Contents of No. 8, Vol. II, for March, 1822
1822; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
William Farr, Charles William Jones, Charles Mingay Syder, Charles Mansfield Clarke, John Stevenson, John Forbes, Charles Bell, Thomas O'hadloran, J. H. James, Henry Earle, A. P. W. Philip, A. P. Copland Hutchison, George Gregory, Henry Coates, David Price, Henry Coates, George Gregory, George Gregory, P. Breton, P. Breton, Joseph Swan, John Dunn, Sir Astley Cooper, Richard Wilbank, M. A. Burmester, P. N. Scott, Edward Salmon, Philip M. Martineau, William Porter, Sir Astley Cooper,
ResumoTable of contents: Contents of No. 8, Vol. II, for March, 1822 Arachnoid Inflammation. Frontmatter: The Medico-Chirurgical Review, and Journal of Medical Science. Essay: Arachnoid Inflammation, Cerebral and Spinal Recherches Sur L'inflammation De L'arachnoide, Cerebrale, Et Spinale; Ou Histoire Theorique Et Pratique …, An Account of a Case of Tetanus Successfully Treated in the York Military Hospital at Chelsea. By M. A. Burmester, Esq., A Brief View of the Yellow Fever, as It Appeared in Andalusia, during the Epidemic of 1820: Together with the Mode of Treatment Adopted, and an Account of the Appearances on Dissection. To Which Is Prefixed, a Short Topographical Sketch of the Country. By Thomas O'hadloran, Esq. Octavo, Pp. 171. London, 1821, Case of Fractured Os Pubis Successfully Treated. By Henry Coates, Esq. Surgeon to the Salisbury Infirmary, On the Re-Establishment of a Canal in the Place of a Portion of the Urethra Which Had Been Destroyed. By Henry Earle, Esq. Surgeon to the Foundling Hospital, and Assistant Surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital. Quarto, Pp. 13. From the Philosophical Transactions, 1821, Present State of Medicine in Italy Della Nuova Dottrina Medica Italiana, &c. Del Professore G. Tommasini, Firenze, 1817, Pp. 98, In Taking a Reluctant Leave of Our Interesting Opium-Eater, Who, We Hope, Will yet Enjoy the Inestimable Blessings of Tranquil Sleep and Agreeable Dreams, We Had an Intention of Entering Somewhat Copiously into a Consideration of the Physiological, Pathological, and Medicinal Effects of Opium on the Human Constitution; but Various Causes Combine to Limit Our Remarks within a Very Small Compass, On Lithotomy. By Philip M. Martineau, Esq. Senior Surgeon to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, Medical Intelligence, A Case of Chorea Successfully Treated by Arsenic. By George Gregory, M. D. Senior Physician to the St. George's and St. James's Dispensary, A Series of Lectures on the Most Approved Principles and Practice of Modern Surgery; Principally Derived from the Lectures Delivered by Astley Cooper, Esq. F. R. S. &c. &c. &c. At the United Hospitals of Guy and Saint Thomas, and in Which Will Be Found Some of the Opinions of the Most Celebrated Surgeons, from the Time of Hunter, to the Present Moment: Interspersed with Numerous Cases. By Charles William Jones. Second Edition. By Charles Mingay Syder, Surgeon. One Vol. 8vo. Pp. 448. London, Highly, 1821, Observations on the Scrofulous Inflammation of the Peritonœum Occurring in Children, and Frequently Denominated Marasmus. By George Gregory, M. D. Senior Physician of the St. George's and St. James's Dispensary, A Case of Aneurism of the Carotid Artery. By Henry Coates, Esq. Surgeon to the Salisbury Infirmary, An Essay on the Effects of the Fucus Helminthocorton upon Cancer, More Especially in the Stage Denominated Occult, &c. &c. &c. By William Farr, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons. &c. one Vol. 8vo, Pp. 112. London, 1822. With a Plate Prona Via Est Et Eget Moderamine Certo, Case of a Large Adipose Tumour Successfully Extirpated. By Sir Astley Cooper, Bart. F. R. S. Surgeon to Guy's Hospital, Extra Limits Medical Botany, Correspondence, Hydrocephalus, Case of