Jornais Acesso aberto

Stockton & Co. 's Dental Intelligencer

1847; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

E. Parmly, E. Baker, E. Parmly, E. Baker, A. C. Castle, E. B. Gardette, E. Parmly, J. F. Flagg, Dr. E. Parmly, E. G. Tucker, Lewis Roper, Edward Maynard, C. A. Harris, William H. Dwinelle,

Resumo

Frontmatter: Stockton & Co. 's Dental Intelligencer. Essay: Twins Born with an Interval of Two Months, I Would Also Express My Thanks to C. W. C. For the Valuable Testimony Received This Morning from Him; Also for His Kind Permission to Use His Name, and in His Name, the Names of Those Who, by Outraging Truth and Honesty, Obtained His Money and Have Entailed upon Him Suffering and Disease, With Regard to the Perfect Accuracy of the History of Mr. Ames's Case, as Given in the above Letter to Dr. Parmly, We Do Not Think the Effects, as They Were Developed, Are Correctly Stated, Facts Versus Parmly, Foreign Body in the Trachea, The Foregoing Communication, Embodying the Proceedings of a Meeting of Dentists Favorable to the Use of Amalgam, and the Report of Dr. J. A. Houston, Who, at Their Instance, Visited Springfield, Massachusetts, Amounts Really to Nothing at All, Dr. E. Parmly: Dear Sir.—I Have Just Receved Your Note of the 17th, and in Reply I Can Only Say, That I Have Seen Many Teeth Which Had Been Filled with Amalgam, and From My Observations as to Its Effects upon the Teeth and Other Parts of the Mouth, I Do Not Hesitate to State That They Have Been Decidedly Pernicious, Odontography Teeth of Quadrumana, My Dear Doctor.—In Reply to Your Note of the 8th Inst., I Beg to State That, during the Last Ten or Twelve Years, My Opportunities for Observing the Effects of Amalgam Have Been, I Am Sorry to Say, Very Frequent, Suckling a Snake, The Amalgam Controversy in New York, A Female Dentist, We Do Not Deem It Necessary to Offer Any Comments upon the Communication from Dr. Baker, Dear Sir.—We Answer with Pleasure the Questions Contained in Your Note of the 7th, My Dear Sir.—Yours of the 7th Inst. is before Me, Nasal Hemorrhage, Dear Sir.—In Reply to Yours, I Have to Say That I Consider Amalgams Not Only Unfit, but Dangerous for Plugging Teeth, Dr. E. Parmly: Dear Sir.—I Noticed the Discussion in Which You Are Engaged, in Reference to the Cause of the Death of the Lamented Mr. N. P. Ames, My Personal Friend and Fellow Passenger, at the Time of His Visit to London and Paris, When He Unfortunately, Soon after His Arrival at the Former City, Was Presented with the Card, at the Euston Hotel, of a Paste-Filling, or Amalgam Dentist, While Suffering from the Effects of a Severe Ague or Toothache, Needing Immediate Relief, All Amalgams, under Whatever Name That I Have Known to Be Employed for Filling Teeth, I Hold to Be Injurious in Their Effects; and Though, in Some Instances, They Remain for a Long Time, and Appear to Be Harmless, They Do, in All Such Cases, Fall Far Short of Gold in Effecting the Preservation of the Teeth, My Dear Doctor.—In Answer to Yours of the 7th, I Have No Hesitation in Saying That I Consider Amalgam Totally Unfit for Plugging Teeth.

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