10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SANGUIFEROUS»
Discover the use of
sanguiferous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
sanguiferous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The half-yearly abstract of the medical sciences: being a ...
These canals (the sanguiferous canals) appear when the liver is injected with
coloured water, and disappear as it flows away, the particles again falling into
close contact. They are very numerous, and by their anastomoses the mass of the
...
William Harcourt Ranking, Charles Bland Radcliffe, William Dommett Stone, 1849
2
An experimental inquiry into the laws of the vital functions
I shall begin with the diseases which arise chiefly from a fault in the sanguiferous,
afterwards making some observations on those whose cause chiefly exists in the
nervous system. I use the qualifying words of the preceding sentence, because ...
Alexander Philip Wilson Philip, 1817
3
The Half-yearly Abstract of the Medical Sciences: Being a ...
These canals (the sanguiferous canals) appear when the liver is injected with
coloured water, and diappcar as it flows away, the particles again falling into
close contact. They are very numerous, and by -their anastomoscs the mass of
the liver ...
William Harcourt Ranking, Charles Bland Radcliffe, William Domett Stone, 1849
4
Principles of comparative physiology
There is, then, no trae sanguiferous system in the Cestoid Worms, any more than
there is an alimentary canal ; both being replaced by the direct absorption of the
nutritious juices from without, in a state ready for assimilation. Yet it is probable ...
William Benjamin Carpenter, 1854
5
Outlines of Comparative Anatomy
the sanguiferous system of the radiated classes, a close analogy not only to the
earliest conditions of this system in the vertebrated animals, but also to the
permanent conditions of their chyliferous and lymphatic apparatus, especially in
the ...
Robert Edmond Grant, 1841
6
A treatise on protracted indigestion and its consequences: ...
The subject of the present part of this volume naturally divides itself into two
classes, the diseases which originate in the sanguiferous, and those which
originate in the nervous system; the latter term being understood in its most
extended ...
Alexander Philip Wilson Philip, 1843
7
Materia Medica; Or, Pharmacology and Therapeutics
It has been said that neither increase of appetite and digestive power, nor
increase in the strength of sanguiferous action, are any certain indications of a
true and genuine increase of tone, since both are said to be capable of being
produced, ...
8
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
The point in dispute in this sequence of diseased action, seems to be whether the
nervous or sanguiferous system is the first to yield to the potent agency of the
poison. This is a point of great importance. Without wishing to dispute or doubt
the ...
9
The London Medical and Physical Journal
Under the second head, it is suggested that the vascular system, sanguiferous
and absorbent, is the great scat of disease. Some remarks on the laws *i! disease
follow, particularly on the manner in which they supersede sede each other, ...
10
Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science
TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY. On the Changes
which accompany the Metamorphosis of the Tadpole, in reference especially to
the Respiratory and Sanguiferous Systems. By W. U. Whitney, Esq., M.R.C.S., &c
...