Malformation of the Heart. By George Gregory, M. D. Senior Physician to the St. George's and St. James's Dispensary, Case of Amputation of Part of the Tarsus and Metatarsus, and Preservation of the Shape and Usefulness of the Foot. By John Dunn, Esq. Scarborough, A Case of Inguinal Aneurism Successfully Treated by Tying the External Iliac Artery. By Edward Salmon, Esq. Surgeon to the First Battalion of the Third Regiment of Guards, On the Efficacy of the Bark of the Pomegranate-Tree in Cases of Tænia. By P. Breton, Esq. Surgeon to the Rhamgur-Battalion in the East Indies, Case of Sudden Death, in Which a Hydatid Was Found in the Substance of the Heart. By David Price, Esq. London, Case of a Separation of a Portion of the Uterus during Severe Labour. By P. N. Scott, Esq. Norwich, On Sloughing Phogedœna. By Richard Wilbank, Esq., Case of Cynanche Laryngea, in Which Tracheotomy and Mercury Were Successfully Employed: with Remarks. By William Porter, Esq. A. M. Surgeon to the Meath Hospital and Country of Dublin Infirmary, and to the Dublin General Dispensary, On the Efficacy of the Bark of the Swietenia Febrifuga, as a Substitute for That of the Cinchona. By P. Breton, Esq., On the Physiology of the Ear. By Joseph Swan, Esq. Lincoln, On the Nature, Symptoms, and Treatment of the Different Species of Amaurosis, or Gutta Serena; Illustrated by Cases. By John Stevenson, Esq. Surgeon-Occulist and Aurist to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and His Royal Highness Prince Leopold of Saxe Cobourg: Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, &c. &c. one Vol. 8vo. Pp. 277. London, 1821, Cases of Bronchocele or Goitre, Treated by Seton, with Observations, by A. P. Copland Hutchison, Esq., Opiologia; or Confessions of an English Opium-Eater; Being an Extract from the Life of a Scholar, An Account of a Case in Which Numerous Calculi Were Extracted from the Urinary Bladder, without the Employment of Cutting Instruments. By Sir Astley Cooper, Bart. F. R. S., On the Nerves; Giving an Account of Some Experiments on Their Structure and Functions, Which Lead to a New Arrangement of the System. By Charles Bell, Esq. (From the Philosophical Transactions.) Quarto, Pp. 30. One Plate. London, 1821, Medico-Chirurgical Transactions. Vol. XI. Part 2, with Plates, Observations on Those Diseases of Females Which Are Attended by Discharges. Illustrated by Copper-Plates of the Diseases. By Charles Mansfield Clarke, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, London. Part II. Octavo, Pp. 243. Four Plates. Longman, London, 1821, A Treatise on Indigestion and Its Consequences, Called Nervous and Bilious Complaints; with Observations on the Organic Diseases, in Which They Sometimes Terminate. By A. P. W. Philip, M. D. F. R. S. Ed. &c. one Vol. 8vo. Pp. 391. Second Edition, with Some Additional Observations. London, 1822, A Treatise on the Diseases of the Chest, in Which They Are Described According to Their Anatomical Characters, and Their Diagnosis Established on a New Principle by Means of Acoustick Instruments. With Plates. Translated from the French of R. T. H. Laennec, M. D. with a Preface and Notes by John Forbes, M. D. Physician to the Penzance Dispensary, Secretary of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, &c. &c. one Volume, 8vo. Pp. 438, Eight Copper-Plates. London, 1821, Observations on Some of the General Principles and on the Particular Nature and Treatment of the Different Species of Inflammation; Being, with Additions, the Substance of an Essay to Which the Jacksonian Prize for 1818 Was Adjudged, by the Royal College of Surgeons. By J. H. James, Surgeon to the Devon and Exeter Hospital, and Consulting Surgeon to the Exeter Dispensary. London, 1821. Octavo, Pp. 305. Review: Bibliographical Record; or Works Received for Review, within the Quarter.
Referência(s)