The Medical Examiner, and Record of Medical Science, Volum 8Lindsay & Blakiston, 1852 |
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abscess acid action agents Anatomy anesthetic animal appearance applied asphyxia attention auscultation blood body bowels bronchi bronchophony calomel cancer cause cells character Chemistry chest chloroform cholera cicatrix Committee condition continued convulsions County Society cure death disease dose dysentery dyspnoea effect emphysema epidemic epithelial ether examination exist experiments fact favor fever fluid fracture gout Hospital inch increase inflammation influence irritation Journal labor ligature limbs lungs matter Medical College Medical Society medicine medulla oblongata membrane months morbid mucous mucous membrane muscles muscular nature nerves observed occurred operation opinion organs pain papillæ patient Philadelphia physician Physiology poison portion practice present produced profession Professor prove quantity quinine remarks remedy removed respiration result side skin sound spinal cord stomach strychnine substance surgeon Surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue trachea treatment tumor ulceration urine uterus whilst wound
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Side 731 - Studies, by AUSTIN FLINT, MD, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College.
Side 394 - To refer the question to a committee ;" "To recommit the resolution ;" "That the subject be referred to a committee of three to be appointed by the chair, and that it report by resolution at the next meeting...
Side 139 - Each delegate shall hold his appointment for one year, and until another is appointed to succeed him, and shall participate in all the business and affairs of the Association.
Side 181 - SWETT. A Treatise on the Diseases of the Chest. Being a Course of Lectures delivered at the New York Hospital. • By JOHN A. SWETT, MD, Professor of the Institutes and Practice of Medicine in the New York University ; Physician to the New York Hospital ; Member of the New York Pathological Society. 1 vol., 8vo.
Side 741 - Certificates will not be received on more than one branch of science from one and the same lecturer ; but Anatomy and Physiology — Demonstrations and Dissections — will be respectively considered as one branch of science...
Side 595 - The character of the true philosopher is to hope all things not impossible, and to believe all things not unreasonable. He who has seen obscurities which appeared impenetrable in physical and mathematical science suddenly dispelled, and the most barren and unpromising fields of inquiry converted, as if by inspiration, into rich and inexhaustible springs of knowledge and power on a simple change of our point of view, or by merely bringing to bear on them some principle which it never occurred before...
Side 266 - Each State, county and district medical society entitled to representation shall have the privilege of sending to the Association one delegate for every ten of its regular resident members, and one for every additional fraction of more than half that number...
Side 266 - The faculty of every regularly constituted medical college or chartered school of medicine, shall have the privilege of sending two delegates. The professional staff of every chartered or municipal hospital containing a hundred inmates or more, shall have the privilege of sending two delegates ; and every other permanently organized medical institution of good standing shall have the privilege of sending one delegate.
Side 191 - It is well to observe, that neither in these nor in other poisoneaters is there the least trace of an arsenic cachexy discernible ; that the symptoms of a chronic arsenical poisoning never show themselves in individuals who adapt the dose to their constitution, even although that dose should be considerable. It is not less worthy of remark, however, that when, either from inability to obtain the acid, or from any other cause, the perilous indulgence is stopped, symptoms of illness are sure to appear,...
Side 561 - The head of the animal is alternately bent on both sides of the body, and lastly the limbs are agitated in every direction. In the case of a section of the lateral half of the spinal cord, in the lumbar region or at the end of the dorsal region, three limbs only are strongly convulsed ; the two anterior and one of the posterior — the one that is on the side of the body opposite to the side of the section of the spinal marrow. The other posterior limb has only very slight movements. When the spinal...