The Comparative Merits of Alloeopathy, the Old Medical Practice: And Homoeopathy, the Reformed Medical Practice; Practically IllustratedR. Campbell, 1846 - 287 sider |
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Side 11
... prescribed for the eruption called nettle - rash . The semecarpus anacardium bearing the form of a heart , was recommended in the diseases of that organ . The cassuvium occidentale , resembling the formation of a kidney , was prescribed ...
... prescribed for the eruption called nettle - rash . The semecarpus anacardium bearing the form of a heart , was recommended in the diseases of that organ . The cassuvium occidentale , resembling the formation of a kidney , was prescribed ...
Side 21
... prescription lose their individual identity , and form a new medicine , which , if admitted into the Materia Medica at all , should be subjected to the same rigid scrutiny and experimen- tation OR COMMON MATERIA MEDICA . 21.
... prescription lose their individual identity , and form a new medicine , which , if admitted into the Materia Medica at all , should be subjected to the same rigid scrutiny and experimen- tation OR COMMON MATERIA MEDICA . 21.
Side 22
... prescription by another and another , before the effects of the first , either for good or evil , can be fully known . There is still another cause operating to restrict the successful cultivation of the Materia Medica , and which ...
... prescription by another and another , before the effects of the first , either for good or evil , can be fully known . There is still another cause operating to restrict the successful cultivation of the Materia Medica , and which ...
Side 29
... prescription , to patients . He more strictly than any of his predecessors insisted on the necessity of ascertaining the proper character of disease , unmixed with many symptoms produced by many remedies ; of distinguishing genuine from ...
... prescription , to patients . He more strictly than any of his predecessors insisted on the necessity of ascertaining the proper character of disease , unmixed with many symptoms produced by many remedies ; of distinguishing genuine from ...
Side 50
... prescribed . On the 11th she was again taken worse , after imprudently sitting up ( ? ) ; the beating of the temples , tightness across the chest , and difficulty in breathing returned , unattended by cough . Sixteen ounces of blood ...
... prescribed . On the 11th she was again taken worse , after imprudently sitting up ( ? ) ; the beating of the temples , tightness across the chest , and difficulty in breathing returned , unattended by cough . Sixteen ounces of blood ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
aconite action acute administered allopathic allopathist Andral applied arnica arsenic atony belladonna bleeding blood blood-letting body bowels calomel cause chest cholera chronic colocynth colour constipation cough course cure delirium tremens diarrhoea dilution disease doctrine doses drugs dyspnoea effects efficacy effusion emetics eruption experience fact favourable fever FRANCIS BLACK frequently give hæmorrhage Hahnemann healing Hippocrates Homœo homœopathic Hospital inflammation influence injurious intestinal canal irritation itch knowledge less lungs Marshall Hall Materia Medica means medicine membrane ment mercury method mode morbid mucous mucous membrane nature observed old school opinion opium organs pain pathic pathology patient physician physiology pills pleuritis pneumonia practice practitioner predominant symptom prescribed present principle produce profession prove pulse purging quack quantity remarks remedies respiration salivation says serous skin specific stomach substances theory therapeutics tion treated treatment truth violent vital force vomiting Wilson Philip
Populære passager
Side 35 - And that which should accompany old age, As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends, I must not look to have ; but, in their stead, Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath, Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.
Side 32 - I hold every man a debtor to his profession ; from the which, as men of course do seek to receive countenance and profit, so ought they of duty to endeavor themselves, by way of amends, to be a help and ornament thereunto.
Side 27 - The received method in medicine, of treating diseases by opposite remedies — that is to say, by medicines which are opposed to the effects they produce (contraria contrariis), — is completely false and absurd. I am convinced, on the contrary, that diseases are subdued by agents which produce a similar affection, (similia similibus) : — burns, by the heat of a fire to which the parts are exposed ; the frost-bite, by snow or icy cold water ; and inflammation and contusions, by spirituous applications.
Side 15 - ... result is obtained, and it appears impossible for any fact to be supported by more decisive testimony. Yet in the space of a few short years the boasted remedy has lost its virtue, the disease no longer yields to its power, while its place is supplied by some new remedy, which, like its predecessors, runs through the same career of expectation, success, and disappointment.
Side 15 - ... contemporaries, bore down all opposition, and we flattered ourselves that we had at length subdued the formidable monster. But we were doomed to experience the ordinary process of disappointment; the practice, as usual, was found inefficient or injurious, and it was, after a short time, supplanted by the use of the lancet. But this practice was even more short-lived than...
Side 36 - Fame is no plant that grows on mortal soil, Nor in the glistering foil Set off to the world, nor in broad rumour lies, But lives and spreads aloft by those pure eyes And perfect witness of all-judging Jove; As he pronounces lastly on each deed, Of so much fame in heaven expect thy meed.
Side 211 - ... which has yet been made in the study of the cure of disease. But a century may tell a different tale; much has been done, but much more remains to be done. In like manner, as Morgagni, the father of pathological anatomy, has been far outstripped by Andral, Louis...
Side 63 - ... by which they are enabled to fulfil their various destinies, it will be hardly figurative to say that the objects of inquiry are infinite and inexhaustible. In this, as in most other subjects, the quantity of solid instruction is an inconsiderable fraction of the accumulated mass. A few grains of wheat are buried and lost amid heaps of chaff. For a few well-observed facts, rational deductions, and cautious generalisations, we have whole clouds of systems and doctrines, of speculations and fancies,...
Side 248 - And, sure, he is an honourable man. I speak not to disprove what Brutus spoke, But here I am to speak what I do know. You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you then to mourn for him ? O judgment, thou art fled to brutish beasts, And men have lost their reason!
Side 173 - ... intermitting pulse, occasional vomiting, a pale contracted countenance, a sense of coldness ; but the tongue is seldom furred, nor are the vital or natural functions much disordered.