I have frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken from the heart, and another with the black vomit taken from the stomach. They were both so unlike the blood of health, and resembled each other so completely, that it was almost impossible... The New-York Medical Journal - Side 1121830Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| 1830 - 602 sider
...thin. Secondly, in reference to the change of colour in the blood, both venous and arterial, Dr. S. has frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken...the black vomit taken from the stomach — they were so similar that it was almost impossible to distinguish the one from the other. Thirdly, in violent... | |
| John Read (maker to the army.) - 1830 - 594 sider
...however, the red colour is lost, and the whole circulating current becomes black, as well as thin. 2. The whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and veins, was changed to this black colour. Dr. S. has often taken black vomit from the stomach, and blood from the heart,... | |
| 1832 - 704 sider
...own credibility, by asserting that " the colour of the whole masa of blood, both in the artet te» and veins, was changed from its natural scarlet or modena red, to a dark black." In the living artery, I unhesitatingly deny this assertion ; for, when, even in the latter stage of... | |
| 1841 - 616 sider
...more fluid state after death, than is usually the case in other diseases. His words are, " the colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and...from its natural scarlet or modena red, to a dark colour. I have frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken from the heart, and another with... | |
| Robley Dunglinson - 1841 - 672 sider
...more fluid state after death, than is usually the case in other diseases. His words are, " the colour of- the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries...from its natural scarlet, or modena red, to a dark colour. I have frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken from the heart, and another with... | |
| 1842 - 278 sider
...more fluid state after death, than is usually the case in other diseases. His words are, "the colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and...from its natural scarlet or modena red, to a dark colour. I have frequently filled one glass with the black fluid taken from the heart, and another with... | |
| Sir John Forbes, Alexander Tweedie, John Conolly, Robley Dunglison - 1848 - 828 sider
...black, and so thin that it has no longer any leseuiblance to the blood of health. " 2d. The colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and...black fluid taken from the heart, and another with tho black vomit taken from the stomach. They were both so unlike the blood of health, and resembled... | |
| John Parkin - 1883 - 316 sider
...to his treatment. " In malignant fever," remarks Dr. Stevens, " as the disease advances, the colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and veins, changes from its scarlet or Modena red, to a dark black." . . . " In these fevers, the saline matter,... | |
| 1832 - 618 sider
...system all distinction between arterial and venous blood is entirely lost:" and again, "the colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and...its natural scarlet or modena red to a dark black." This is not a fact ; I am bound to say, it is absolutely and utterly without foundation. There is no... | |
| 1832 - 718 sider
...gentleman seems to me to attempt to prove too much for his own credibility, by asserting that " the colour of the whole mass of blood, both in the arteries and...its natural scarlet or modena red, to a dark black." In the living artery, I unhesitatingly deny this assertion ; for, when, even in the latter stage of... | |
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