Glasgow Medical Journal, Volumen1Royal Medico-Chirurgical Society of Glasgow., 1869 |
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Página 5
... increasing the membership of the Association . It cannot be expected that the most enthusi- astic regard for local honour will long sustain a man in the melancholy rites attending the entombment of the fruit of his brain in the pages of ...
... increasing the membership of the Association . It cannot be expected that the most enthusi- astic regard for local honour will long sustain a man in the melancholy rites attending the entombment of the fruit of his brain in the pages of ...
Página 10
... increases , Mackenzie's reputation will rise in quarters where it is now rather undervalued . In 1841 Dr Mackenzie published a work on the " Physiology of Vision . " The subject was , perhaps , hardly so well suited to his peculiar ...
... increases , Mackenzie's reputation will rise in quarters where it is now rather undervalued . In 1841 Dr Mackenzie published a work on the " Physiology of Vision . " The subject was , perhaps , hardly so well suited to his peculiar ...
Página 23
... increased delirium , or to coma ; for it is more likely that the dose is too small than too large , and in any case , he remarks , " it is much better to err on the side of over - stimulation than not to give enough " ( p . 130 ) ...
... increased delirium , or to coma ; for it is more likely that the dose is too small than too large , and in any case , he remarks , " it is much better to err on the side of over - stimulation than not to give enough " ( p . 130 ) ...
Página 27
... increasing the doses gradually but steadily up to , and sometimes over the crisis , or until all danger from exhaustion or death by asthenia ( as he termed it ) , was clearly past . No one who followed his hospital practice in connec ...
... increasing the doses gradually but steadily up to , and sometimes over the crisis , or until all danger from exhaustion or death by asthenia ( as he termed it ) , was clearly past . No one who followed his hospital practice in connec ...
Página 36
... increased by the continuous administration of alcoholic stimulants , even when the more striking or obvious symptoms of over - stimulation do not become apparent . 6. The effect of stimulants moderately and judiciously used in certain ...
... increased by the continuous administration of alcoholic stimulants , even when the more striking or obvious symptoms of over - stimulation do not become apparent . 6. The effect of stimulants moderately and judiciously used in certain ...
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abdomen abscess admitted affection aged alcoholic amputation appearance attack blood bone bowels Bright's disease Calabar bean carbolic acid cause cavity cervix child coloboma considerable continued creatinine cure death dilated discharge disease doses Dr Fergus dressing enteric fever epiphysis examination experience extract fatal favour favus fibrinous fluid frequently give Glasgow Glasgow Royal Infirmary heart hospital inches increased inflammation injection joint labour ligature limb liver London lungs medicine membrane months morning motion night observed operation ophthalmoscope pain parasite patient physician poison practice present Pulse quantity regard remarks removed respiration result Royal Infirmary scarlet fever Scott Orr sewage sewers side skin slept slight soft spasms stimulants Street suffering surface Surgeon symptoms syphilis syphilitic Temperature in rectum tion tissue to-day Tongue treatment tumour typhus urethra urine usual uterine uterus vessels vomiting waxy wound
Pasajes populares
Página 135 - Lectures on the Diseases of Women and Children. By Dr. GS Bedford. 4th Edition. 8vo. 18s. The Principles and Practice of Obstetrics. By Gunning S. Bedford, AM, MD With Engravings. 8vo. Cloth, II.
Página 389 - Idiots have been improved, educated, and even cured; not one in a thousand has been entirely refractory to treatment; not one in a hundred who has not been made more happy and healthy; more than 30 per cent.
Página 389 - ... the standard of manhood, till some of them will defy the scrutiny of good judges when compared with ordinary young men and women.
Página 23 - I must tell you, in limine," he writes, " that it is far more dangerous to diminish or withdraw alcohol than to give too much" (p. 484). Again — " I cannot too strongly impress upon you that, to do good with stimulants, you must use them early, with care and watchfulness, in very definite quantities, and not in a vacillating or timid manner. . . . The harm which they do (in disease) is grossly and unfairly exaggerated, and always due to the slovenly administration of them
Página 392 - ... pauses of music, the eloquent harmonies of human gesture, look, and speech, these are the powerful agents of their transition from physiological to mental education. Away, then, with books ! Give us the Assyrian and Jewish mode of instruction. The representative signs of thought were painted, engraved, sculptured in deepness or in relief, sensible to the eye and...
Página 544 - ... no means of combining against him, no power of even locally overmastering him, and, on the other hand, with the strongest motives for seeking his favour and avoiding to give him offence. In struggles for political emancipation, everybody knows how often its champions are bought off by bribes, or daunted by terrors. In the case of women, each individual of the subject-class is in a chronic state of bribery and intimidation combined.
Página 389 - He says that more than forty per cent. have become capable of the ordinary transactions of life, under friendly control ; of understanding moral and social abstractions, and of working like two-thirds of a man.
Página 222 - SMITH— On the Wasting Diseases of Infants and Children. By EUSTACE SMITH, MD, FRCP, Physician to HM the King of the Belgians, and to the East London Hospital for Children. Fourth Edition. Post 8vo, 8s.
Página 80 - A System of Surgery, Theoretical and Practical, in Treatises by various Authors, arranged and edited by T. HOLMES, MA Cantab, Surgeon to the Hospital for Sick Children, and AssistantSurgeon to St. George's Hospital. Volume I.— General Pathology.
Página 393 - The foot being held at a right angle to the leg, the point of the knife is introduced immediately below the malleolar projection of the fibula, rather nearer its posterior than anterior edge, and then carried across the bone, slightly inclining backwards, to the inner side of the ankle, where it terminates at the point exactly opposite its commencement...