10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «VENOSITY»
Discover the use of
venosity in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
venosity and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Association medical journal
motion, the fluids being driven up, as it were, into a corner, and consequently the
congestion and venosity of the blood is at its maximum ; and again, in children,
whose rapid breathing and varied motions prevent any stagnation in the lungs, ...
Provincial Medical and Surgical Association, 1854
VENOSITY. There are certain subjects whose venous systems are exceedingly
prone to ail ; if they have anything wrong with their hearts, it is pretty sure to be
the venous side of it ; if they get dyspepsia, it arises from congestion of the - portal
...
3
A manual of pathological anatomy
VENOSITY, ALBUMINOSIS. HTPINOS1S (SIMON.) This constitution of the blood
is characterised by deficiency in fibrin, but preponderance of albumen, and
generally speaking, also of blood-globules. The blood is upon the whole thickish,
...
Karl Rokitansky (Freiherr von), 1854
4
British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review
The empirical modes of treatment to which we advert signally failed, because
those who employed them were utterly ignorant of the real healing agent, namely
the venosity, which in catarrh is the consequence of the deficiency of function, ...
5
The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review Or ...
The empirical modes of treatment to which we advert signally failed, because
those who employed them were utterly ignorant of the real healing agent, namely
the venosity, which in catarrh is the consequence of the deficiency of function, ...
6
The Dublin Journal of Medical and Chemical Science
Setting out from this theoretic point of view, the author, in the remainder of his
memoir, endeavours to prove, that'the congestion depends upon an excess of
venous blood, upon a predominant venosity, and that this disposition is
sometimes ...
7
The Cincinnati Lancet and Clinic
ribs being abnormally oft in the rickety, and thus not "holding out" during the
descent of the diaphragm, the efforts of that muscle are more or less neutralised.
Thus there is in young rickety children a condition for venosity (which may in part
...
8
The Homœopathic Examiner
... and the irritable tissues which have connection with them; it also causes
nervous irritability, increased venosity, dissolution and decomposition with
tendency to atony, colliquation and paralysis”—and then proceeds to state that it
has proved ...
9
Remarks on the abracadabra of the nineteenth century: or on ...
... mostly depend not upon a ' ora, or orgasmus in the vena portarum, obstructions
in the liver and other abdo- on a predominant venosity, so much advocated in
modern minal organs, &c., nor upon a predominant venosity, times as the cause ...
10
Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal
The proximate cause of this lesion he considers to be " a predominant venosity."
— " The icterus and erysipelas," says he, " of newly born infants, induration of the
cellular tissue, aphthae, and gelatiniform ramollissement of the stomach, are ...