrane ment milk minutes months morphine nerve nervous never night operation opium ounces pain patient permanganate physician pilocarpine placenta poison potassium powder practice present Prof profession pruritus quinine readers remedy rheumatism salicylate salicylic acid skin solution stomach strychnine suffering sulph symptoms syphilis syrup teaspoonful temperature Tinct tincture tion tissue tonic treated treatment trouble typhoid fever urine uterine uterus vomiting weeks zinc
Popular passages
Page 410 - Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it.
Page 387 - Cloth, 126 pages, interleaved for adding notes and other illustrations, $1.25 net. Philadelphia: The FA Davis Co., Publishers, 1914 and 1916 Cherry Street.
Page 267 - By GEORGE M. GOULD, AM, MD, Author of "The Student's Medical Dictionary," "30,000 Medical Words Pronounced and Defined," "The Meaning and the Method of Life," "Borderland Studies ;" Editor of "American Medicine,
Page 268 - The importance attached to this drug, I think, is due to its anodyne and analgesic power, and the celerity with which it acts. As an antipyretic in fevers, it acts more slowly than antipyrin, but is not attended with as much depression of the cardiac system and cyanosis.
Page 110 - For Sale by Subscription. AN AMERICAN TEXT-BOOK OF THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. By American Teachers. Edited by Louis STARR, MD, assisted by THOMPSON S. WESTCOTT, MD In one handsome royal-8vo volume of 1190 pages, profusely illustrated with wood-cuts, half-tone and colored plates. Net Prices : Cloth, $7.00 ; Sheep or Half-Morocco, $8.00.
Page 112 - Put not all thine eggs in the one basket" — which is but a manner of saying, "Scatter your money and your attention"; but the wise man saith, "Put all your eggs in the one basket and — WATCH THAT BASKET.
Page 112 - THE ASSOCIATION OF MILITARY SURGEONS OF THE UNITED STATES," will be held in Washington, D. C., May 1st, 2d and 3d, 1894.
Page 363 - Instead of the conical termination and minute foramen, which characterizes a perfected tooth, the aperture is nearly as large as the root itself, and thus when the sensitive pulp, composed of connective tissue, blood-vessels, and nerves, is in a condition of irritation because of the morbid activity of the process of dentition — augmented vascular and nervous action — there may be produced a hyperemia sufficient, possibly, to cause the protrusion of a part of the mass from the incomplete aperture...
Page 363 - ... thus giving rise to a true toothache, comparable only to that exquisite torture which is experienced in after life from an exposed and irritated pulp.
Page 227 - Cocaine given continuously from the beginning can completely abort the disease. 2. If given after the eruption has appeared, it will transform confluent or hemorrhagic forms into the discrete.