| William Stokes - 1855 - 732 pages
...obliteration, that the double action of the heart appeared suspended, nothing remaining but the second sound. J have suggested, that in the rare cases in which the...anatomical conditions of the muscular fibre that we find the key of cardiac pathology ; for, no matter what the affection may be, its symptoms mainly depend... | |
| Medicine - 1907 - 492 pages
...muscular walls of the heart. In this connection the following remark is worthy of quotation : — " It is, then, in the vital and anatomical conditions of the muscular fibre that we find the key of cardiac pathology ; for, no matter what the affection may be, its symptoms mainly depend... | |
| Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland - 1907 - 552 pages
...muscular walls of the heart. In this connection the following remark is worthy of quotation : — " It is, then, in the vital and anatomical conditions of the muscular fibre that we find the key of cardiac pathology ; for, no matter what the affection may be, its symptoms mainly depend... | |
| 1894 - 962 pages
...the General Considerations on Valvular Disease of the Heart, in Stokes equally classical work. "It is in the vital and anatomical conditions of the muscular fibre that we find the key of cardiac pathology, for, no matter what the affection may be, its symptoms depend on... | |
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