... the diathesis. This is done naturally, and is to be imitated artificially, by the elimination of the morbid element through the channels of augmented excretions, such as the sweat, the urine, and the secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive,... The Chicago Medical Journal - Page 6881868Full view - About this book
| 1857 - 92 pages
...secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive, then, that my argument may be thus summed up. Internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...nutrition to which we give the name of inflammation. What we may do by our interference may either aid, promote, and even accelerate this natural tendency... | |
| Robert Bentley Todd - 1860 - 548 pages
...secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive, then, that my argument may be thus summed up. Internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...retard, and even altogether stop, that salutary process. If, then, this view of the nature of the means by which inflammation is resolved in internal organs... | |
| Robert Bentley Todd - 1860 - 364 pages
...secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive, then, that my argument may be thus summed up. Internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...very seriously impair and retard, and even altogether atop, that salutary process. If, then, this view of the nature of the means by which inflammation is... | |
| 1860 - 564 pages
...often, I suspect always, connected with the prominence of some peculiar diathesis." So it follows that internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...drugs of the physician, but by a natural process, &c. If the patient in question had been bled to twelve or sixteen ounces, and taken tartar-emetic freely,... | |
| 1857 - 492 pages
...nutrition to which we give the name of inflammation. What we may do by our interference may either aid, promote, and even accelerate this natural tendency...retard, and even altogether stop, that salutary process. If, then, this view of the nature of the means by which inflammation is resolved in internal organs... | |
| Thomas Pretious Heslop - 1872 - 52 pages
...often, I suspect always, connected with the prominence of some peculiar diathesis." So it follows that internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...drugs of the physician, but by a natural process, &c. If the patient in question had been bled to twelve or sixteen ounces, and taken tartar-emetic freely,... | |
| George H. Dadd - 1880 - 450 pages
...distinct and definite as the process of normal nutrition. What we may do by our interference, may either aid, promote, and even accelerate, this natural tendency...retard, and even altogether stop, that salutary process. If, then, this view of the nature of the means by which inflammation is resolved in internal organs... | |
| 1858 - 950 pages
...secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive, then, that my argument may be thus summed up. Internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta...nutrition to which we give the name of inflammation. What we may do by our interference may either aid, promote, and even accelerate this natural tendency... | |
| 1858 - 492 pages
...secretions of the alimentary canal. You will perceive, then, that my argument may bfe thus summed op. Internal inflammations are cured, not by the ingesta administered, nor by the egesta promoted by the drngs of the physician, but by a natural process as distinct and definite as that process itself of... | |
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