Clinical manual for the study of medical cases. ed. by J. Finlayson, ©ºÑº·Õè 313

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˹éÒ xxi - A CLINICAL MEMOIR ON CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE EYE AND EAR, CONSEQUENT ON INHERITED SYPHILIS; with an appended Chapter of Commentaries on the Transmission of Syphilis from Parent to Offspring, and its more remote Consequences. With Plates and Woodcuts, 8vo. cloth, 9s. OR. INMAN, MRCP ON MYALGIA: ITS NATURE!
˹éÒ xxi - ON DISEASES OF THE ABDOMEN, comprising those of the Stomach and other Parts of the Alimentary Canal, (Esophagus, Stomach, Caecum, Intestines, and Peritoneum.
˹éÒ 16 - ... a sharp nose, hollow eyes, collapsed temples; the ears cold, contracted, and their lobes turned out: the skin about the forehead being rough, distended, and parched; the color of the whole face being green, black, livid, or lead-colored.
˹éÒ 17 - ... the vertebrae are quite visible ; and their connections with the sternum are also manifest ; the intercostal spaces are hollow and rhomboidal, agreeably to the configuration of the bone ; hypochondriac region lank and retracted; the abdomen and flanks contiguous to the spine; joints clearly developed, prominent, devoid of flesh ; so also with the tibia, ischium and humerus ; the spine of the vertebrae, formerly hollow, now protrudes, the muscles on either side being wasted ; the whole shoulder...
˹éÒ xix - Allbutt (TC)— ON THE USE OF THE OPHTHALMOSCOPE in Diseases of the Nervous System and of the Kidneys ; also in certain other General Disorders. By THOMAS CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, MA, MD Cantab., Physician to the Leeds General Infirmary, Lecturer on Practical Medicine, &c.
˹éÒ 386 - A small wide-mouthed gas bottle of about 60 cc capacity. 3. A short test-tube of about 10 cc capacity, and of such height that when introduced into the gas bottle it will stand within it in a slightly inclined position. The following are the arrangements for combining the apparatus and working an experiment : The graduated tube, held in a clamp attached to a retort stand, is^ depressed into a glass cylinder, nearly filled with water, until the zero mark, which is near the upper end, exactly coincides...
˹éÒ v - CLINICAL MANUAL for the STUDY of MEDICAL CASES. Edited by JAMES FINLAYSON, MD, Physician and Lecturer on Clinical Medicine in the Glasgow Western Infirmary, &c.
˹éÒ 17 - ... and flat, for, owing to the loss of flesh, they neither retain their tension nor rotundity ; and owing to the same cause, the nails are bent, namely, because it is the compact flesh at their points which is intended as a support to them ; and the tension thereof is like that of the solids.
˹éÒ 25 - Respecting the movement of the hands I have these observations to make: When in acute fevers, pneumonia, phrenitis, or headache, the hands are waved before the face, hunting through empty space, as if gathering bits of straw, picking the nap from the coverlet, or tearing chaff from the wall — all such symptoms are bad and deadly.
˹éÒ 262 - The subjects of angina pectoris report that it is a suffering as sharp as anything that can be conceived in the nature of pain, and that it includes, moreover, something which is beyond the nature of pain, a sense of dying.

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