Pediatrics, Volume 24Pediatric Publishing Company, 1912 |
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abdominal acid acute adenoids adults arthritis attack baby birth blood bone breast carbohydrates casein catarrhal cause cells cent child childhood chronic clinical condition congenital convulsions cough cow's milk deafness deformity diagnosis diarrhea diet digestion disease doses drug effect epilepsy examination fact feeding fracture frequently gastric give given glands Hospital hygiene important increased infant infantile infection intestinal intussusception joint lesions lungs measles Medicine meningitis mental method months mortality mother muscle naso-pharynx nervous normal nurse nutrition occur operation organism Orthopedic Surgery ounces pain paper parents patient Pediatrics pediatrists peristalsis peritonitis pertussis physician pneumonia poliomyelitis practice present produce pyelitis pylorus reaction rheumatism scarlet fever serum sexual showed skin stomach stools sugar Surgery symptoms syphilis teeth temperature tion tissue tonsils treatment tuberculosis tuberculous typhoid typhoid fever urine usually vaccine vomiting weeks whooping-cough York
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Page 57 - American Illustrated Medical Dictionary. A new and complete dictionary of terms used in Medicine, Surgery, Dentistry, Pharmacy, Chemistry, Veterinary Medicine, Nursing, Biology, and kindred branches, with new and elaborate tables.
Page 71 - Widal reaction in the blood, but this is not present before the end of the first week or the beginning of the second week of typhoid.
Page xiv - DOSAGE: The adult dose of the preparation is one teaspoonful. repeated every two hours or at longer intervals, according to the requirements of the individual case. For Children of tenor more years, from one-quarter to one-half teaspoonful. For children of three or more years, from five to ten drops. FOR SAMPLES AND LITERATURE. ADDRESS: MARTIN H SMITH CO..
Page 183 - Doses" is given in the book. The diseases treated are divided into related groups, each group occupying a chapter. The Appendix gives very many necessary tables for quick reference and is followed by an exhaustive Table of Doses, closing with a General Index. In order to get all this within the compass of a book for the pocket, a very thin, tough Bible paper has been used, so that it is really a much larger book than it looks. This book will be a useful pocKet companion to the physician in his daily...
Page 589 - By L. Duncan Bulkley. 8vo, Cloth, 272 Pages $1.50 net. BULKLEY: COMPENDIUM OF DISEASES OF THE SKIN. Based on an analysis of thirty thousand consecutive cases. With a Therapeutic Formulary, by L. Duncan Bulkley, AM, MD Physician to the New York Skin and Cancer Hospital; Consulting Physician to the New York Hospital. 8vo, Cloth, xviii+ 286 Pages $2.00 net. BULKLEY: DIET AND HYGIENE IN DISEASES OF THE SKIN.
Page 125 - Diseases of the Eye. By EDWARD JACKSON, AM, MD, Professor of Diseases of the Eye in the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medicine...
Page 530 - Rays in Therapeutics and Diagnosis. By WILLIAM ALLEN PUSEY, AM, MD, Professor of Dermatology in the University of Illinois; and EUGENE W. CALDWELL, BS, Director of the Edward N. Gibbs X-Ray Memorial Laboratory of the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York.
Page 474 - The Legislature shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of free public schools for the instruction of all the children in this state between the ages of five and eighteen years.
Page 57 - MEDICINE, a textbook for practitioners and students with special reference to diagnosis and treatment ; by James Tyson, M. D., Professor of Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania and Physician to the Hospital of the University; Physician to the Pennsylvania Hospital ; Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia ; Member of the Association of American Physicians, etc.
Page 635 - Theoretically, the child under six months, because of the deficiency of salivary and pancreatic secretions is said to be incapable of digesting starches. Practically this is not true. Nearly every fluid in the human economy has a diastatic ferment and as a matter of fact the very young infant does digest starch. We have seen too many babies successfully fed on arrow root to deny this fact.