10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HEMAGOGUE»
Discover the use of
hemagogue in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hemagogue and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Balm used by "the ancients" as hemagogue in dysmenorrhea, but rejected by
Soranus, 139. papyrus: P'or making the "black remedy" (q.v.). parsley: Oil with
bread recommended by some ancients in inflammation of the uterus, but rejected
by ...
Soranus, Owsei Temkin, 1956
2
Handbook On Ayurvedic Medicines With Formulae, Processes And ...
... is now stocked in bottles. Dosage and administration: 60 ml. with 15 ml.
sharbat anar shirin. (q.v.) Uses and indications: (i) Cardiac stimulant, (ii) Tonic
cephalic. (iii) Liver tonic, (iv) Antihypnotic. (v) Aphrodisiac, (vi) Hemagogue. Arq
Fawakeh ...
3
Medical Terminology Guide
HEMAGOGUE: A chemical which stimulates the flow of blood.
HEMANGIECTASIS: Blood vessel enlarging. HEMANGIOBLASTOMA: A typically
benign cystic neoplasm (tumor) of the central nervous system. HEMANGIOMA: A
condition present ...
4
Psycholusia Or, The Hstory Of Cold-Bathing, Both Ancient and ...
And probably for their Hemagogue Faculty, Hippocrates observes, That Cold
Bathing makes bloody Urine worse, which none of the Interpreters seem to have
well understood. A moderate Heat increases the Flesh, and Cold shrinks and ...
John Floyer, Edward Baynard, 1732
5
Psychrolousia: or, the history of cold-bathing : both ...
And probably for their Hemagogue Faculty, Hippocrates observes, That Cold
Bathing makes bloody Urine worse, which none of the Interpreters seem to have
well understood. A moderate Heat increases the Flesh, and Cold shrinks and ...
6
Linguistic Change under Contact Conditions
galactologue 2.3.4 gegg 2.3.6 gig 2.3.3 gigue 2.3.4 gog 2.3.10 goog 2.3.8
grarnmalogue 2.3.4 grig 2.3.8 grog 2.3.10 hag 2.3.1 heg 2.3.1 hemagogue 2.3.4
hog 2.3.1; 2.3.2 homologue 2.3.4 hug 2.3.7 hydragogue 2.3.4 iceberg 2.3.5 igg
2.3.9 ...
7
A pentaglot dictionary of the terms employed in anatomy, ...
... from convulsion of the muscles, of the eye. Hemagogue, adj., — hsemagogus (
a'po, blood, iyn, to expel), I* : an epithet employed, in Materia Medica, to
designate remedies which operate by determining the menstrual or hemorrhoidal
flux.
8
Psychrolousia. Or, the History of Cold Bathing: Both Ancient ...
And probably for their Hemagogue Faculty, Hipper ates observes, That Cold
Bathing makes bloody Urine work, which none of the Interpreters seem to have
well understood. A moderate Heat increases the Flesh, and Cold shrinks and
hinders ...
Sir John Floyer, Edward Baynard, 1715
9
A Manual of Materia Medica and Pharmacology
Diuretic, emmenagogue, ecbolic, irritant, hemagogue; amenorrhea,
dysmenorrhea, menorrhagia, rheumatism, gout; warts, ulcers, dental caries, tinea
capitis, polypi. Poisoning: Abdominal pain, vomiting, strangury, convulsions,
coma ...
10
From Arabye to Engelond: Medieval Studies in Honour of ...
The confusion continues; in the lengthy Latin passage preceding Ad
restringuendum coytum the stone in the bladder was cured by a marvellous
hemagogue of Master Edmund (which purged the womb of many ailments and
even brought out ...
Auguste Elfriede Christa Canitz, Gernot Rudolf Wieland, 1999