A Treatise on the Continued Fevers of Great Britain |
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Page 10
... known to be harmless . Their presence is therefore probably the consequence , rather than the cause , of disease . 3. Although the mode of introduction of a contagium often eludes observation , yet if all contagious diseases can arise ...
... known to be harmless . Their presence is therefore probably the consequence , rather than the cause , of disease . 3. Although the mode of introduction of a contagium often eludes observation , yet if all contagious diseases can arise ...
Page 18
... known experiment of Claude Bernard , an elevation of temperature to the extent of from 7 ° to 11 ° Fahrenheit is pro- duced on one side of the face of an animal , when the trunk uniting the sympathetic ganglia of the neck on the ...
... known experiment of Claude Bernard , an elevation of temperature to the extent of from 7 ° to 11 ° Fahrenheit is pro- duced on one side of the face of an animal , when the trunk uniting the sympathetic ganglia of the neck on the ...
Page 25
... known as Pestilential or Putrid Fever , or by some name derived from the eruption , or expressive of the locality in which it appeared , as Camp- , Jail- , Hospital- , or Ship - fever . SECTION III . - HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF TYPHUS FEVER ...
... known as Pestilential or Putrid Fever , or by some name derived from the eruption , or expressive of the locality in which it appeared , as Camp- , Jail- , Hospital- , or Ship - fever . SECTION III . - HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF TYPHUS FEVER ...
Page 32
... known to break down and colliquate the blood - globules , an to render the animal juices more acrid and alkaline . ' * 6 of The first edition of Huxham's celebrated Essay on Fevers ' ap peared in 1739. Chapter viii . is entitled ...
... known to break down and colliquate the blood - globules , an to render the animal juices more acrid and alkaline . ' * 6 of The first edition of Huxham's celebrated Essay on Fevers ' ap peared in 1739. Chapter viii . is entitled ...
Page 43
... known that in relapsing fever itself no benefit is derived from blood - letting , and even in the epidemic of 1817-19 some observers had the sagacity to discern its inutility . Dr. William Brown of Edinburgh maintained that the cases ...
... known that in relapsing fever itself no benefit is derived from blood - letting , and even in the epidemic of 1817-19 some observers had the sagacity to discern its inutility . Dr. William Brown of Edinburgh maintained that the cases ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid acute admission admitted aged albumen Alison appears attack Barrallier blood bowels cause cent cerebral symptoms Chomel Christison circumstances commencement common complication congestion contagious Continued Fever convalescence Cormack crisis death delirium diarrhoea died disease doses Douglas duration Edinburgh enlarged enteric fever epidemic epidemic of 1843 epidemic of typhus epistaxis eruption fatal Febris Fièvre fluid followed glands Glasgow Griesinger hæmorrhage headache ileum increased Infirmary inflammation instances intestinal Ireland Irish Jacquot jaundice Jenner Journ kidneys lesions liver London Fever Hospital Louis lungs mesenteric glands morbid mucous membrane observed occasionally occurred opium ounces pain paroxysm patient perforation peritonitis petechial Peyer's patches poison prevalent prostration pulse pyrexia quantity quinine rare rate of mortality relapsing fever result severe skin sloughs solitary glands sometimes spleen spots stage stools Temp temperature tion tissue tongue treatment typhoid fever ulceration urea urine usually ventilation vomiting Wardell week writers ZUELZER
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Page 731 - A SYSTEM of SURGERY, Theoretical and Practical. In Treatises by Various Authors.