Detroit Review of Medicine and Pharmacy, Band 51870 |
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Seite 15
... regard medication as important secondarily , needful rather as an aid where nature is inadequate , and especially hold that inasmuch as the disease tends to prostration , often assuming the typhoid form , it is all important that the ...
... regard medication as important secondarily , needful rather as an aid where nature is inadequate , and especially hold that inasmuch as the disease tends to prostration , often assuming the typhoid form , it is all important that the ...
Seite 39
... regard to the physiological action of chloral , present some discrepancies , which only a series of carefully ... regards the anaesthetic action as of too brief duration to be practically available for surgical opera- tions . He has ...
... regard to the physiological action of chloral , present some discrepancies , which only a series of carefully ... regards the anaesthetic action as of too brief duration to be practically available for surgical opera- tions . He has ...
Seite 57
... regard to its effects from those of M. Bernard and others . Narceia , which is difficultly soluble , when combined with codeia is rendered much more so , and Dr. DaCosta is of the opinion that M. Behier's sample of the medicine was ...
... regard to its effects from those of M. Bernard and others . Narceia , which is difficultly soluble , when combined with codeia is rendered much more so , and Dr. DaCosta is of the opinion that M. Behier's sample of the medicine was ...
Seite 58
... regard to its therapeutical value , Dr. Harley observes : " Further acquaintance with it will , perhaps , more positively indi- cate that , as happens in morphia , individuals are affected in opposite ways by it , some being influenced ...
... regard to its therapeutical value , Dr. Harley observes : " Further acquaintance with it will , perhaps , more positively indi- cate that , as happens in morphia , individuals are affected in opposite ways by it , some being influenced ...
Seite 59
... regard to the action of codeia as with that of narceia . From the experimental researches of Dr. Harley it appears that the action of codeia on man closely resembles that of morphia , and if carried greatly to excess would probably end ...
... regard to the action of codeia as with that of narceia . From the experimental researches of Dr. Harley it appears that the action of codeia on man closely resembles that of morphia , and if carried greatly to excess would probably end ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
able acid action appearance applied attended attention become believe blood body brain called cause child complete condition considerable containing continued contraction cord course death disease doses effects examination excitement exists experience extremities fact fever four frequently functions give given grains hand head hospital important increased inflammation influence injection insane interest irritation kind labor less matter means medicine mental method Michigan mind months muscles nature nerve nervous observed occur once operation opium organic pain passed patient persons physician placenta practice present probably produce proved quantity reason regard remedies removed result says seems severe side skin Society solution sometimes spinal success suffering symptoms taken tenderness tion tissue treatment true usually uterus weeks whole
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 465 - Yet I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns.
Seite 288 - With Engravings, 8vo, 8s. 6d. [1878] PHTHISIS : in a series of Clinical Studies, by AUSTIN FLINT, MD, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College.
Seite 189 - Secretaries of all medical organizations are requested to forward lists of their Delegates as soon as elected, to the Permanent Secretary. Any respectable physician who may desire to attend, but cannot...
Seite 401 - Physiologically, we cannot choose but reject the will : volition we know, and will we know, but the will, apart from particular acts of volition or will, we cannot know. To interpose such a metaphysical entity between reflection and action thereupon, would bring us logically to the necessity of interposing a similar entity between the stimulus to the spinal cord and its reaction. Thus, instead of unravelling the complex by help of the more simple, we should obscure the simple by speculations concerning...
Seite 460 - Idiocy is, indeed, a manufactured article ; and, although we are not always able to tell how it is manufactured, still its important causes are known and are within control. Many cases are distinctly traceable to parental intemperance and excess. Out of 300 idiots in Massachusetts, Dr. Howe found as many as 145 to be the offspring of intemperate parents ; and there are numerous scattered observations which prove that chronic alcoholism in the parent may directly occasion idiocy in the child. I think,...
Seite 533 - But expectation is permissible where belief is not ; and if it were given me to look beyond the abyss of geologically recorded time to the still more remote period when the earth was passing through physical and chemical conditions, which it can no more see again than a man can recall his infancy, I should expect to be a witness of the evolution of living protoplasm from not living matter.
Seite 417 - Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.
Seite 38 - It alters the molecular condition of the fat, mingling it with water in such a way that even ether cannot separate the fat from the water. A permanent emulsion is thus formed ready to mix with a larger quantity of water whenever it may be added.
Seite 465 - Whence come the savage snarl, the destructive disposition, the obscene language, the wild howl, the offensive habits, displayed by some of the insane ? Why should a human being deprived of his reason ever become so brutal in character as some do, unless he has the brute nature within him...
Seite 498 - He holds that there is among criminals a distinct and incurable criminal class, marked by peculiar low physical and mental characteristics; that crime is hereditary in the families of criminals belonging to this class; and that this hereditary crime is a disorder of mind, having close relations of nature and descent to epilepsy, dipsomania, insanity, and other forms of degeneracy. Such criminals are really morbid varieties, and often exhibit marks of physical degeneration — spinal deformities,...