| Charles Henry Wilkinson - 1804 - 554 sider
...particulars it is not necessary to adduce, is as follows : • . During respiration, or the passage of the blood from the right to the left side of the heart, a, great quantity of oxygen is absorbed, by which the venous blood is rendered arterial. Carbonic acid... | |
| William Nicholson - 1809 - 684 sider
...large. The greater circulation is the passage of the blood from the leftside of the heart, tlirolrfcli the arteries, to the extremities of the body, and...facts there stated are supported. The passage of the blood through the heart, i. • . from the right auricle to the left ventricle, by the medium of the... | |
| William Nicholson - 1821 - 378 sider
...veins of the body at large. The greater circulation is the passage of the blood from the left side of the heart, through the arteries, to the extremities...blood takes, has been already explained in the article AVATOMT. We subjoin the proofs and experiments, by which the facts there stated are supported. The... | |
| Anthelme Richerand - 1819 - 554 sider
...may be compared to that, which, in an inflamed lung, opposes the admission of air, and the passage of the blood, from the right to the left side of the heart. Can any one call in question, the increase of vital action in peripneumony ? I am therefore of opinion,... | |
| William Nicholson - 1821 - 376 sider
...viscus. The lesser circulation is the transmission if the blood from the right to the left side 'if the heart, through the lungs. The course, which the blood takes, has heen already explained in the article AtiTOMT. We subjoin the proofs and experiments, by which the... | |
| William Hutchinson - 1821 - 126 sider
...the mngs in respiration, and consequent dilatation of the pulmonary arteries, open a free passage for the blood from the right to the left side of the heart : this fluid no longer flows from the right auricle through the foramen ovale; it meets with resistance... | |
| John Bell, Sir Charles Bell - 1829 - 656 sider
...the alternate dilatation and compression of the lungs, was for the purpose of aiding the circulation of the blood from the right to the left side of the heart. What has thrown obscurity over this subject is the interrupted flow of the blood from the head into... | |
| John Eberle - 1834 - 472 sider
...p. 124. f Ibid. p. 259. j Transaction* of the New York Physico-Medical Society, vol. i. facilitating the transmission of the blood from the right to the left side of the heart, the impeded course of which forms, perhaps, the chief source of distress in this and other similar... | |
| 1837 - 726 sider
...presence of abscesses in the hmg, but are solely occasioned by a mechanical obstacle to the passage of the blood from the right to the left side of the heart. Whenever this obstacle is considerable the disease may assume some of the characters of phithisis;... | |
| Thomas Johnstone Aitkin - 1838 - 558 sider
...and greater circulations are also often spoken of, the former being applied to its transmission from the right to the left side of the heart, through the lungs, the latter to its course from the left through the system to the right side again. The circulation, as... | |
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