Memphis Medical Monthly, Volume 10S.C. Toof & Company, 1890 |
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Results 1-5 of 64
Page 1
... frequent than the left and all other varieties combined . The number of men afflicted with inguinal hernia , is to the number of women as three to one . The majority of herniæ occur in childhood , or early adult life . A person's ...
... frequent than the left and all other varieties combined . The number of men afflicted with inguinal hernia , is to the number of women as three to one . The majority of herniæ occur in childhood , or early adult life . A person's ...
Page 10
... frequent because the patient is abandoned to ex- pectation of the resorption of the pneumonic exudation . I believe that the acetate of lead is a very efficient means of shortening the pneumonic process , and impeding its passage into ...
... frequent because the patient is abandoned to ex- pectation of the resorption of the pneumonic exudation . I believe that the acetate of lead is a very efficient means of shortening the pneumonic process , and impeding its passage into ...
Page 13
... frequently there is criminal disregard of common sense in the flooding of a patient's exposed body with large quantities of cold water containing the antiseptic . In some of the large hospitals , as the city hospital , of New York ...
... frequently there is criminal disregard of common sense in the flooding of a patient's exposed body with large quantities of cold water containing the antiseptic . In some of the large hospitals , as the city hospital , of New York ...
Page 14
... frequently washed in sublimate solution to render it aseptic . Almost universally in the cities of the North and West the anesthetic is ether . Frequently chloroform is given to child- ren , but I saw numerous operations in even small ...
... frequently washed in sublimate solution to render it aseptic . Almost universally in the cities of the North and West the anesthetic is ether . Frequently chloroform is given to child- ren , but I saw numerous operations in even small ...
Page 16
... frequently than before . The important features of Dr. McBurney's operation are to thoroughly dissect up the sac , separate the cord , ligate the sac at the highest possible point , and cut it off ; sew skin on either side to deep ...
... frequently than before . The important features of Dr. McBurney's operation are to thoroughly dissect up the sac , separate the cord , ligate the sac at the highest possible point , and cut it off ; sew skin on either side to deep ...
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Common terms and phrases
acetanilide acid action aged agent alcohol antipyretic antipyrin antiseptic applied believe bladder blood Board Campho-Phenique carbolic carbolic acid catarrh catgut cause cavity cent cervix child chloralamid chloroform chronic clinical cocaine cure diagnosis dilated diphtheria disease doctor doses drainage dressing drug dysmenorrhea Editor effect epidemic Eucalyptol examination fact fever gauze Gibson County give given grains hemorrhage ical inflammation injection insanity intestinal iodoform Journal larynx leprosy malarial Medical Association medical profession Medical Society medicine meeting membrane Memphis Memphis Medical Monthly ment method months mucous mucous membrane nervous operation organs ounces pain pathology patient pepsin physician poison practice practitioner present quinine recent remedy reported salicylate says septic sleep solution stomach suffering surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis teaspoonful temperature Tenn therapeutic tion tissue treated treatment tuberculosis tubes urine uterine uterus vomiting wound yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 376 - A NEW MEDICAL DICTIONARY: Including all the words and phrases used in Medicine, with their proper Pronunciation and Definitions, based on Recent Medical Literature. By George M. Gould, BA, MD, Ophthalmic Surgeon to the Philadelphia Hospital, etc.
Page 526 - July 14, 1894, provided that an essay deemed by the committee of award to be worthy of the prize shall have been offered. Essays intended for competition may be upon any subject in medicine, but...
Page 477 - Essentials of Diseases of Children. By WILLIAM M. POWELL, MD, Attending Physician to the Mercer House for Invalid Women at Atlantic City, NJ ; late Physician to the Clinic for the Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Crown octavo, 222 pages. Cloth, $1.00; interleaved for notes, $1.25. [See Saunders...
Page 273 - Constitution, be referred to a committee of three, to be appointed by the chair...
Page 232 - ... the Secretary of the Treasury to promulgate such rules and regulations as in his judgment may be necessary to prevent the spread of such disease from one State or Territory into another, or from any State or Territory into the District of Columbia, or from the District of Columbia into any State or Territory, and to employ such inspectors and other persons as may be necessary to execute such regulations to prevent the spread of such disease.
Page 123 - Violations of the act are to be punished by a fine of not less than $20 nor more than $100, or by imprisonment for not less than 30 days nor more than 365 days, or by both.
Page 502 - I herewith give notice that a General Convention for the Revision of the Pharmacopoeia of the United States of America will be held in the City of Washington, DC, •beginning on the first Wednesday in May, 1900.
Page 333 - REGIONAL ANATOMY IN ITS RELATION TO MEDICINE ."AND; SURGERY. By GEORGE McCLELLAN, MD, Lecturer on Descriptive and Regional Anatomy at the Pennsylvania School of Anatomy; Professor of Anatomy at the Pennsylvania Academy of the...
Page 239 - Half a teaspoonful of chloride of ammonium in a goblet of water will almost immediately restore his faculties and powers of locomotion to a man who is helplessly intoxicated.
Page 559 - Headache almost always yields to the simultaneous application of hot water to the feet and back of the neck. A towel folded, dipped in hot water, wrung out rapidly, and applied to the stomach, acts like magic in cases of colic.