Official report of the ... annual meeting ... (National Association of Railway Surgeons (U.S.)). v.6, 1893Railway Age and Northwestern Railroader, 1893 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 64
Page 42
... examination of the spine was made , and the possibility of a dislocation or fracture of a " corvical vertebra " was not considered or , at any rate , not alluded to . The case , however , furnished the basis for the claim that the ...
... examination of the spine was made , and the possibility of a dislocation or fracture of a " corvical vertebra " was not considered or , at any rate , not alluded to . The case , however , furnished the basis for the claim that the ...
Page 46
... examination lesions gross enough to be detected by the naked eye . Preston ( Medical News . March , 1893 , ) expresses his belief that it is possible to have " All grades of injury to the cord from mere temporary suspension of function ...
... examination lesions gross enough to be detected by the naked eye . Preston ( Medical News . March , 1893 , ) expresses his belief that it is possible to have " All grades of injury to the cord from mere temporary suspension of function ...
Page 67
... examinations , of which records have been preserved in 11 . The cases taken as a whole may be grouped into the following classes : ( a ) Embrace the simulated , 6 . ( b ) Lesions of the cervical , 17 ; dorsal , 20 ; and lumbar regions ...
... examinations , of which records have been preserved in 11 . The cases taken as a whole may be grouped into the following classes : ( a ) Embrace the simulated , 6 . ( b ) Lesions of the cervical , 17 ; dorsal , 20 ; and lumbar regions ...
Page 68
... examination will utterly fail us , for of the regions of all the body there is none in which , even in this age of progress , that pathological changes are so meagerly comprehended as * Bulletin de L'Acadmie de Medicine 9 , Ars . 147 ...
... examination will utterly fail us , for of the regions of all the body there is none in which , even in this age of progress , that pathological changes are so meagerly comprehended as * Bulletin de L'Acadmie de Medicine 9 , Ars . 147 ...
Page 69
... examination , as the dynometer , audiometer , lenses , battery , etc. , unless you know your patient is telling the truth ? You dis- cover , forsooth , that he presses fifty pounds at the right hand and ten pounds at the left , and you ...
... examination , as the dynometer , audiometer , lenses , battery , etc. , unless you know your patient is telling the truth ? You dis- cover , forsooth , that he presses fifty pounds at the right hand and ten pounds at the left , and you ...
Common terms and phrases
abdomen accident amputation animal arachnoid association Asst bladder blood body bone border of spine brain Case-History-Patient catheter cavity cervical vertebra Chief column committee compression concussion condition contusion disease dislocation dorsal dura dura mater examination experience extended force fracture functional Harlem hospital hemorrhage inch inflammation J. B. Murphy laceration legs lesions ligaments limbs lower lumbar lumbar vertebra medullary substance meningitis Minn motion muscles muscular myelitis neck nerve nervous neuroses Ohio organs pain paralysis paraplegia pathological patient Penna post mortem posterior Pres prognosis pulse puncture railroad Railway Age railway surgeon recovery region result sacrum segment shock side spinal canal spinal cord spinal hemorrhage spinal injury spinous processes Supt surgery surgical symptoms temperature thoracic vertebra tion tissue traumatic neuroses treatment urethra urine W. J. Galbraith Wabash wound
Popular passages
Page 6 - And Asa in the thirty and ninth year of his reign was diseased in his feet, until his disease was exceeding great: yet in his disease he sought not to the Lord, but to the physicians.
Page 18 - ... a strong coffin or casket encased in a hermetically sealed (soldered) zinc, copper, or tin case, and all enclosed in a strong outside wooden box of material not less than one inch thick. In all cases the outside box must be provided with four iron chest handles.
Page 19 - RULE 5. Every dead body must be accompanied by a person In charge, who must be provided with a ticket, and also present a full first-class ticket marked "Corpse...
Page 19 - RULE 4. The bodies of persons dead of diseases that are not contagious, infectious, or communicable, may be received for transportation to local points in same state ; when encased in a sound coffin or metallic case, and enclosed in a strong wooden box. securely fastened so it may be safely handled. But when it is proposed to transport them out of the State...
Page 19 - ... agent at initial point and sent to the General Baggage Agent, and the second coupon, by the last Train Baggageman. The stub, permit and coupons, must be numbered so the one will refer to the other, and on...
Page 19 - Every disinterred body, dead from any disease or cause, shall be treated as infectious or dangerous to the public health, and shall not be accepted for transportation unless said...
Page 18 - RULE 1. The transportation of bodies dead of smallpox, Asiatic cholera, yellow fever, typhus fever or bubonic plague is absolutely forbidden. RULE 2. The bodies of those who have died of diphtheria...
Page 19 - Corpse," and a transit permit from Board of Health, or proper health authority, giving permission for the removal, and showing name of deceased, age, place of death, cause of death, (and if of a contagious or infectious nature), the point to which it is to be shipped, medical attendant, and name of undertaker.
Page 201 - For the want of a nail the shoe was lost; for the want of a shoe the horse was lost; for the want of a horse the rider was lost; for the want of a rider the battle was lost; for the want of a battle the kingdom was lost — and all for the want of a horseshoe nail.
Page 13 - An act for the establishment of a bureau of . animal industry, to prevent the exportation of diseased cattle, and to provide means for the suppression and extirpation of pleuro-pneumonia and other contagious diseases among domestic animals," and to cooperate with the authorities of the United States in the enforcement of the provisions of such act.