Jornais Acesso aberto

The New-York Medical Magazine

1815; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

Valentine Mott, Henry U. Onderdonk, M. Le Gallois, J. G. Nancrede, M. Thomas, James Wardrop, John Syng Dorsey, Robert Watt, John Abernethy, Thomas Sutton, John Warren, Samuel Akerly, George Pearson, Dr. Gilbert Smith, Henry U. Onderdonk, R. Calvert, B. C. Brodie, Edward Percival, Dr. Joseph M. Smith, T. W. Blatchford, Henry U. Onderdonk, Dr. Nehemiah Brush, Valentine Mott, Valentine Mott,

Resumo

Frontmatter: The New-York Medical Magazine. Review: Review Experiments on the Principle of Life, and Particularly on the Principle of the Motions of the Heart and …. Essay: Alexander Macauley, a British Naval Surgeon, When at Calcutta, Tied the Left Carotid Artery, for a Wound about the Posterior Angle of the Jaw, and the Patient Recovered, On the Use of Charcoal-Powder, as a Substitute for Cinchona. By R. Calvert, Physician to the Forces, Palermo, Mr. Price Wynnes, an English Apothecary, Has Treated Hydrophobia Successfully by Copious Blood-Letting, after the Plan Recommended by Drs. Schoolbred and Tymon, of India, Examination of a Case of Hydrocephalus Externus. By Dr. Nehemiah Brush, We Are Informed by an Intelligent Friend Lately from Europe, That the Internal Illiac Artery Has Been Successfully Taken up for a Gluteal Aneurism, History of James Mitchell, a Boy Born Blind and Deaf, with an Account of the Operation Performed for the Recovery of His Sight. By James Wardrop, F. R. S. Edinburgh. 4to. Pp. 52. London, 1813, Treatise on the History, Nature, and Treatment of Chincough; Including a Variety of Cases and Dissections. To Which Is Subjoined, an Inquiry into the Relative Mortality of the Principal Diseases of Children, and the Numbers Who Have Died under Ten Years of Age, in Glasgow, during the Last Thirty Years. By Robert Watt, M. D. Member of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, Member of the London Medical and Chirurgical Society, &c. And Lecturer on the Theory and on the Practice of Medicine in Glasgow. 8vo. Pp. 392. Longman and Co. 1813, Water of the Nile, Conclave Cadaveris Examination of a Case of Fracture of the Pelvis, Communicated by Dr. Joseph M. Smith, of New-York, Diabetic Urine, A View of the Mercurial Practice in Febrile Diseases, by John Warren, M. D. President of the Massachusetts Medical Society, and Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the University of Cambridge. Boston, Wait & Co. 1813, Examination of a Case, in Which the Left Arm Was Torn from the Body, Accompanied with a Fracture of the Cervical Vertebrœ. By Valentine Mott, M. D., Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, Published by the Medical and Chirurgical Society of London. Volume the Fourth. London, 1813, P. S.—Since My Last Communication to the Society, I Have Had an Opportunity of Making Some Further Observations and Experiments on This Subject, The Discovery of Morichini, Who First Found Fluoric Acid in Animal Substances, and Obtained It from the Teeth, Has Been Confirmed by Berzelius, An Inquiry into the Probability and Rationality of Mr. Hunter's Theory of Life; Being the Subject of the First Two Anatomical Lectures Delivered before the Royal College of Surgeons of London. By John Abernethy, F. R. S. &c. Professor of Anatomy and Surgery to the College. 8vo. Pp. 95. Longman and Co. 1814, On Oil of Turpentine, &c. In Epilepsy. By Edward Percival, M. B. Dublin, Cases of Rabies in Dogs; by Mr. Youatt, On the Coloring Matter of the Black Bronchial Glands, and of the Black Spots of the Lungs. By George Pearson, M. D. F. R. S., Intelligence Foreign, Tracts on Delirium Tremens, on Peritonitis, and on Some Other Internal Inflammatory Affections, and on the Gout. By Thomas Sutton, M. D. Of the Royal College of Physicians; Late Physician to the Forces, and Consulting Physician to the Kent Dispensary. 8vo. Pp. 272. London. 1813, Examination of a Case of Supposed Hepatitis, Communicated by T. W. Blatchford, Student of Medicine, and Resident Physician in the New-York State-Prison, The Femoral (or Rather Inguinal) Aneurism Mentioned in Our First Number, Was Successfully Operated upon by Dr. Post, by Taking up the External Illiac Artery, Case of Disease in the Head, with the Appearances after Death. By Henry U. Onderdonk, M. D. Read before the Medical Society of the County of New-York, July 5th, 1814, Elements of Surgery: for the Use of Students; with Plates. By John Syng Dorsey, M. D. &c. &c. In Two Volumes. Philadelphia, 1813, Mem. De L'acad. De St. Petersburg. Tom. iii. P. 76, Domestic, Experiments and Observations on the Influence of the Nerves of the Eighth Pair on the Secretions of the Stomach. By B. C. Brodie, Esq. F. R. S. Communicated by the Society for the Promotion of Animal Chemistry. Read before the Royal Society, February 10th, 1814, Examination of a Man Said to Have Died of Old Age. By Henry U. Onderdonk, M. D., Examination of a Young Woman, in Whom the Left Ventricle of the Heart Was Found Ruptured. By Valentine Mott, M. D.. Letter to the editor: A New Method of Resuscitating Still-Born Children. By Dr. Gilbert Smith, Physician and Surgeon to the New-York Alms House, &c. Communicated in a Letter to the Editors of the N. Y. Med. Mag., Essays and Cases A Case of Hypochondriasis, or Tristimania; with Remarks on This Disease. By Samuel Akerly, Hospital Surgeon, U.S. Army. Editorial: Examination of William Twaits, Esq. The Comedian. By the Editors.

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