Southern Medical and Surgical Journal
1860; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
L. A. Dugas, L. A. Dugas, Desaussure Ford, John M. Burns, Charles West, Thomas P. Teale, John Erichsen, John Harrison, J. Whittaker Hulke, Levin S. Joynes, M. O. Davidson, Charles Hunter, O. C. Gibbs, M. Rurkowski, Austin Flint, John King,
ResumoFrontmatter: Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. Letter to the editor: Original and Eclectic. Essay: A Case of Threatened Abortion Apparently Caused by Malaria. By M. O. Davidson, M. D., Van Buren, Arkansas, On Cerebral Symptoms Independent of Cerebral Disease. Delivered at the Hospital for Sick Children, Dec. 3, 1859, by Charles West, M. D., Physician to the Hospital for Sick Children. Importance of the Subject, and Difficulties Which Attend It—Three Classes of Cases in Which the Brain May Be Disturbed without Disease: in Fevers, in Inflammation of the Thoracic Viscera, in Various Disorders of the Digestive Organs.—Rules for Discriminating in Each between the Signs of Sympathetic Disorders of the Brain, and the Symptoms of Its Real Disease, Permanent Exutories in Chronic Phlegmasiœ, Death from Obstruction of a Small Portion of the Alimentary Canal in a New-Born Infant. By John M. Burns, M. D., of Erastus, Banks Co., Ga. [With Remarks by Editors of S. M. and S. Journal], On Discharges from the Urethra Not of a Specific Gonorrhœa Character. By John Harrison, Esq., F. R. C. S., Practical Clinical Remarks on Diseases of the Bursa Patellæ. By John Erichsen, Esq., F. R. C. S., Surgeon to the Hospital, Double Amputation for Gangrene of the Feet. By Desaussure Ford, M. D., of Augusta, Ga., Markoe on Subcutaneous Perforation of Bone in Ununited Fracture, Preparation of Caffein, Nœvus Cured by Creasote, Pneumonia, A Practical Treatise on the Diagnosis, Pathology and Treatment of Diseases of the Heart. By Austin Flint, M. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine, in the New Orleans School of Medicine, Etc., Etc., Pp. 473: Blanchard & Lea, Philadelphia. For Sale by Messrs. T. Richards & Son, Augusta, Another "Black Doctor."—The Following Is a Part of the Public Advertisement of a Negro Doctor, A Case of Dyspepsia Cured with Strychnia. By O. C. Gibbs, M. D., of Frewsburg, N. Y., Median Lithotomy. By Thomas P. Teale, of Leeds, A Clinical Lecture Delivered at the Augusta Hospital upon the Subject of Homeopathy. By L. A. Dugas, M. D., &c. Written out by Request, Very Thin Perforated Elastic Tubes Are Extensively Used in England and France Instead of Tents of Lint, Sponge, Etc., On the Mode of Employing the Hypodermic Treatment. By Charles Hunter, Late House-Surgeon to St. George's Hospital, On the Physiological Position of Fibrin. By Levin S. Joynes, M. D., Professor of Institutes of Medicine in the Medical College of Virginia, "Unaccountable Antipathies, M. Bean, an Hospital Physician of Paris, Has Found That Workmen Who Handle Lead Do Not Suffer from Phthisis, and That the Progress of This Disease Has Been Stopped by Symptoms of Lead Poisoning, A Revolution in Anæsthetics, Buttermilk and Longevity, In Wurtemburg, According to a Recent Decree of the Government, Homeopaths Dare Not Dispense Their Medicines the Licensed Druggist, and Only He, Prepares and Compounds the Imponderables of Hahnemann, White Paint in Severe Burns, Multiple Essay Items, Binding of the Fifteenth Volume, Epithelial Cancer of the Lips, On Intra-Ocular Hœmorrhage after Extraction, and Other Operations Requiring a Large Incision in the Cornea. By J. Whittaker Hulke, Esq., F. R. C. S., Assistant Surgeon to the Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital, and to King's College Hospital, Nux Vomica as a Febrifuge, Improved Needles for Vesico-Vaginal Fistula, The Microscopist's Companion; a Popular Manual of Practical Microscopy; Designed for Those Engaged in Microscopic Investigations, Schools, Seminaries, Colleges, Etc., Etc., by John King, M. D. Pp. 308. Illustrated with 114 Wood Cuts. Rickey Mallory & Co. Cincinnati, 1839, Contributions to the History of Nervous Diseases of Syphilitic Origin. By Dr. Gjor. Editorial: Editorial and Miscellaneous. Display ads: Joseph Jones' Laboratory.
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