North Carolina Medical Journal, Volume 48, Issue 6

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1902

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Page 257 - A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by HOBART AMORY HARE, MD, Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia. Octavo, handsomely bound in cloth, 412 pages, 54 illustrations.
Page 258 - A Text-Book of the Practice of Medicine. By JAMES M. ANDERS, MD, PH. D., LL. D., Professor of the Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine, Medico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia.
Page 262 - Diseases published by the same house. A strong feature of the work will be its illustrations, reproduced from recent photographs, the major portion of which will be so colored as to give a very faithful representation of typical cases of Variola in the successive stages of the disease, also unusual phases of Variola, Vaccinia, Varicella, and diseases with which Small-pox is liable to be confounded.
Page 261 - Edited by WILLIAM H. HOWELL, PH. D., MD, Professor of Physiology in the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
Page 260 - PATHOLOGY, DERMATOLOGY, DISEASES OF THE EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT, AND OTHER TOPICS OF INTEREST TO STUDENTS AND PRACTITIONERS BY LEADING MEMBERS OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION THROUGHOUT THE WORLD EDITED BY HENRY W. CATTELL, AM, MD, PHILADELPHIA, USA WITH THE COLLABORATION OF JOHN B.
Page 261 - Even in the short time that has elapsed since the first edition of this work there has been much progress in Physiology, and in this edition the book has been thoroughly revised to keep pace with this progress. The chapter upon the Central Nervous System has been entirely rewritten.
Page 217 - Tuberculosis and all diseases arising from impoverished blood and a depleted physical condition demand the most efficient NUTRITION The patient MUST have a new and continuous supply of all the vital elements in which the blood is deficient. Introduce in all such cases LIVE BLOOD.
Page 259 - ... deserves, and this volume will come to many as a revelation of the possibilities of therapeutics in this important field. The reading part of the English-speaking medical profession has passed judgment on this monograph.
Page 266 - Medical Journal). The first group comprises those cases in which pain occurs independently of eating, and the second group, those cases in which the pain occurs after food is taken. The treatment of the first class consists of change of scene, a sea voyage or mountain air and abundant food at regular intervals. The palliative treatment consists of iron, quinine, arsenic, nux vomica and the mineral acids.
Page 262 - Huddleston, all of whom are officials of the Health Department of New York City, and have had unusual opportunities for the study and treatment of this disease during the present epidemic. The work is to be in atlas form, similar to "Fox's Photographic Atlas of Skin Diseases,

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