Medical Communications of the Massachusetts Medical Society, Volum 20Society, 1907 |
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Medical Communications of the Massachusetts Medical Society, Volum 22 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1911 |
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Medical Communications of the Massachusetts Medical Society, Volum 18 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1901 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abdomen abscess acute animal bacillus bacteria bacterial cell blood body Boston bovine Brookline cause cell molecule Charles chemical clinical Coli colon Committee consumption culture cure demonstration diagnosis disease Dorchester doses duct Edward enzymes Essex North examination experience fact ferment Francis frontal frontal sinus gall bladder gallbladder gallstones gastric George glands hemorrhage hospital immune incision increased infection Initial indices inoculation John Joseph JUNE 13 kidney Lawrence lesions leucocytes liver living Lowell Massachusetts Medical Society medicine metabolism method MIDDLESEX Middlesex North months muscle normal operation opsonic opsonins organism oxidation pain patient phagocytosis physician poison Polymyositis practitioner present produced prostate proteid reported Roxbury serum Shattuck sinus sinuses Society Springfield stomach Streptococcus substance surgeon surgical symptoms temperature tion tissue treated treatment tube tubercle bacilli tubercular Tuberculin tuberculosis tumor typhoid ulcer urethra urethrotomy uric acid urine vaccine Vice-President William Worcester
Populære avsnitt
Side 301 - is a definite combination of heterogeneous changes, both simultaneous and successive, in correspondence with external coexistences and sequences.
Side 34 - Moved, that a committee of five be appointed by the President to confer with a Committee of the International Statistical Institute on methods of obtaining the population in countries taking no census.
Side 421 - ... flesh, they neither retain their tension nor rotundity; and owing to the same cause, the nails are bent, namely, because it is the compact flesh at their points which is intended as a support to them, and the tension thereof is like that of the solids.
Side 23 - Now, eyes and ears, and all the mechanism of perception, have, as we know, been evolved in us and our brute progenitors by the slow operation of natural selection. And what is true of senseperception is of course also true of the intellectual powers which enable us to erect upon the frail and narrow platform which sense-perception provides, the proud fabric of the sciences.
Side 496 - ... one practical and discreet person, learned in the science of medicine and hygiene, to be State inspector of health in that district Every nomination for such office shall be made at least seven days prior to the appointment.
Side 435 - Plague in the'front house, two more in the rear — and one of these had a young wife and four children. Here the Plague lives in darkness and filth — filth in halls, over walls and floors, in sinks and closets. Here in nine years alone...
Side 49 - ... of the association, and must show that he is not less than twentyone years of age, that he has followed medical...
Side 398 - That the Massachusetts Medical Society hereby declares that it does not consider itself as having endorsed or censured the opinions in former published Annual Addresses, nor will it hold itself responsible for any opinions or sentiments advanced in any future similar addresses.
Side 300 - ... surrounding the nucleus of charge, is comparatively clear and distinct. There may possibly be two different kinds of inertia, which exactly simulate each other, one electrical and the other material; and those who hold this as a reasonable possibility are careful to speak of electrons as ' corpuscles, ' meaning charged particles of matter of extremely small size, much smaller than an atom, consisting of a definite electric charge and an unknown material nucleus; which nucleus, as they recognize,...
Side 298 - Since force is the result of motion, we may say that anything and everything that moves or can be moved, or whose position in space may be changed is matter. There are many forms of matter that cannot be seen or felt, and can be recognized only by their motions. Matter is indestructible ; it may be successively solid, liquid and gas, but in undergoing these changes it neither gains nor loses. It has always been, and it always will be. It is without beginning and will be without end.