10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «TONSILLITIC»
Discover the use of
tonsillitic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
tonsillitic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Chemists' annual list
Sir, — I was suffering some short time since from Ulcerated Mouth and Throat,
and my daughter asked her mistress for a little hlack-currant preserve for me,
when she kindly sent me a bottle of your Tonsillitic Tincture, and the result was I
was ...
2
Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical
The branches of the glosso-pharyngeal nerve are the carotid, pharyngeal,
muscular, tonsillitic, and lingual. The carotid branches descend along the trunk of
the internal carotid artery as far as its point of bifurcation, communicating with the
...
3
Cincinnati Lancet and Clinic
The tonsillitic regions were natural, and bore pressure without causing
uneasiness. I got the patient to open his mouth sufficiently to enable me to
introduce the little finger, and the man winced when he depressed his tongue.
The palate and ...
The branches of the glosso-pharyngeal nerve are the carotid, pharyngeal,
muscular, tonsillitic, and lingual. The Carotid Branches descend along the trunk
of the internal carotid artery as far as its point of bifurcation, communicating with
the ...
5
A System of Human Anatomy: General and Special
The Branches of the glosso-pharyngeal nerve are — Communicating branches
with the Facial, Pneumogastric, Spinal accessory, Sympathetic. Tympanic,
Muscular, Pharyngeal, Lingual, Tonsillitic. The Branches of communication
proceed ...
Sir Erasmus Wilson, Paul Beck Goddard, 1813
6
The cyclopaedia of anatomy and physiology
They pass through the muscles of the tongue without giving any filaments to them
.* Tonsillitic twigs. — The different twigs of this nerve which we have described as
passing to the tonsils, form an intricate plexus, posterior to and around these ...
Robert Bentley Todd, 1839
7
A manual for the College of surgeons in London, Dublin, and ...
The tonsil receives its supply of blood chiefly from the tonsillitic branch of the
labial artery ; its nerves are derived from the tonsillitic plexus, formed by branches
from the lingual, glosso-pharyngeal, and sympathetic nerves. The tonsils are ...
John Steggall, Malcolm William Hilles, 1839
8
The cyclopædia of anatomy and physiology
The tonsillitic artery, ( arteria tonsillaris of Soemmering,) enumerated as a distinct
branch of the labial by Professor Harrison, is, more properly speaking, a branch
of the inferior palatine. In passing through the sub-maxillary gland, the labial ...
Robert Bentley Todd, 1836
9
The Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiology: DIA-INS
Tonsillitic twigs. — The different twigs of this nerve which we have described as
passing to the tonsils, form an intricate plexus, posterior to and around these
bodies, which has been called the circulus tonsillaris. These tousillitic twigs are ...
Robert Bentley Todd, 1839
Further, that post-scarlatinal nephritis, which clinically and pathologically is
almost indistinguishable from post-tonsillitic (non-scarlatinal) acute diffuse
nephritis, is also chiefly found among the younger subjects with scarlatina,
though, of course ...
London County Council, 1935