10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «FARADISATION» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
faradisation in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
faradisation im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
The Retrospect of Medicine
This form of disease seems to place the muscles in precisely the same
relationship to the rapidly intermitted galvanic current as to faradisation ; but the
fact which I do not think has yet received an explanation is this : that the muscles,
in this ...
2
The Retrospect of Medicine
In such cases Faradisation of the skin is generally advisable, but this proceeding
should not be resorted to if the affection is seated in the face, to which moist
conductors only should be applied. The curative influence of Faradisation is most
...
William Braithwaite, 1863
3
The Medical Times and Gazette: A Journal of Medical Science, ...
Here the farado-contractility is or quite lost, while the excitability t0 the interrupted
voltaic current is increased; and faradisation may be employed for weeks without
cfl'ecting any improvement. In this affection, therefore, the interrupted voltaic ...
Duchenne conceived the idea of "faradisation" — it was he who suggested
substituting this word for "electrisation" or "galvanism" which were too vague or
inexact — to describe a precise, selective instrument which acted as much on the
...
J. A. Cadden, Louise Elliott Wallace, 1998
5
The London Lancet: A Journal of British and Foreign Medical ...
If you are using faradisation, you may keep the second conductor steady; if
galvanism, you must move it about, in order to interrupt the current. Paralysis of
the third nerve, with ptosis or strabismus, may be treated by galvanism or by fara-
dism ...
6
Medical Press and Circular A Weekly Journal of Medicine and ...
Electrisation by these mode3 is very rarely employed. The dynamic, which is
divided into — 1. Electricity by contact (galvanism), subdivided into (n)
continuous current, (A) an intermitting current. 2. Inducted electricity (Faradisation
), thus called ...
7
The Medical Times and Gazette
in muscles paralysed by exposure to cold ; but this is not the case in facial
paralysis from cold. Here the farado-con- tractility is diminished or quite lost,
while the excitability to the interrupted voltaic current is increased ; and
faradisation may be ...
8
Electro-medical instruments and their management, and ...
Switchboard on trolley, for galvanisation, electrolysis, faradisation, cautery and
surgical lamps, for hospital use. The apparatus contains all the accessories
specified under N0. 1830, resembles Fig. 1837 in appearance, but an interrupter
...
9
The Human Brain and Spinal Cord: A Historical Study ...
Faradisation of the cortex of the post-central convolution, though not like the pre-
central itself eliciting movement, when employed at certain places facilitates the
elicitation of movement by faradisation at certain points at about the same ...
Edwin Clarke, Charles Donald O'Malley, 1996
10
histological studies on the localisation of cerebral function
The region has been carefully explored by Sherrington and Griinbaum in the
anthropoid ape, and they state that " faradisation of the cortex of the inferior
frontal convolution has failed so far to elicit movements of any satisfactory degree
of ...
Alfred Walter Campbell, 1936
2 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «FARADISATION» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
faradisation im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Cured with sparks: a history of electrotherapy for functional …
General Faradisation, from A treatise on medical electricity, by Julius Althaus. Wellcome Library Figure 3. General Faradization, from A treatise ... «OUPblog, Mai 15»
The history of medical studies of male infertility
... that a tough regime of physical exercise and the faradisation (treatment with electrical currents) of his testicles would prove unable to change. «Medical Xpress, Sep 14»