The Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, 3. sējumsJ. McCafferty, 1847 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 100.
37. lappuse
... cause ? From the presence of vitiated secretions and undigested decomposed food in the stomach , it is answered . And how does this act ? By sympathy ? Now , this cannot be either proved , or even rendered probable . It is true , when ...
... cause ? From the presence of vitiated secretions and undigested decomposed food in the stomach , it is answered . And how does this act ? By sympathy ? Now , this cannot be either proved , or even rendered probable . It is true , when ...
42. lappuse
... cause . Is relieved or cured by antiphlogistic treatment . Gastric Cancer ( early period . ) Occasionally runs in families . Is rarely , if ever , refer- rible to local agencies . Is not cured , but is re- lieved by special treat- ment ...
... cause . Is relieved or cured by antiphlogistic treatment . Gastric Cancer ( early period . ) Occasionally runs in families . Is rarely , if ever , refer- rible to local agencies . Is not cured , but is re- lieved by special treat- ment ...
43. lappuse
... Causes . - Parenchymatous orchitis , like epididymitis , recognizes as its cause , most frequently , an existing gonorrhoea , or one that has recently disappeared ; in fact , it is most frequently gonorrhoeal . We have attempted to push ...
... Causes . - Parenchymatous orchitis , like epididymitis , recognizes as its cause , most frequently , an existing gonorrhoea , or one that has recently disappeared ; in fact , it is most frequently gonorrhoeal . We have attempted to push ...
56. lappuse
... cause of the complaint ; he examined the abdomen , and found an ovarian tumor , which was compressing the rectum , and so mechanically caused constipation . The position of the patient in bed was altered so as to relieve the rectum from ...
... cause of the complaint ; he examined the abdomen , and found an ovarian tumor , which was compressing the rectum , and so mechanically caused constipation . The position of the patient in bed was altered so as to relieve the rectum from ...
57. lappuse
... cause of sea - sickness is purely mechani- cal ; it is not the air of the ocean , neither the odor of the ship which provokes it . Whether sitting or lying down one experiences an alternate movement of elevation and depression while at ...
... cause of sea - sickness is purely mechani- cal ; it is not the air of the ocean , neither the odor of the ship which provokes it . Whether sitting or lying down one experiences an alternate movement of elevation and depression while at ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
abdomen acid action alcohol aneurism appearance applied artery attended auscultation believe bladder blister blood bone bowels calomel cause child cold commenced congestion continued convulsions cure death diagnosis diarrhoea dilated discharge disease doses drachms dysentery effects emetic ether examination excitement extract fatal fluid frequently give globules grains head inch inflammation influence inhalation injury intermittent intestines iodine irritation Journal labour lancet laudanum lungs malignant matter Medical medicine membrane ment Mercury minutes mode months mucous membrane nature nervous nitric acid observed occur operation opium organs ounces pain paroxysm pathology patient periosteum physician pills portion practice practitioner present produced profession pulse quantity quinine remarks remedy Remittent fever result salivation says sickness skin spasm spinal stomach strychnine suffering sulphate sulphuric sulphuric ether surgeon Surgical symptoms syphilis tetanus tion tongue treatment tumour typhus ulceration urine uterine uterus vagina vomiting wound
Populāri fragmenti
543. lappuse - A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable; for his attendance may continue to be highly useful to the patient, and comforting to the relatives around him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by alleviating pain and other symptoms, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance, under such circumstances, would be sacrificing to fanciful delicacy, and mistaken liberality, that moral duty, which is independent of, and far superior to, all pecuniary...
547. lappuse - But if a member of the profession neglect his business in quest of pleasure and amusement, he cannot be considered as entitled to the advantages of the frequent and long-continued exercise of this fraternal courtesy, without awarding to the physician who officiates the fees arising from the discharge of his professional duties. In obstetrical and important surgical cases, which give rise to unusual fatigue, anxiety and responsibility, it is just that the fees accruing therefrom should be awarded...
546. lappuse - All practitioners of medicine, their wives, and their children while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case; and the natural anxiety and solicitude which he experiences at the sickness of a wife, a child, or any one who, by the ties of consanguinity, is rendered peculiarly dear to him, tend to obscure his...
544. lappuse - The obedience of a patient to the prescriptions of his physician should be prompt and implicit. He should never permit his own crude opinions as to their fitness to influence his attention to them. A failure in one particular may render an otherwise judicious treatment dangerous, and even fatal. This remark is equally applicable to diet, drink, and exercise. As patients become convalescent, they are very apt to suppose that the rules prescribed for them may be disregarded, and the consequence, but...
551. lappuse - DUTIES OF THE PROFESSION TO THE PUBLIC, AND OF THE OBLIGATIONS OF THE PUBLIC TO THE PROFESSION. ART. I. — Duties of the profession to the public. § 1. As good citizens, it is the duty of physicians to be ever vigilant for the welfare of the community, and to bear their part in sustaining its institutions and burdens...
549. lappuse - Indeed, such visits should be avoided, except under peculiar circumstances; and when they are made, no particular inquiries should be instituted relative to the nature of the disease, or the remedies employed, but the topics of conversation should be as foreign to the case as circumstances will admit.
546. lappuse - ... timidity and irresolution in his practice. Under such circumstances, medical men are peculiarly dependent upon each other, and kind offices and professional aid should always be cheerfully and gratuitously afforded. Visits ought not, however, to be obtruded officiously ; as such unasked civility may give rise to embarrassment, or interfere with that choice, on which confidence depends. But, if a distant member of the faculty, whose circumstances are affluent, request attendance, and an honorarium...
543. lappuse - ... the community, and who are required to make so many sacrifices of comfort, ease and health, for the welfare of those who avail themselves of their services, certainly have a right to expect and require that their patients should entertain a just sense of the duties which they owe to their medical attendants.
548. lappuse - ... 9. As circumstances sometimes occur to render a special consultation desirable, when the continued attendance of two physicians might be objectionable to the patient, the member of the faculty whose assistance is required in such cases, should sedulously guard against all future unsolicited attendance. As such consultations require an extraordinary portion • both of time and attention, at least a double honorarium may be reasonably expected § 10.
545. lappuse - A patient should, after his recovery, entertain a just and enduring sense of the value of the services rendered him by his physician ; for these are of such a character, that no mere pecuniary acknowledgment can repay or cancel them.