The Monthly Journal of Foreign Medicine
1828; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
James Phillips Kay, William Hamilton, M. Dupuytren, W. Lawrence, James Guthrie, William F. Montgomery, Richard Bright, J. Howell, William Laidlaw, John Macculloch, Egerton A. Jennings, F. Bailey, William Campbell, John Evans, M. Ferrier, George Gregory, T. H. Holberton,
ResumoFrontmatter: The Monthly Journal of Foreign Medicine. Essay: Further Remarks on the Internal Exhibition of the Acetate of Lead, Chiefly with the View of Determining to What Extent It May Be Safely Administered in the Cure of Diseases, Especially in Uterine Hæmorrhage. By William Laidlaw, Esq. Surgeon, Notice of the Appearances in the Brain of a Young Female Who Attained Her Seventeenth Year without Giving Indications of Sensation or Motion from Birth. Communicated by Davies Gilbert, Esq. M. P., President of the Royal Society, Case, in Which an Adventitious Membrane Was Found Adhering to the Inner Surface of the Cerebral Part of the Dura Mater. By T. H. Holberton, Extirpation of the Uterus, Structure of the Nerves, Rupture of the Pulmonary Artery, Period of the Disease at Which Measles Begin to Be Infectious, Dr. Desaignes Relates the Following Symptoms as Arising from an Attempt at Suicide, with a Drachm and a Half of a Solution of the Hydriodate of Potash, On Cutaneous Absorption, Successful Case of Transfusion. By J. Howell, Esq. Bridge Street, Southwark, Pills of Balsam of Copaiba, Medico-Chirurgical Transactions Remarkable Fungous Eruption Curable by Mercury. By Mr. Wallace, Singular Case in Midwifery. By Dr. Hare, Great Baddow, Essex, Mercury Detected in the Glands, &c., Medical and Philosophical Intelligence, Ectropium of the External Angle of the Eye, Periodical Contraction of the Extremities, Malaria:—An Essay on the Production and Propagation of This Poison, and on the Nature and Localities of the Places by Which It Is Produced: with an Enumeration of the Diseases Caused by It, and of the Means of Preventing or Diminishing Them, Both at Home and in the Naval and Military Service. By John Macculloch, M. D. F. R. S. &c. Physician in Ordinary to His Royal Highness Prince Leopold. Octavo, Pp. 480. Longman & Co. 1827, Observations on Fever. Addressed to a Medical Friend, by Dr. Bow, of Alnwick, Dr. Kellie on Tubercles, and Their Effects on Different Structures (Dr. Monro's Work on the Brain, Vol. I), On Pian, Yaws, or Frambœsia, Dr. Bally Has Lately Employed Strychnine Internally in Paralysis of the Bladder, and Has Obtained from Its Use Very Decided Benefit, Rare Aneurismal Disease of the Temporal Arteries, Disease of the Heart Caused by Onanism, On the High Operation of Lithotomy. By M. Dupuytren, Examination after Death, On the Physiology of the Iris. By Egerton A. Jennings, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, Physiological Experiments and Observations on the Cessation of the Contractility of the Heart and Muscles in the Asphyxia of Warm-Blooded Animals. By James Phillips Kay, M. D. House Physician to the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, and Late Senior President of the Royal Medical Society. No. 1, Varicose Arteries, Urinary Calculi in a Singular Situation, Suffocation Occasioned by the Presence of a Leech in the Larynx, Sabulous Formation in the Brain, Death Caused by the External Application of Opium, New Borate of Soda, Case of Diffuse Inflammation of the Cellular Membrane from a Poisoned Wound, Terminating Favourably under the Use of Deep Incisions. By John Evans, M. D., Member of the Royal College of Surgeons of London, Vaccination in Africa, Influence of the Stomach on the Brain, Spasmodic Contraction of the Urethra, A Case of Non-Union of the Thigh, in Which Three Modes of Treatment Were Unsuccessfully Employed; Followed by a Description of the Appearances of the … and Connecting Medium after Amputation; Read by Mr. Amesbury before the London Medical Society, Feb. 18,1828, On Dislocations of the Vertebræ. By W. Lawrence, F. R. S. [Medico Chirurgical Transactions], Expulsion of the Placenta after Abortion, Rupture of the Vena Cava Inferior, Case of Laborious Parturition, Complicated with Laceration of the Uterus and Vagina. By William Campbell, M. D., Lecturer on the Practice of Physic and Midwifery, &c., Remarkable Lesion of the Rectum, Observations on the Nature and Treatment of Beriberi. By William Hamilton, Esq. Royal Navy, Remarks on Strumous Corneitis and Iritis, with Cases. By James Guthrie, Esq. Surgeon, Kilmarnock, On the Power of Water and Bromine in Conducting Electricity, Diseases of the Placenta, Cases Illustrative of Some of the Appearances Observable after Death, When Dropsical Effusion Has Been Connected with Disease of the Liver. By Richard Bright, M. D. [Reports, &c. From Guy's Hospital], Congenital Luxation of the Femora, New Method of Distinguishing Barytes and Strontites, Case of Double Uterus, with Double Impregnation, M. Roux, a Distinguished Surgeon in the Department of the Var, Has Recently Made an Ingenious Application of the Principles of the Taliacotian Operation to the Treatment of Cancers of the Lips; Borrowing from the Lateral Parts of the Face and Neck, the Materials Necessary to Replace the Loss of Substance Occasioned by Their Removal, Separation of Bismuth from Mercury by Potassium, Elementary Nature of Bromine, Mala Praxis.—Rolfe v. Stanley, New Chloride of Manganese, Successive Abolition of the Senses, Suggestions for the Improvement of the Female Catheter. By William F. Montgomery, a. M., M. B., Professor of Midwifery in the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland, Gangrene of the Uterus, Examination of the Eyes of an Individual Affected with Amaurosis; by Prof. Heusinger, Crystallization of Metallic Oxides, Strangulated Hernia in an Infant Twenty Days Old.—Operation Treated by M. Dupuytren.—Hotel Dieu, Memoir on the Treatment of Rheumatism. By Dr. Cazenave, of Pau. Letter to the editor: Vaccination To the Editor of the London Medical Gazette, Cases Illustrative of the Virtues of Prussic Acid, in Stomach Complaints To the Editors of the London Medical Repository, Cysts Containing a Watery Fluid, Apparently Connected with the Liver To the Editor of the London Medical Gazette.
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