The New England Medical Gazette, Volume 41

Capa
Medical gazettee pub., 1906

De dentro do livro

Conteúdo

Outras edições - Ver todos

Termos e frases comuns

Passagens mais conhecidas

Página 611 - There is so much bad in the best of us, And so much good in the worst of us, That it hardly behooves any of us To talk about the rest of us.
Página 220 - No candid observer of his actions, or candid reader of his writings, can hesitate for a moment to admit that he was a very extraordinary man, — one whose name will descend to posterity as the exclusive excogitator and founder of an original system of medicine, as ingenious as many that preceded it, and destined, probably, to be the remote, if not the immediate, cause of more important fundamental changes in the practice of the healing art than have resulted from any promulgated since the days of...
Página 50 - PRACTICAL DIETETICS WITH REFERence to Diet in. Disease. By Alida Frances Pattee, Graduate, Boston Normal School of Household Arts.
Página 591 - ... all at once, but with these remedies we prefer to combine not more than one drug — sometimes less. When I turn to some of the older books on therapeutics, some still used in our school, and see how the frail human stomach is expected to bear not only the drug but an adjuvant, a corrective...
Página 160 - Wendell Kilmer MD, Adjunct Attending Pediatrist to the Sydenham Hospital, Instructor in Pediatrics in the New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital, New York; Attending Physician to the Summer Home of St. Giles, Garden City, New York. Illustrated with 59 half-tone engravings.
Página 281 - A primrose by the river's brim, A yellow primrose was to him. And it was nothing more.
Página 626 - Gentlemen, if I had set myself the task of rendering an incurable disease curable by artificial means, and should find that only the road of homeopathy led to my goal, I assure you dogmatic considerations would never deter me from taking that road.
Página 625 - I am touching here upon a subject anathematized till very recently by medical pedantry ; but if I am to present these problems in historical illumination, dogmatic imprecations must not deter me. They must no more deter me now than they did thirteen years ago, when I demonstrated before the Berlin Physiological Society the immunizing action of my tetanus antitoxin in infinitesimal dilution.
Página 486 - The best results seem to be obtained only when treatment is pushed to the point of killing or beginning to kill the tissues, which would also probably be to the point of killing the organisms.
Página 438 - A PRIMER OF PSYCHOLOGY AND MENTAL DISEASE. For Use in Training Schools for Attendants and Nurses and in Medical Classes, and as a Ready Reference for the Practitioner.

Informações bibliográficas