Glasgow Medical JournalRoyal Medico-Chirurgical Society of Glasgow., 1903 |
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal abscess acute affected amblyopia anæsthesia anaesthetic appeared bacillus blood bone cancer cardiac cause cavity cells cent cervix child chloroform clinical cobra condition congenital considerable cord cysts daboia death death-rate diagnosis dilatation diphtheria disease Edition endocarditis enlarged enteric fever ether examination fact fever fingers fluid forceps glands Glasgow Glasgow Royal Infirmary hæmorrhage hand head heart hospital important inches increase infection Infirmary intestinal John labour lesion London mastoid Medical Journal medicine membrane method milk months mucous muscles nerve Nissl bodies nitrous oxide normal notification observed obstetrics occurred operation pain paralysis patient pelvis phthisis placenta poison posterior practice practitioner present pulse pyæmia recognised regards removed reported respiration result scarlet fever serum showed skin Society surgeon surgery surgical symptoms temperature tion tissue tonsils treatment tuberculosis tumour tympanic membrane ulcer urine uterus venom Western Infirmary woman
Popular passages
Page 405 - And the midwives said unto Pharaoh, Because the Hebrew women are not as the Egyptian women; for they are lively, and are delivered ere the midwives come in unto them.
Page 237 - SKIN. BULKLEY. The Skin in Health and Disease. Illustrated. .40 CROCKER. Diseases of the Skin. Their Description, Pathology, Diagnosis, and Treatment, with Special Reference to the Skin Eruptions of Children.
Page 14 - In a lecture delivered in 1785 John Hunter says: I cannot see any reason why, when the disease can be ascertained in an early stage, we should not make an opening into the abdomen and extract the cyst itself. Why should not a woman suffer spaying, without danger as well as other animals do? The merely making an opening into the abdomen is not highly dangerous. In a sound constitution perhaps a wound merely into the abdomen would never be followed by death in consequence of it.
Page 411 - She was liberally supplied with banana wine, and was in a state of semi-intoxication. She was perfectly naked. A band of mbugu or bark cloth fastened her thorax to the bed, another band of cloth fastened down her thighs, and a man held her ankles. Another man, standing on her right side, steadied her abdomen. The operator stood, as I entered the hut, on her left side, holding his knife aloft with his right hand, and muttering an incantation. This being done, he washed his hands and the patient's...
Page 27 - It is the most individuated type that prevails in spite, nay, in another sense, positively because of its slower increase ; in a word, the survival of a species or family depends not primarily upon quantity, but upon quality. The future is not to the most numerous populations, but to the most individuated.
Page 9 - ... &c. Inquire at his shop, •middle of Stockwell Street, or at his lodgings, Miss Semple's, New Street. At a separate hour, attendance will be given for the instruction of women in the practice of midwifery.
Page 159 - Foreign Courts and Foreign Homes '. Crown 8vo, 6s. Paget .— MEMOIRS AND LETTERS OF SIR JAMES PAGET. Edited by STEPHEN PAGET, one of his sons. With Portrait. 8vo, 6s. net.
Page 444 - Schafer. — THE ESSENTIALS OF HISTOLOGY, DESCRIPTIVE AND PRACTICAL. For the use of Students.
Page 20 - I prefer to attribute them to accident, or Providence, of which I can form a conception, rather than to a contagion of which I cannot form any clear idea, at least as to this particular malady.
Page 159 - The Prize Essay on the Erection of a Sanatorium for the treatment of Tuberculosis in England...