The London Lancet, Volume 2Burgess, Stringer & Company, 1852 - Medicine |
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Results 1-5 of 96
Page 13
... joint . 43. It is otherwise with amputations above the middle of the thigh , and up to the hip - joint . They are always attended by considerable danger . 44. There can be no doubt that if the knife of the surgeon could in all cases ...
... joint . 43. It is otherwise with amputations above the middle of the thigh , and up to the hip - joint . They are always attended by considerable danger . 44. There can be no doubt that if the knife of the surgeon could in all cases ...
Page 14
... joint is often lost . A leg which might have been cut off below the knee in the first instance , is frequently obliged to be removed above the knee when done in the second . 56. In the secondary period after great injuries , the areolar ...
... joint is often lost . A leg which might have been cut off below the knee in the first instance , is frequently obliged to be removed above the knee when done in the second . 56. In the secondary period after great injuries , the areolar ...
Page 15
... joint at the battle of Toulouse , on the 12th of April , 1814 , had his thigh amputated by the late Mr. Boutflower , on the Sth of May . The night suc- ceeding the operation he passed comfortably . Next day , the 9th , the febrile ...
... joint at the battle of Toulouse , on the 12th of April , 1814 , had his thigh amputated by the late Mr. Boutflower , on the Sth of May . The night suc- ceeding the operation he passed comfortably . Next day , the 9th , the febrile ...
Page 16
... joint , measuring twenty - seven inches and a half in circumference . The thigh was amputated by Mr. Guthrie on Saturday , the 27th , the bone being sawn through just below the trochanter . She suffered a good deal of pain after the ...
... joint , measuring twenty - seven inches and a half in circumference . The thigh was amputated by Mr. Guthrie on Saturday , the 27th , the bone being sawn through just below the trochanter . She suffered a good deal of pain after the ...
Page 19
... joint , it is a most dangerous An incision should then be made through the integuments and across the great pec- toral muscle , when the artery may be readily ex- posed , and a ligature placed upon it without diffi- culty anywhere below ...
... joint , it is a most dangerous An incision should then be made through the integuments and across the great pec- toral muscle , when the artery may be readily ex- posed , and a ligature placed upon it without diffi- culty anywhere below ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abscess acid action admitted amputation appeared applied arsenious acid artery attack attention bladder blood bone bowels calculus canal cancer catheter cause cavity cervix child chloroform cicatrix considerable cyst death deposit dilatation discharge disease drachm effect examination existed external favourable femur fibrinous flap fluid forceps fracture frequently glands hæmorrhage hernia hospital inch incision inflammation injury instrument intestine irritation joint labour laryngismus latter lectures ligature limb lithotomy lithotrite lithotrity lung medicine membrane ment months morbid mucous mucous membrane muscles nature neck observed occurred operation organs ounces ovarian pain passed pathological patient performed physician pleura portion posterior practice present pressure pulse purulent quantity relief remarkable removed result side skin stricture suffered surface surgeon symptoms thigh tibia tion tissue trachea tracheotomy treatment tumour ulceration urethra urine uterine uterus vaccination veins wound
Popular passages
Page 297 - Gratiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing, more than any man in all Venice. His reasons are as two grains of wheat hid in two bushels of chaff : you shall seek all day ere you find them, and when you have them, they are not worth the search.
Page 91 - When the man of the world is devoting his days to wasting melancholy, for some deep disappointment; or in the ebullience of joy, is going out to meet his happy destiny, the lightly-moved and all-conceiving spirit of the poet, steps forth, like the sun from night to day, and with soft transitions tunes his harp to joy or woe.
Page 248 - ... which may possibly aggravate his danger. And unless I shall have found him averse from doing what was necessary in aid of my remedies, from a want of a proper sense of his perilous situation, I forbear to step out of the bounds of my province in order to offer any advice which is not necessary to promote his cure. At the same time, I think it indispensable to let his friends know the danger of his case the instant I discover it. An arrangement of his worldly affairs, in which the comfort or...
Page 331 - This flap being turned upwards, the tendon was cut through, nnd the os calcis having been disarticulated from the astragalus and cuboid bones, was removed, together with the integument of the heel, included between the two incisions. The lateral ligaments connecting the astragalus with the tibia and fibula were now divided, and the knife was carried into the joint on each side, extreme care being observed to avoid wounding the anterior tibial artery, which was in view. The astragalus was then detached...
Page 223 - But thou, O son of man, behold, they shall put bands upon thee, and shall bind thee with them, and thou shalt not go out among them : and I will make thy tongue cleave to the roof of thy mouth, that thou shalt be dumb, and shalt not be to them a reprover; for they are a rebellious house.
Page 255 - And the midwives said unto Pharaoh, Because the Hebrew women are not as the Egyptian women; for they are lively, and are delivered ere the midwives come in unto them.
Page 93 - ... of kingdoms. By the love of glory, weak nations swell into magnitude and strength. Whatever there is of terrible, whatever there is of beautiful in human events, all that shakes the soul to and fro, and is remembered while thought and flesh cling together,— all these, have their origin from the passions.
Page 137 - ... development, with pus and blood globules when the villi are affected. When a circumscribed ulcer is visible upon the os uteri to the naked eye, after death, such as occurs in eruptive affections of the os and cervix, and is examined by the microscope with a low power, it is found to consist of a base from which the villi are entirely removed, or in which only the scattered debris of villi remain ; and, surrounding this base, there is a fringe of enlarged villi, partially or entirely denuded of...
Page 304 - ... with variolous matter, or by wilful exposure to variolous matter, or to any matter, article, or thing impregnated with variolous matter, or wilfully by any other means whatsoever produce the disease of smallpox in any person in England...
Page 136 - The mucous membrane of the os and cervix uteri, like the mucoas membrane of other parts, consisted of epithelium, primary or basement membrane, and. fibrous tissue bloodvessels and nerves. But as there were some special characteristics pertaining to this tissue, he proposed, for the convenience of description, to examine, first the mucous membrane of the os uteri and external portion of the cervix ; and, secondly, the mucous lining of the cervical cavity or canal. The epithelial layer of the former...