Medical Museum
0000; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
Stubbins Ffirth, Dr. Wm. Dewees, J. C. Rousseau, J. C. Rousseau, J. C. Rousseau, Dr. Thomas R. P. Spence, Dr. John Brickell, James Mease, Dr. J. B. Davidge, John B. Davidge, Dr. G. Williamson, Dr. Wm. Budd, Dr. Wm. Budd, Benjamin Rush, John A. Stuart, Dr. John Vaughan, John Vaughan, Daniel Rutherford, James Simons,
ResumoFrontmatter: Medical Museum. Letter to the editor: A Case of Salivation Produced in a Child, from a Cent Which He Swallowed. Communicated to the Editor, by Dr. Wm. Budd, A Case of Disease Produced by Taking One Ounce of Corrosive Sublimate, Successfully Treated. Communicated to the Editor, by Dr. Wm. Budd, To the Editor of the Philadelphia Medical Museum, An Account of the Diseases of Queen Anne's County, Eastern Shore of Maryland, during 1802—3. By Dr. G. Williamson, in a Letter to the Editor, Dated Baltimore, June 12th, 1805, Some Account of the Diseases That Occurred on Board the Ship China, during a Voyage from Philadelphia to Batavia, until Her Return to the Delaware. Communicated to the Editor. By Stubbins Ffirth, M. D., A Case of Long Continuance of Pulsation in the Funis Umbilicalis after the Birth of the Child. Communicated to the Editor by Dr. Wm. Dewees, History of a Case of Death from Long Continued Abstinence. Communicated to the Editor, by Benjamin Rush, M. D.. Essay: Case of a Still-Born Child Restored to Life; Proving, That in the Most Desperate Cases, Proper Means Ought to Be Used to Recal Such Children to Life. By J. C. Rousseau, M. D., Mr. Chenevix's Mode of Preparing James's Powder, Of the Malignant Fever of Batavia, When Ink-Spots Have Remained Long, They Become Ironmoulds, and Are Then Taken out with More Difficulty, and the More so, the Longer They Stand, in Consequence of the Iron, by Repeated Moistening and Exposure to the Air, Having Acquired Such an Addition of Oxygen as to Make It Insoluble in Acids, Puerperal Convulsions, Royal Jennerian Dinner, This Extraordinary Case Is Not Altogether Unprecedented, On the Generation of the Septic Acid, from Neglect of Cleanliness, Account of the Dissection of a Singular Lusus Nature. By Dr. J. B. Davidge, Extract from the Minutes of the Original Vaccine Pock Institution, in Broad Street, Golden Square, January 8, 1805. On Thursday, January 3, Dr. Pearson Received a Note from Mr. Jones, of Mount-Street, a Governor, Informing Him, That Two Children of the Honourable Commissioner Grey Were Vaccinated Two Years Ago, and Declared to Be in a State of Security from the Small-Pox; but That Mr. Jones Having Inoculated Them with Variolous Matter, the Infection Appeared to Have Regularly Taken, and He Was Inclined to Think They Would Sicken on the Day Following, (Circular), To Prevent Danger from Exposure to the Excessive Heat of the Sun, Mr. Holmes' Receipt, Account of the Efficacy of Sugar of Lead, in a Case of Epilepsy. By Dr. Thomas R. P. Spence, of Accomac County, Virginia, History of a Case of Constipation Continued: Also an Account of a Case of Biliary Concretions. By Dr. John Vaughan, Wilmington, Observations on a Case of Diabetes Mellitus, by Dr. Duncan, Senior; with the History of the Morbid Appearances Which Were Discovered on Dissection. By Dr. Monro, Junior, To Dr. John Redman Coxe, Mr. Doberimer Proposes the Following Method to Make White Lead, The Occurrence of the Yellow Fever in Philadelphia, by the Obstruction Which Produced in Business of Every Description, Must Plead Our Excuse for the Tardy Appearance of the Present Number, Medical and Philosophical Register Foreign and Domestic, Ribancourt's Receipt, A Lamb Was Lately Yeaned at Mr. Browns High Winder, in Westmoreland, (England) with Eight Legs, Two Tails, Two Separate Bodies, Two Necks, and Only One Head, Dr. Caldwell Has Now in the Press, "A Treatise on the Hidden Nature, and the Treatment of Intermitting and Remitting Fevers, by J. Senac, M. D. " Translated from the Latin, with Notes, Of the Dysentery, To Prevent the Effects of Excessive Cold, Ulmus Americana of Marshall, American Rough-Leaved Elm Tree, In Cases of Suffocation from the Fumes of Burning Charcoal, Mr. Stoddart Gives the Following as a Good Method of Gilding upon Steel, Dissection of Ann Laidlaw, Aged 9 or 10, A Board of Health Has Lately Been Established for the Purpose of Preparing and Digesting Regulations for the Most Speedy and Effectual Modes of Guarding against the Introduction and Spreading of Infection, and for Purifying Any Ship or House in Case Any Contagious Disorder Should Manifest Itself in Any Part of the United Kingdom, An Account of the Virtues of Some American Trees, Shrubs, and Plants. By James Mease, M. D., The 3d Vol. of the Asiatic Annual Register, Contains an Account of the Life of a Very Eccentric Character, the Late General Martin, in Which Are the Following Particulars, To Prevent the Fatal Effects of Lightning, Mr. C— S— in the Summer of the Year 1794, Aged about Thirty-Two Years, While Riding to the Parish Church to Attend Divine Service, Was Seized with Hemiplegia, or as Some of His Physicians Termed It, Arthritic Vertigo, Which Palsied Him on One Side, Rendering His Articulation Indistinct, and His Gait Irregular and Tottering, Dear Sir, Agreeably to My Promise, I Send to You a Correct Detail of the Phenomena, as They Appeared Externally, and Were Discovered upon Dissection, in That Singular Lusus Naturæ of the Human Kind, Your Friendly Courtesy Furnished Me with; and I Solicit You to Accept for the Favour You Granted to Me, of Using the Preparation in My Lectures, That Return Which a Mind Conscious of an Obligation Naturally Offers, Receipts for Making Writing-Ink, Foctus Found in the Abdomen of a Boy Fourteen Years of Age, An Account of the Morbid Appearances Observed in Two Cases of Diabetes Mellitus. By Daniel Rutherford, M. D. Professor of Botany in the University of Edinburgh Dissection of John Robinson, To Prevent the Fatal Effects of Drinking Cold Water, or Cold Liquors of Any Kind in Warm Weather, Case of Biliary Concretions, The Dangerous Effects of Noxious Vapours, from Wells, Cellars, Fermenting Liquors, &c. May Be Prevented, On the Efficacy of the Black Oak Bark of America in All Diseases in Which the Peruvian Bark Has Been Used with Success. By J. C. Rousseau, M. D.. Review: Extract from the British Critic, in a Review of a Pamphlet, Entitled, "An Account of Baptisms, Burials, and Deaths, by Small-Pox, within the Parish of Boston, in the County of Lincoln, &c. &c.. Death notices: Deaths. Editorial: We Feel Much Gratified in Observing That Communications from the Museum Are Introduced into Those Valuable Periodical English Publications, the Medical and Chirurgical Review, and the Medical and Physical Journal.
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