The Medical Current, Volume 9Eugene F. Starke, Wilson A. Smith, Wesley A. Dunn Dunn & Smith, 1893 - Medicine |
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid aconite action allopathic antikamnia attended believe belladonna better blood body bowels brain called catarrh cause cervix chancroid Chicago child chloroform chorea chronic clinical condition Congress course cubebs cure Denver diagnosis dilated diphtheria disease doctor doses drug dysmenorrhoea effect endometritis examination experience fever fracture frequently hæmorrhage Hahnemann hand head headache Homeopathic Medical Society Homœopathic Homœopathic Medical hospital inflammation irritation labor materia medica Medical College MEDICAL CURRENT medicine meeting membrane ment mental months muscles Natr-m nature nerve nervous nitric acid normal opathic operation organs pain paper patient perinæum periosteum physician practice practitioner present produce profession quinine rectum remedies removed result silicea spinal stomach student success suffering surgeon surgery surgical symptoms temperature therapeutics tissue treated treatment trouble tumor typhoid typhoid fever ulcer urine uterine uterus vagina vomiting vulva weeks woman
Popular passages
Page 196 - The effects desired, and certainly as a rule produced, are a decided reduction of temperature, a marked diminution in the frequency of the pulse, a decided moisture of the skin or free sweating, a slower and more easy respiration, or relief from pain, and the feeling of fullness...
Page 194 - Quinine is a poison to the minute organism, sarcina ; and antikamnia exerts a soothing, quieting effect on the nerve filaments. A full dose (two fivegrain tablets) of this remedy will often arrest a commencing pneumonia or pleuritis.
Page 329 - New Inventions in Instruments and Appliances; Books of the Year, etc. The arrangement of the work is alphabetical, and with its complete Index, makes it a reference book of rare worth. In short, the "Annual...
Page 245 - All on each in turn depending — • Heavenly ministers descending—- And again to heaven up-tending — Floating, mingling, interweaving — Rising, sinking, and receiving Each from each, while each is giving On to each, and each relieving Each, the pails of gold, the living Current through the air is heaving ; Breathing blessings, see them bending, Balanced worlds from change defending, While every where diffused is harmony unending...
Page 196 - The effects desired, and certainly, as a rule, produced, are a decided reduction of the temperature, a marked diminution in the frequency of the pulse, a decided moisture of the skin, or free sweating, a slower and more easy respiration, or relief from pain and the feeling of fullness in the chest, a diminution of the cough and of the tenacious and bloody character of the expectoration; and, in short, not only is there a checking of the fever, but of all evidence — general and local — of the...
Page 125 - Marchand, to be a stable compound, resulting from the chemical reaction that takes place when cp glycerine is submitted, under certain conditions, to the action of fifteen times its own volume of -ozone, under normal atmospheric pressure at a temperature of 0°C. The necessity of using cp glycerine is imperative, as a presence of the water or other foreign matter in the glycerine causes the...
Page 329 - HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF D. HAYES AGNEW, MD, LL.D. By J. Howe Adams, MD With fourteen full-page portraits and other illustrations. In one large royal octavo volume, 376 pages. Extra cloth, beveled edges, $2.50 net; halfmorocco, gilt top, $3.50 net.
Page 75 - THIRTY-THREE languished for from eight to ten months, and then died; EIGHT became idiotic, and died before the age of five years ; and TWO came into the world with numerous fractures of the bones of the limbs...
Page 125 - Although glycozone absorbs water readily, it does not deteriorate when kept at a temperature of no degrees F as long as it retains its proper anhydrous condition. The therapeutic properties of glycozone and Marchand's peroxide of hydrogen (medicinal) differ in the following particulars: Peroxide of hydrogen (medicinal) instantly destroys the morbid elements of diseased surfaces of the skin or of the mucous membrane with which it comes in contact, leaving the tissues beneath, in a healthy condition....
Page 196 - labyrinthine vertigo," this combination has, by persistent use, entirely removed the trouble in many cases. The curative effects of quinine and the coal-tar antipyretics in sunstroke are well known, and have been used recently with great benefit in numerous instances in this country and in India. In hysteria, and even in epilepsy, the combination of quinine and antikamnia is often indicated, and will frequently give the desired results. In whooping-cough and hay fever, quinine and antikamnia will...