The Medico-chirurgical Review, and Journal of Practical Medicine1843 - Medicine |
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Page iv
6. Observations on the Blood , with reference to its Peculiar Condition in the Morbus Brightii . By George Owen Rees , M.D. 7. Account of Observations made under the Superintendence of Dr. Bright , on Patients whose Urine was Albuminous ...
6. Observations on the Blood , with reference to its Peculiar Condition in the Morbus Brightii . By George Owen Rees , M.D. 7. Account of Observations made under the Superintendence of Dr. Bright , on Patients whose Urine was Albuminous ...
Page 14
... condition . I once saw a man with Dr. Cholmeley and Mr. Stocker , whose pulse was twenty - eight or twenty - nine in a minute , was on more than one occasion only fourteen , and once thirteen in a minute . He was treated as having ...
... condition . I once saw a man with Dr. Cholmeley and Mr. Stocker , whose pulse was twenty - eight or twenty - nine in a minute , was on more than one occasion only fourteen , and once thirteen in a minute . He was treated as having ...
Page 29
" " Again , we read , the nervous system may be in a condition that repels sleep ; a judicious and well - directed narcotic , in as much as it affords the means of indirectly giving power to the body , may be correctly considered as a ...
" " Again , we read , the nervous system may be in a condition that repels sleep ; a judicious and well - directed narcotic , in as much as it affords the means of indirectly giving power to the body , may be correctly considered as a ...
Page 78
... condition when born , and secondly on the quality of the food provided for it , that it must be quite unnecessary to enter upon any argument to prove that , unless the mother be thoroughly healthy and prepared , as Nature designed , to ...
... condition when born , and secondly on the quality of the food provided for it , that it must be quite unnecessary to enter upon any argument to prove that , unless the mother be thoroughly healthy and prepared , as Nature designed , to ...
Page 80
... condition of the milk , partly from the looks of the mother , and in part from the general appearance and health of the child . If the former is pale and languid , if the white of the eyes be blueish , and the lips and tongue have lost ...
... condition of the milk , partly from the looks of the mother , and in part from the general appearance and health of the child . If the former is pale and languid , if the white of the eyes be blueish , and the lips and tongue have lost ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid action albumen animal animalcules appears applied army astringents attended become bladder blood blood-corpuscles body bowels capillaries cause character child circumstances coagulum colour congestion considerable Cooper dermis diagnosis dilatation discharge disease effects effusion examination existence fever fibrine fluid frequently give glands Guy's Hospital hæmorrhage Hospital important increased inflammation inflammatory inspector intestinal irritation kidneys labour lesion less lungs matter medicine ment microscope morbid mucous membrane mucus muscular narcotic nature nerves nervous system nitric acid observed occur operation opinion organs pain pathology patient phlebitis physician pneumonia portion practice present pulmonary pulmonary emphysema pulse purulent pyrexia quantity quinine re-action regimental surgeon remarks remedies result secretion sedative sediment serum shews Sir Astley skin sometimes staff surgeon stimulants stricture substance suppuration surface symptoms tion tissue tonics treatment tumor typhus ulcer urethra uric acid urine usually uterus varix vesicles vessels viscus
Popular passages
Page 281 - I have referred rests on this doctrine : ' the population is increasing in a geometrical progression, the means of subsistence in an arithmetical progression, and unless wars, destructive epidemics, marshes, dense towns, close workshops, and other deadly agents, carry off the excess of the numbers born — unless the outlets of life and blood be left open — the whole people must be exposed to a slow process of starvation.
Page 435 - OWEN. - LECTURES ON THE COMPARATIVE ANATOMY and PHYSIOLOGY of the INVERTEBRATE ANIMALS, delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons in 1843.
Page 174 - It is not a question of time. It is a question of being. It is not a question of...
Page 359 - The subject here presented is one of the most important that can engage the attention of the profession. The volume should be generally read, as the subject-matter is of great importance to society.
Page 107 - DISEASES OF THE SKIN : A Practical and Theoretical Treatise on the DIAGNOSIS, PATHOLOGY, and TREATMENT OF CUTANEOUS DISEASES.
Page 258 - A living body has no power of forming elements, or of converting one elementary substance into another ^ ; and it therefore follows that the elements of which the body of an animal is composed must be the elements of its food.
Page 306 - Humus acts in the same manner in a soil permeable to air as in the air itself; it is a continued source of carbonic acid, which it emits very slowly. An atmosphere of carbonic acid, formed at the expense of the air, surrounds every particle of decaying humus.
Page 257 - TREATISE ON FOOD AND DIET : With Observations on the Dietetical Regimen suited for Disordered States of the Digestive Organs ; and an Account of the Dietaries of some of the principal Metropolitan and other Establishments for Paupers, Lunatics, Criminals, Children, the Sick, &c. By JON. PEREIRA, MDFRS & LS Author of
Page 304 - The proper, constant, and inexhaustible sources of oxygen gas are the tropics and warm climates, where a sky seldom clouded permits the glowing rays of the sun to shine upon an immeasurably luxuriant vegetation.
Page 308 - The process of assimilation, in its most simple form, consists in the extraction of hydrogen from water, and carbon from carbonic acid, in consequence of which, either all the oxygen of the water and carbonic acid is separated, as in the formation of caoutchouc, the volatile oils which contain no oxygen, and other similar substances, or only a part of it is exhaled.