Canada Lancet, Volume 21Lancet Publishing Company, 1889 |
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Results 1-5 of 92
Page 1
... symptoms . Under these circumstances Dr. Browne came to ask me to see the case with him , and told me that he believed he had a case of extra - uterine fœtation . I found the woman suffering very severely from pelvic and abdominal pain ...
... symptoms . Under these circumstances Dr. Browne came to ask me to see the case with him , and told me that he believed he had a case of extra - uterine fœtation . I found the woman suffering very severely from pelvic and abdominal pain ...
Page 3
... symptoms demanding medical aid may be those of fatal rupture , and as Dr. Herman , of London , says in a very thoughtful and temperate paper which has just appeared in the London Lancet , if we judged of the fatality of extra - uterine ...
... symptoms demanding medical aid may be those of fatal rupture , and as Dr. Herman , of London , says in a very thoughtful and temperate paper which has just appeared in the London Lancet , if we judged of the fatality of extra - uterine ...
Page 4
... symptoms , as here described , arising . Expectancy . Are we ever to let the patient alone , except for the medical treatment of certain symptoms ? If Veit and others be correct in their opinion that all cases of retro - uterine ...
... symptoms , as here described , arising . Expectancy . Are we ever to let the patient alone , except for the medical treatment of certain symptoms ? If Veit and others be correct in their opinion that all cases of retro - uterine ...
Page 10
... symptoms is not an unmitigated evil , as he is , at the same time , prevented from misrepresenting or magnifying them . It simply makes a person pay more attention to physical signs , and look more closely for positive symptoms , than ...
... symptoms is not an unmitigated evil , as he is , at the same time , prevented from misrepresenting or magnifying them . It simply makes a person pay more attention to physical signs , and look more closely for positive symptoms , than ...
Page 11
... symptoms of narcotic poisoning . So long as the sedative continues to be given the bowels are costive , the child often vomits , his relish for food in great part disappears , and he lies with pupils firmly contracted in a dull , heavy ...
... symptoms of narcotic poisoning . So long as the sedative continues to be given the bowels are costive , the child often vomits , his relish for food in great part disappears , and he lies with pupils firmly contracted in a dull , heavy ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal abscess acid acute albuminuria alcohol anæmia aneurism antipyrine antiseptic applied bacillus bandage believe bladder blood body bowels Bright's disease CANADA LANCET carbolic carbolic acid cardiac cause cavity cent child chloroform chronic clinical condition cure death diagnosis diarrhoea dilatation diphtheria disease disinfection doses drachm drug effect erysipelas examination fact fever fluid four gastric give given glands grains hæmorrhage hernia Hospital hot water hydrophobia inflammation injection intestinal iodoform irritation Jour LANCET liver lungs Medical medicine membrane ment method milk months Montreal mucous mucous membrane observed occurred Ontario Ontario Medical Association operation pain patient phthisis physician pill pneumonia practice practitioner present Prof profession Professor remedy salicylate salicylic acid says skin solution splint stomach surgeons surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue Toronto treated treatment tube tubercle tuberculosis tumor ulcer urine uterine uterus vomiting wound York
Popular passages
Page 64 - Manual of Chemistry. A Guide to Lectures and Laboratory work for Beginners in Chemistry. A Text-book, specially adapted for Students of Pharmacy and Medicine. By W. SIMON, PH. D., MD, Professor of Chemistry and Toxicology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, and Professor of Chemistry in the Maryland College of Pharmacy.
Page 203 - To keep a privy-vault disinfected during the progress of an epidemic, sprinkle chloride of lime freely over the surface of its contents daily. Or, if the odor of chlorine is objectionable, apply daily four or five gallons of Standard Solution No.
Page 201 - Disinfection of Excreta, etc. The infectious character of the dejections of patients suffering from cholera and from typhoid fever is well established; and this is true of mild cases and of the earliest stages of these diseases as well as of severe and fatal cases. It is probable that epidemic dysentery, tuberculosis, and perhaps diphtheria, yellow fever, scarlet fever, and typhus fever, may also be transmitted by means of the alvine discharges of the sick. It is, therefore, of fhe first importance...
Page 201 - The object of disinfection is to prevent the extension of infectious diseases by destroying the specific infectious material which gives rise to them.
Page 155 - 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 368 - Masiich. . >£ gr. m Ft. one pill. Lady Webster Dinner Pills. This is an excellent combination officially designated as Aloes and Mastich, USP We take very great pleasure in asking physicians to prescribe them more liberally, as they are very excellent as an aperient for persons of full habit or gouty tendency when given in doses of one pill after dinner.
Page 368 - DOSE— A heaping teaspoonful in half a glass of water, to be repeated once after an interval of thirty minutes, if necessary.
Page 144 - A solution of 1 : 500. For the destruction of infectious material which owes its infecting power to the presence of micro-organisms not containing spores, the committee recommends, — 1. Fire. Complete destruction by burning. 2. Boiling in water half an hour. 3. Dry heat, 110° C. (230° Fahr.) for two hours. 4. Chloride of lime, I to 4 per cent, solution.
Page 200 - FOR MERCHANDISE AND THE MAILS.* The disinfection of merchandise and of the mails will only be required under exceptional circumstances; free aeration will usually be sufficient. If disinfection seems necessary, fumigation with sulphur dioxide, as recommended for woolen clothing, etc., will be the only practicable method of accomplishing it.