| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1823 - 876 pages
...or at least returning regularly every winter ; which in such cases is very often )аЫ. Causes, &c. The proximate cause of catarrh seems to be an increased...fluids to the mucous membrane of the nose, fauces, and bronchia-, along with some degreee of inflammation affecting the same. The latter circumstance is confirmed... | |
| Robert Thomas - Diagnosis - 1828 - 1118 pages
...this manner, the term Of influenza has been applied to it. The proximate or immediate cause of the catarrh seems to be an increased afflux of fluids to the mucous membrane of the nose, fauces, and bronchia, in consequence of some degree of inflammation in these parts. Catarrh is to be distinguished... | |
| Horse racing - 1830 - 714 pages
...tubercles, and will, consequently, render the horse completely broken-winded. The causes of catarrh seem to be an increased afflux of fluids to the mucous membrane of the nose, fauces, and bronchia?, attended with a greater or less degree of inflammation; the application of cold, which operates... | |
| John S. Haller - Medical - 1981 - 488 pages
...from the lungs) and the formation of tubercles in the lungs. ^ "If, therefore, catarrh consists in an afflux of fluids to the mucous membrane of the nose, fauces, and bronchiae, accompanied with inflammatory action of these parts — if this afflux and this action are occasioned... | |
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