Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, 第 9 卷Longmans, Green and Company, 1818 |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常见术语和短语
abdomen adhesive affusion Aneurism appearance artery attack became black vomit bleeding body bone bowels bronchial arteries Cadets calomel cavity cellular circumstances coagulated coagulum colour commencement considerable continued cure degree deposit discharge disease Dissection doses effect evacuations examination experiment external extremely femoral femoral artery femur fever fluid formed fracture fractured bone Fungus Fungus Hæmatodes glands hæmorrhage Hospital Hydrocele inch increased inflammation injected instance integuments ligature liver lung M.D. Physician Marlow medicines medullary medullary cavity membrane mercury minute months muscles nearly night o'clock observed operation ossific ounces of blood pain patient periosteum pleura produced pulpy pulsation pulse quantity remarkable remedies removed scrotum seemed shewed side similar skin stomach Street structure Subcutaneous Nævus substance suffered surface Surgeon swelling symptoms syringe taken tion transfusion treatment tumor Tunica Vaginalis Testis ture ulceration uterus vascular vein vessels violent wound Yellow Fever
热门引用章节
第181页 - ... part of the pivot, yet there is no corresponding female screw in the hole which is to receive it. Every practical accoucheur will know, that it is not easy, or always possible, to lock the joint of the forceps with such accuracy as to bring this pivot and hole into opposite contact. This Chamberlen soon discovered, and next produced a more light and manageable instrument, which instead of...
第215页 - Bateman's case it was remarked—" that the action of the heart and arteries, which was extremely feeble as well as irregular while awake, was so much more enfeebled during sleep, as to be in fact almost suspended, and thus to occasion...
第181页 - First, we have a simple vectis, with an open fenestrum ; then we have the idea of uniting two of these instruments by a joint, which makes each blade seem as a fulcrum to the other, instead of making a fulcrum of the soft parts of the mother ; and which also unites a power of drawing the head forward. This idea is at first by a pivot, which being riveted, makes the instrument totally incapable of application. Then he goes to work again, and having...
第338页 - The colour I am most at a loss with is green, and in attempting to distinguish it from red it is nearly guess-work. Scarlet in most cases I can distinguish, but a dark bottle-green I could not, with any certainty, from brown. Light yellow I know ; dark yellow I might confound with light brown, though in most cases I think I should know them from red.
第181页 - ... then we have the idea of uniting two of these instruments by a joint, which makes each blade seem as a fulcrum to the other, instead of making a fulcrum of the soft parts of the mother ; and which also unites a power of drawing the head forward. This idea is at first by a pivot, which being riveted makes the instrument totally incapable of application ! Then he goes to work again, and having made a notch in each vectis for the joint, he fixes a pivot in one only, which projecting, is to be received...
第399页 - When the ears are stopped, and a watch is brought in contact with any part of the head, face, teeth, or neck ; or if a stick, water, &c. be interposed between any of these parts and the watch, the sound will be .heard as well as when the ears are open.
第338页 - Light yellow I know ; dark yellow I might confound with light brown, though in most cases, I think, I should know them from red. The different shades of red and green, I know not to which they belong ; but, when they are before me, I see a difference in the shade. Though I see different shades in looking at a rainbow, I should say it was a mixture of yellow and blue, — yellow in the centre, and blue towards the edges.
第29页 - A Treatise on the Diseases of Arteries and Veins; containing the Pathology and Treatment of Aneurisms and wounded Arteries.
第215页 - It was now distinctly obvious, that the action of the heart and arteries, which was extremely feeble as well as irregular while awake, was so much more enfeebled during sleep, *as to be in fact almost suspended, and thus to occasion those alarming faintings and sinkings ; so that it became necessary, notwithstanding the extreme drowsiness which had succeeded the long continued watchfulness, to interrupt the sleep at the expiration of two minutes, by which time, or even sooner, the sinking of the...
第xvi页 - Professor of Surgery to the Royal College of Surgeons, and Regius Professor of Military Surgery in the University of Edinburgh.