The Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Volume 3Lundsford Pitts Yandell, Theodore S. Bell Prentice & Weissinger, 1845 |
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Page 27
... operation of the cause , as to prevent inflammatory action , though other- wise , the organ may fatally suffer , as in the case of prussic acid , & c . , or to the disease Chapman's Lectures on Eruptive Fevers , & c . 27.
... operation of the cause , as to prevent inflammatory action , though other- wise , the organ may fatally suffer , as in the case of prussic acid , & c . , or to the disease Chapman's Lectures on Eruptive Fevers , & c . 27.
Page 39
... operation , where the necessity for it exists . I drew as much as sixty ounces in one case , and in another half this amount , in several successive bleedings , with the most decisive advantage . The course is justified by the state of ...
... operation , where the necessity for it exists . I drew as much as sixty ounces in one case , and in another half this amount , in several successive bleedings , with the most decisive advantage . The course is justified by the state of ...
Page 53
... operations of the other . It is in this view of man's compound existence - this union of spirit and matter ; the one , capable of immortality - of ever - living , ever blooming virtue ; the other , heir of a life so brief , that its ...
... operations of the other . It is in this view of man's compound existence - this union of spirit and matter ; the one , capable of immortality - of ever - living , ever blooming virtue ; the other , heir of a life so brief , that its ...
Page 59
... operation of the latter , and by pre- serving the balance of the secretions , it prevents those func- tional derangements which sometimes follow the use of opium even in this way . If the disease has in any degree passed into the second ...
... operation of the latter , and by pre- serving the balance of the secretions , it prevents those func- tional derangements which sometimes follow the use of opium even in this way . If the disease has in any degree passed into the second ...
Page 60
... operation of such agents . The principal object in case of gangrene is to support the general strength , and counteract the noxious influence of the dead matter , until it can be thrown off from the system . " ART . VII . — Lectures on ...
... operation of such agents . The principal object in case of gangrene is to support the general strength , and counteract the noxious influence of the dead matter , until it can be thrown off from the system . " ART . VII . — Lectures on ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid action amenorrhoea appearance applied asafoetida attended blood body bowels brain bronchial bronchial tubes calomel cause cavity character chest child cholera cold condition constipation costive croup cure death disease doses dyspepsia effect emetic eruption examination excitement fact false membrane fauces favor fever fibrine fluid frequently give grains inflammation inflammatory injection insanity instances intestines irritation Journal labor larynx lecture less lungs magnesia matter medicine menstruation ment mercury mind morbid mucous mucous membrane nature Nutt observed occurred operation opium organs ounce pain patient peculiar physician pleural cavity poison portion poultice practice practitioner present produced profession Professor proved pulse purgatives Pursh putrid remedy respiration respiratory sounds rhonchus scarlatina secretion skin sore throat sound stomach symptoms temperature tion trachea treatment tubes typhus ulcers urethra uterus Walt Willd wound
Popular passages
Page 46 - O ! how wretched Is that poor man that hangs on princes' favours. There is, betwixt that smile we would aspire to, That sweet aspect of princes, and their ruin, More pangs and fears than wars or women have ; And when he falls, he falls like Lucifer, Never to hope again.
Page 254 - Either the delusion is such that the person under its influence has a real and firm belief of some fact, not true in itself, but which if it were true, would excuse his act...
Page 254 - ... friend or foe indiscriminately; so that although there were no previous indications of violence, yet the subsequent act, connecting itself with the previous symptoms and indications, will enable an experienced person to say that the outbreak was of such a character, that for the time being it must have overborne memory and reason ; that the act was the result of the disease, and not of a mind capable of choosing; in short, that it was the result of uncontrollable impulse, and not of a person...
Page 459 - ... other animals. A man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike, and in an army of a hundred thousand men every one may be known from another.
Page 254 - The character of the mental disease relied upon to excuse the accused in this case, is partial insanity, consisting of melancholy, accompanied by delusion. The conduct may be in many respects regular, the mind acute, and the conduct apparently governed by rules of propriety, and at the same time there may be insane delusion by which the mind is perverted.
Page 263 - The invalid's case was therefore considered perfectly hopeless and he was given up by all his comrades, who thought of little else than to consign him to the grave. But being unwilling to resign himself to the fate which appeared frowning over him without a last effort, he obtained the consent of two or three of the party who undertook to amputate his arm merely to gratify the wishes of the dying man ; for in such a light they viewed him. Their only case of instruments consisted of a handsaw, a butcher's...
Page 253 - ... in order to constitute a crime, a person must have intelligence and capacity enough to have a criminal intent and purpose; and if his reason and mental powers are either so deficient that he has no will, no conscience, or controlling mental power, or if, through the overwhelming violence of mental disease, his intellectual power is for the time obliterated, he is not a responsible moral agent, and is not punishable for criminal acts.
Page 253 - If then it is proved to the satisfaction of the jury, that the mind of the accused was in a diseased and unsound state ; the question will be whether the disease existed to so high a degree, that for the time being it overwhelmed the reason, conscience, and judgment, and whether the prisoner, in committing the homicide, acted from an irresistible and uncontrollable impulse. If so, then the act was not the act of a voluntary agent, but the involuntary act of the body, without the concurrence of a...
Page 263 - A few days before the caravan had reached this place, a Mr. Broadus, in attempting to draw his rifle from a wagon muzzle foremost, discharged its contents into his arm. The bone being dreadfully shattered, the unfortunate man was advised to submit to an amputation at once ; otherwise, it being in the month of August, and excessively warm, mortification would soon ensue. But Broadus obstinately refused to consent to this course, till death began to stare him in the face. By this time, however, the...
Page 255 - The same is true in regard to any question of science, because persons conversant with such science have peculiar means, from a larger and more exact observation, and long experience in such department of science, of drawing correct inferences from certain facts, either observed by themselves, or testified to by other witnesses. A familiar instance of the application of this principle occurs very often in cases of homicide, when upon certain facts being testified to, by other witnesses, medical persons...