The American Journal of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, Volume 5W.A. Townsend & Adams, 1873 - Children |
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Page 40
... craniotomy , but found that the skull , though collapsed , could not be drawn through the contracted strait . Nothing now remained for the woman save the chances which the Cæsarean operation , performed under unfavorable circumstances ...
... craniotomy , but found that the skull , though collapsed , could not be drawn through the contracted strait . Nothing now remained for the woman save the chances which the Cæsarean operation , performed under unfavorable circumstances ...
Page 42
... craniotomy , prior to the Cæsarean section , which caused the patient additional exhaustion ; and , 4. The necessity of using sutures to draw together the wound in the uterus , caused by the want of con- tractility of its tissues . With ...
... craniotomy , prior to the Cæsarean section , which caused the patient additional exhaustion ; and , 4. The necessity of using sutures to draw together the wound in the uterus , caused by the want of con- tractility of its tissues . With ...
Page 137
... craniotomy . The falling of the arm was not low enough to prevent the head from engaging at the brim and traversing the pelvic passage , but , by some acci- dental circumstance peculiar to the labor and not well appreciated , it ...
... craniotomy . The falling of the arm was not low enough to prevent the head from engaging at the brim and traversing the pelvic passage , but , by some acci- dental circumstance peculiar to the labor and not well appreciated , it ...
Page 287
... craniotomy was the only operation . This indis- criminate adoption of the mutilating instruments was the wonder of strangers , and was the opprobrium of the Dublin school . The submission to the authority alluded to was so complete that ...
... craniotomy was the only operation . This indis- criminate adoption of the mutilating instruments was the wonder of strangers , and was the opprobrium of the Dublin school . The submission to the authority alluded to was so complete that ...
Page 308
... craniotomy mischief or death may ensue , the forceps , if used rightly and in suitable cases , is an in- nocuous instrument . Statistics professing to show that the mortality from the use of the forceps is at the rate of one to twenty ...
... craniotomy mischief or death may ensue , the forceps , if used rightly and in suitable cases , is an in- nocuous instrument . Statistics professing to show that the mortality from the use of the forceps is at the rate of one to twenty ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid adhesions aged applied bladder blades blood Cæsarean section canal cancer catarrh cause cavity cells cephalotribe cervix uteri child chronic condition Conjugate contractions craniotomy cure cyst danger death delivery diagnosis diameter dilated discharge Diseases of Women effect epithelium examination Fallopian tube Faradization fibroid finger fistula fluid forceps frequently fundus growth hæmorrhage hand head Hospital inches incision increased inflammation injections instrument irritation labor laceration less Medical menorrhagia menstruation ment months mother mucous membrane mucus muscles muscular neck Obstetrical occur operation organ ovarian ovarian cyst ovariotomy ovary pain paralysis passed pathological patient pedicle pelvis performed perinæum peritoneum peritonitis physician placenta portion position posterior pregnancy present Prof puerperal quinine raphé rectum removed reported result rupture scapula seton side sphincter suffering surface sutures symptoms tion tissue traction treatment tubal tube tumor ulceration urine uterine uterus vagina vomiting wall weeks woman womb wound
Popular passages
Page 550 - WOMEN. BY T. GAILLARD THOMAS, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children...
Page 29 - Miss , aged 20, was suffering from a condition of excessiTe debility and anaemia. She was hysterical to the last degree, and it was with the greatest difficulty that she could be persuaded to submit to electrization. These symptoms had annoyed her for about six months, during which time the menstrual flow had decreased in quantity and had become irregular until, some two monthi •Meyer, op.
Page 739 - Senior Surgeon to University College Hospital, and Holme Professor of Clinical Surgery in University College, London. A New Edition, being the Sixth, revised and enlarged ; with 712 Woodcuts.
Page 563 - THE URINE AND ITS DERANGEMENTS with the Application of Physiological Chemistry to the Diagnosis and Treatment of Constitutional as well as Local Diseases.
Page 724 - LAERTES' head. And these few precepts in thy memory Look thou character. Give thy thoughts no tongue, Nor any unproportion'd thought his act. Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar. The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel ; But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new hatch'd, unfledg'd comrade.
Page 192 - A Treatise on the Diseases of Infancy and Childhood. By J. LEWIS SMITH, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York.
Page 563 - A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON FRACTURES AND DISLOCATIONS. By FRANK HASTINGS HAMILTON, AM, MD, LL.D...
Page 563 - By J. LEWIS SMITH, MD, Curator to the Nursery and Child's Hospital, New York; Physician to the Infants...
Page 548 - American Journal of Obstetrics. •• It shows prodigal industry, and embodies within its five hundred and odd pages pretty much all that seems worth knowing on the subject of ovarian diseases," — Philadelphia Medical Times.
Page 467 - Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, etc., etc., etc.