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" That arsenic does not prevent the liability to subsequent attacks, but that such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion. "
New York Medical Journal - Page 131
1876
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The New York Journal of Medicine, Volumes 12-13

1854 - 946 pages
...to subsequent attacks, but that such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion. 17. That the early age of the patient does not in the least forbid resort to the arsenical treatment....
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The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half ..., Parts 28-29

1854 - 720 pages
...to subsequent attacks, but that such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion. 17. That the early age of Ihe patient does not in the least forbid resort to the arsenical treatment....
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Nelson's American Lancet, Volume 10

1854 - 350 pages
...liability to subsequent nUack-», but they агн always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion. The early age ol the patient \loes not forbid the arsenical treatment. — STARTIN, Med. Tirnes-fe...
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The Retrospect of Medicine, Volume 29

1854 - 534 pages
...to subsequent attacks, but that such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion. 17. That the early age of the patient does not in the least forbid resort to the arsenical treatment....
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The Use and Value of Arsenic in the Treatment of Diseases of the Skin

Lucius Duncan Bulkley - 1876 - 64 pages
...December, 1875, p. 444). * Lancet, February, 1859, p. 158, and Medical Times and Gazette, Jannary, 1864, p. 10. (Stille's " Therapeutics and Materia...affection of the skin in which he has not reported its effects. Of the value of arsenic in certain forms of acne, or, rather, in certain cases, I can...
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Transactions, Volume 27

American Medical Association - 1876 - 730 pages
...subsequent attacks, but he states that such attcicks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in...intensity on each successive occasion. He has recently Edinburgh Medical Jonrnal, vol. iii., 1858, p. 964. A practical Treatise on Eczema, 3d edit., London,...
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Lectures on Clinical Surgery, Volume 1

Jonathan Hutchinson - 1879 - 402 pages
...to subsequent attacks, but that such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion." Since that report was written, now more than twenty years ago, I have seen a considerable number of...
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The Kansas City Medical Record: A Monthly Journal of ..., Volume 7, Issue 4

1890 - 44 pages
...prevent the liability to subsequent attacks, are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion." He administers the arsenic in many cases every two hours, and thus being taken apart from a meal at times...
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Edinburgh Medical Journal, Volume 35, Part 1

1890 - 848 pages
...liability to subsequent attacks, but such attacks are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion." He administers the arsenic in many cases every two hours, and thus being taken apart from a meal at times...
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Medical Brief, Volume 18

1890 - 1368 pages
...prevent the liability to subsequent attacks, are always much less severe than the original one, and tend, if treated by the same remedy, to diminish in intensity on each successive occasion." He administers the arsenic in many cases every two hours, and thus being taken apart from a meal at times...
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