10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PYOID»
Discover the use of
pyoid in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pyoid and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Treatise on the diseases of the chest
This pyoid globule (PI. I., Fig. 12, B), however (which is a variety of the
development of the pus globule), differs from the tubercle globule in being more
regularly spherical, more pale, more transparent, and by containing granules
which are ...
John Appleton Swett, 1852
2
The Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiology
Pyoid corpuscles; (3.) Granules ; Compound granule-corpuscles. (1.) The proper
pus-corpuscle is a body of tolerably sp erical outline, unless when accidentally
flattened or otherwise altered in shape by the pressure of adjoining corpuscles; ...
Robert Bentley Todd, 1849
3
Thoracic Diseases; Their Pathology, Diagnosis and Treatment: ...
This pyoid globule, however (,whioh is a variety of the development of the pus
globule), differs from the tubercle globule in being more regularly spherical, more
pale, more transparent, and by containing granules which are transparent in their
...
Marshall Calkins, Calvin Newton, 1858
4
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5
Annals of Surgery: A Monthly Review of Surgical Science and ...
result is a cavity full of liquid which Park has named pyoid material. If the pyoid
material is evacuated by nature or art, the cavity may be closed by fibrous
contraction. Such collections of caseous material are dangerous in that they are ...
6
A treatise on the principles and practice of medicine
Examined microscopically it is found to contain minute filaments such as are
found in the coagulated fibrin of the blood, intermingled with corpuscles to which
various names have been applied, viz., plastic, pyoid, exudation corpuscles, etc.
7
A Treatise on the principles and practice of medicine
In the pyoid alteration, which is the more common, the yellowish color becomes
somewhat reddened by exposure to the air. The marrow is of a soft, pulpy
consistence like that of creamy pus, but there is usually no real breaking down
into pus, ...
8
The Journal of the American Dental Association
On section, the normal architecture was entirely lost and the parenchyma
appeared pyoid. The nodes were soft, hemorrhagic, and discrete and as if held
together only by the surrounding loose adipose tissue. The heart weighed 480
gm.
9
Twentieth century practice
sternum, or vertebrse. Two forms of change may be recognized by the
macroscopic appearance of the marrow. These were distinguished by Neumann
as the pyoid and the lymphoid. In the former of these the marrow presents a more
or less ...
10
Twentieth Century Practice: Diseases of the respiratory ...
These were distinguished by Neumann as the pyoid and the lymphoid. In the
former of these the marrow presents a more or less yellowish appearance quite
different from the light color of normal marrow. The substance of the marrow may
be ...
Thomas Lathrop Stedman, 1896