... not improbable; but it may be safely affirmed that when inflammation is confined to the chest, however varied may be the tissues involved in the inflammatory process, provided this symptom be present, pneumonia may be confidently pronounced to form... Elements of the Practice of Medicine - Page 242by Richard Bright, Thomas Addison - 1839 - 613 pagesFull view - About this book
| Medicine - 1840 - 664 pages
...although that is not improbable ; but it may be safely affirmed that when inflammation is confined to ihe chest, however varied may be the tissues involved...chest, the fact ought to be carefully remembered." 241-2. " The treatment must be purely and promptly antiphlogistic." Bleeding to syncope, and mercury... | |
| Medicine - 1840 - 648 pages
...to exist, before asking a single question, or making the slightest stethoscopic examination of the chest. The presence of this symptom will seldom mislead...chest, the fact ought to be carefully remembered." 241-2. " The treatment must be purely and promptly antiphlogistic." Bleeding to syncope, and mercury... | |
| Medicine - 1840 - 660 pages
...exist, before asking a single question, or making the slightest stethoscopic examination of the cheat. The presence of this symptom will seldom mislead even...chest, the fact ought to be carefully remembered." 241-2. " The treatment must be purely and promptly antiphlogistic." Bleeding to syncope, and mercury... | |
| Medicine - 1840 - 652 pages
...inflammatory process, provided this symptom be present, pneumonia may be confidently pronounced 10 form a part in nineteen cases out of twenty, and perhaps...still more commonly in the eruptive fevers of the eianthemata and erysipelas ; and as such cases m iy supervene upon already existing disease within... | |
| Thomas Addison - 1868 - 326 pages
...may be confidently pronounced to form a part in nineteen cases out of twenty, and I believe in a much larger proportion. A similar pungent heat of the surface is now and then"observed in certain forms of renal dropsy ; more frequently in continued fever, especially in... | |
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