St. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 58

Couverture
1890
 

Table des matières

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Page 332 - LDS, says : I have for a long time had a gentleman patient under my care for disease of the teeth, and although my operations progressed favorably, I had many difficulties to contend •with. The whole of my patient's teeth appeared to have a syphilitic taint, and with increased flow of saliva, amounting to chronic salivation. These were not the only troubles I had to surmount...
Page 127 - ... of new treatment in dictionary form, with references to the medical literature of the world pertaining to the year's progress of medicine.
Page 113 - I drachm of rectified spirit in fifteen minutes, and water may be added to this solution without reprecipitating the drug. A good way of giving it is to tell the patient to dissolve it in a little brandy, add water to his liking, and drink it shortly before going to bed.
Page 388 - Have you ever, when completely awake, had a vivid impression of seeing or being touched by a living being or inanimate object, or of hearing a voice ; which impression, so far as you could discover, was not due to any external physical cause...
Page 262 - Medical students and other persons, ladies and gentlemen who are not physicians, but who take a special interest in the work of a particular sitting, may be invited by the president or be allowed to attend the sitting by special permission.
Page 170 - Slides and manuscript will be examined and receipted for as soon as received. The prizes will be adjudged on the first day of October, 1890. These nominal prizes are offered less in expectation of results from the money as an agent than in the hope that the offer may furnish a point d'appui for really needed work.
Page 128 - A Treatise on Diseases of the Nose and Throat. In two volumes. By Francke Huntington Bosworth, AM, MD, professor of diseases of the throat in the...
Page 74 - It was in 1844 that the now well-known Aperient called "Tarrant's Seltzer" was prepared for the use of the coterie of physicians which composed the staff of the New York Hospital, and from that time to the present it has been a favorite saline with physicians of all schools. It is not only a most palatable and safe Aperient, but is now extensively used as an antacid in Gouty or Rheumatic Diathesis and as a vehicle to administer the Salicylates, Lithia Salts and Tincture of Iron.
Page 332 - ... generally, which, though not painful to my patient, was still a source of considerable discomfort and militated greatly against the success of my operations...
Page 187 - Derangements of digestion cause more than fifty per cent, of these deaths. This class of diseases may be restricted by proper attention to the food. (3) Infectious diseases are serious in their effects upon infantile mortality. They may be restricted by isolating the sick and disinfecting clothing and rooms. (4) About...

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