The Medical Circular: A Journal of Practical Medicine and Surgery, Issue 15084, Volume 24

Front Cover
1864

From inside the book

Contents


Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 87 - Published under the direction of the general council of medical education and registration of the United Kingdom, pursuant to the medical act (1858).
Page 38 - ... superior to any teeth ever before used. This method does not require the extraction of roots or any painful operation, and will support and preserve teeth that are loose, and is guaranteed to restore articulation and mastication.
Page 92 - ... whether he has ceased to practise, or has changed his Residence, and if no Answer shall be returned to such Letter within the Period of Six Months from the sending of the Letter it shall be lawful to erase the Name of such Person from the Register ; provided always, that the same may be restored by Direction of the General Council should they think fit to make an Order to that Effect.
Page iv - FUNCTIONAL DISEASES OF WOMEN. Cases illustrative of a New Method of Treating them through the Agency of the Nervous System, by means of Cold and Heat.
Page 74 - On the demise of a person of eminence, it is confidently averred that he had a hand "open as day to melting charity," and that "take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again.
Page 140 - Let the subject of inquiry be the conditions of health and disease in the human body ; or (for greater simplicity) the conditions of recovery from a given disease ; and in order to narrow the question still more, let it be limited, in the first instance, to...
Page 306 - A Degree in Arts of any University of the United Kingdom, or of the Colonies, or of such other Universities as may be specially recognised from time to time by the Medical Council.
Page 337 - That the Professional Examination for any Licence be divided into two parts ; the first embracing the primary or fundamental branches directly connected with the practice of Medicine and Surgery ; that the former be not undergone till after the close of the Winter Session of the second year of Professional Study ; and the latter, or final Examination, not till after the close of the prescribed period of Professional Study.
Page 71 - ... in the hams, the heels, or the elbows. He felt, under the influence of the contact of the flowers of brimstone, the skin becoming hotter, slightly excited, and more disposed to sweating; and as soon as this effect was produced, the relief of the pain seemed to be immediately marked. Whatever may be the explanation of the manner in which sulphur exerts its curative agency, Dr. Renard affirms that it has a beneficial effect upon the rheumatic pains of the tendons, and that this action is the more...
Page 177 - MEDICAL ERRORS. — Fallacies connected with the Application of the Inductive Method of Reasoning to the Science of Medicine.

Bibliographic information