The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 77Cupples, Upham & Company, 1868 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
acid agent Anatomy Apparatus ARTIFICIAL LIMBS atomizing attention AUSTIN FLINT Bellevue Hospital Bigelow Bismuth Boston Boston Medical bowels CASWELL chloroform cholera chronic cicatrices cicatrix Clinical Medicine Cod Liver Oil CODMAN & SHURTLEFF contains continues crust Cubebs cured daily death Diseases of Women doses Dragees Druggists Edition Elixir of Calisaya eruption ether Extract Faculty fluid fresh grains Hospital hygrometer impetigo improved inflammation injection Instruments iodine Iron Lectures legs LXXVII.-No lymph manufactured Mass Medical and Surgical Medical College MEDICAL JOURNAL Medical Society ment METCALF moisture Morphine otitis externa pain Paris patient Pepsine perfect phosphate physicians Physiology Pill postage prepared Price Prof profession Professor published quills Quinine re-vaccination remedy Rhigolene Salt sent Session skin smallpox strychnia Surgeon Surgery Surgical Journal symptoms Syringes syrup temperature tion tonic treatment Tremont Street tube tumor tympanum urine vaccination VIRUS weeks York
Fréquemment cités
Page 381 - But when it had been shown by the researches of Pasteur that the septic property of the atmosphere depended, not on the oxygen or any gaseous constituent, but on minute organisms suspended in it, which owed their energy to their vitality, it occurred to me that decomposition in the injured part might be avoided without excluding the air, by applying as a dressing some material capable of destroying the life of the floating particles.
Page 361 - LECTURES ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF PHYSIC. Delivered at King's College, London. A new American, from the last revised and enlarged English edition, with Additions, by D. FRANCIS CONDIE, MD, author of ".A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of Children,
Page 238 - Provost and Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania.
Page 68 - A distinctive feature of the method of instruction in this College is the union of clinical and didactic teaching. All the lectures are given within the Hospital grounds. During the Regular Winter Session, in addition to four didactic lectures on every week-day, except Saturday, two or three hours are daily allotted to clinical instruction. The union of clinical and didactic teaching will...
Page 381 - The material which I have employed is carbolic or phenic acid, a volatile organic compound, which appears to exercise a peculiarly destructive influence upon low forms of life, and hence is the most powerful antiseptic with which we are at present acquainted.
Page 49 - ... cotton, or floss silk ; this passes into an adjacent vessel of water placed at such a distance as to allow a length of conducting thread of about three inches. The cup or glass...
Page 256 - The immeasurable therapeutic superiority of this oil over all other kinds of Cod Liver Oils sold in Europe or in this market, is due to the addition of IODINE, BROMINE and PHOSPHORUS. This oil possesses...
Page 188 - That every medical college should immediately adopt some effectual method of ascertaining the actual attendance of students upon its lectures and other exercises, and at the close of each session, of the attendance of the student, a certificate, specifying the time and the courses of instruction actually attended, should be given, and such certificate only should be received by other colleges as evidence of such attendance.
Page 67 - Dragees are recognized, both in Europe and in the United States, as the most reliable way of dispensing valuable medicines. Physicians will find many worthless imitations, and they must be careful to see that the Pills dispensed by the Druggius are made by Messrs. GARNIER, LAMOUREUX & Co., Members of the College of Pharmacy, Paris.
Page 58 - ... harvests. In every other walk or sphere of science, literature and refined humanity, the civilized world, with unfaltering progress, has pushed forward, at the same time, its dominion over mind and matter. It is the object of the present remarks to show that the amount of knowledge appropriate to civilization which now exists in the world is more than double, and in many cases more than tenfold, what it was about half a century ago...