| Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London - Medicine - 1815 - 728 pages
...impossible to distinguish it; since it often has no certain seat, but is referred to different parts of the limb in different individuals, and even in the same individual at different times. For example, a gentleman labouring under this disease in the hip, complained during a whole... | |
| 1819 - 564 pages
...deal the pain of rheumatism, since it often lias no certain seat; but is referred to different parts of the limb in different individuals, and even in...patient is continually roused from his sleep by painful starlings of the limb. Sometimes he experiences some degree of relief from the pain in a particular... | |
| Medicine - 1819 - 1016 pages
...resembles that of rheumatism, being referrible to various parts of the limb in different individuals. As the disease advances, the pain becomes exceedingly...roused from his sleep by painful startings of the limbs. In most instances, the pain is referred to the hip and knee also, being most severe in the latter;... | |
| Thomas Buchanan - 1828 - 132 pages
...at night, and to occasion the most agonizing screams." Ford on Disease of the Hip-Joint, page 14. " As the disease advances, the pain becomes exceedingly...patient is continually roused from his sleep by painful starlings of the limb." Brodie's Pathol. Obs. page 153. i " The leg wastes more apparently." Ford on... | |
| Medicine - 1834 - 638 pages
...— it becomes afterwards severe and constant. Like rheumatic pain, it has often no certain seat. " As the disease advances, the pain becomes exceedingly...Sometimes he experiences some degree of relief from the pain in a particular position of the joint, and in no other. A patient in St. George's Hospital... | |
| Medicine - 1836 - 686 pages
...upwards, until they terminate in the sigmoid flexure of the colon. These flexures of the rectum difler in different individuals, and even in the same individual at different periods. When a bougie is introduced, be it small or large, it is certain that it will be stopped somewhere... | |
| 1838 - 590 pages
...different parts of the system, as the nature of the tissues through which the blood circulates. Besides, in different individuals, and even in the same individual at different periods, the force of the heart's action and the activity of the vessels are very various. In the melancholic... | |
| 1839 - 532 pages
...blood equaf to the whole mass in the body must pass through the body twenty-eight times in an hour. In different individuals, and even in the same individual at different periods, the force of the heart's action, and the activity of the vessels are very various. In people of a low... | |
| Medicine - 1834 - 606 pages
...— it becomes afterwards severe and constant. Like rheumatic pain, it has often no certain seat. " As the disease advances, the pain becomes exceedingly...Sometimes he experiences some degree of relief from the pain in a particular position of the joint, and in no other. A patient in St. George's Hospital... | |
| Norman Chevers - Medical jurisprudence - 1856 - 628 pages
...recovery. With the foregoing symptoms, great diversity in the state of the circulation is met with in different individuals, and even in the same individual, at different periods. In the greater number of cases, the temperature of the surface and the strength of the pulse are natural... | |
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