Transactions of the Indiana State Medical Association, Vydání 55W. B. Burford, 1904 |
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abdomen abscess alcohol Anderson Association believe bone bowel cancer cause cell CENSORS cent chancre Chas chronic City Claypool Bldg clinical condition COUNTY cure death deformity Delegate diagnosis disease doctor dose drug dust early Elkhart empyema Evansville experience fact femur Fort Wayne fracture frequently give hernia hospital important increase Indiana Indianapolis infection intestinal Jeffersonville John Kokomo Lafayette larynx lesions leucocytes leucocytosis liver Logansport Medical College medical profession MEDICAL SOCIETY medicine MEMBERS ment method morphine Muncie muscles neutrophile obstruction occur OFFICERS Ohio operation opium pain paper patient pedicle perforation perineum peritoneum peritonitis physician plaster of paris practice present President pulmonary pulse reported Richmond scarlet fever Sec.-Treas South Bend splint stomach strangulated strychnia surgeon surgical symptoms syphilis temperature Terre Haute tion tissue treated treatment tubercular tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ulcer usually Vice-Pres Vice-President vomiting Wayne Willoughby Bldg X-ray
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Strana 15 - If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.
Strana 14 - There is no profession, from the members of which greater purity of character, and a higher standard of moral excellence are required, than the medical ; and to attain such eminence, is a duty every physician owes alike to his profession and to his patients.
Strana 13 - The knife is searching for disease, the pulleys are dragging back dislocated limbs, nature herself is working out the primal curse which doomed the tenderest of her creatures to the sharpest of her trials, but the fierce extremity of suffering has been steeped in the waters of forgetfulness, and the deepest furrow in the knotted brow of agony has been smoothed forever.
Strana 10 - Such county societies, constituting as they do the chief element of strength in the organization of the profession, should have the active support of their members and should be made instruments for the cultivation of fellowship, for the exchange of professional experience, for the advancement of medical knowledge, for the maintenance of ethical standards, and for the promotion in general of the interests of the profession and the welfare of the public.
Strana 16 - hewn like the mangled body of Osiris, into a thousand pieces, and scattered to the four winds, shall be gathered limb to limb, and moulded, with every joint and member, into an immortal feature of loveliness and perfection.
Strana 29 - Article * and his more elaborate later work f should be carefully studied by any one who wishes to appreciate the value of scientific methods. It forms one of the most masterly demonstrations of modern medicine. Its thoroughness appears in the fact that in...
Strana 364 - He was for a number of years an active member of the Board of Trustees of Hanover College, Ind., and of the New Albany Theological Seminary, Ind.
Strana 132 - We find abundant evidence that the x-rays have an inhibitory action on all forms of malignant tumors. Yet the number of cases is insufficient to enable us to state what particular varieties are most susceptible to this influence. So far it would seem that sarcomas primary in the lymph-glands yield most readily to the treatment.
Strana 132 - It should only be recommended in cases that are inoperable either because of the extent of the growth or its location. (2) It is absolutely the best means at our command for the treatment of superficial tuberculosis, and it gives better cosmetic results. (3) It should follow all operations for malignant disease or tuberculosis, with the twofold object of stimulating the healing process and of preventing a recurrence. In some cases it may be of advantage to give a course of treatment before operation,...
Strana 133 - SINCLAIR presents the following conclusions, based upon the study of a large number of cases of prolonged lactation : 1. Lactation tends to prevent conception by retarding the return of the ovaries to a condition in which ovulation is perfect. 2. After weaning, the evolution of the ovaries is much more rapid than during lactation. 3. The abrupt cessation of a prolonged lactation may be followed...