10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «ETHERISM»
Découvrez l'usage de
etherism dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
etherism et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
Klas Östergren. heavenly spheres; among animists and spiritists regarded as a
divine substance. Etherism added Christian ideas from medieval thinkers,
primarily the mystics. The highest form of religious experience consisted of unio
mystica, ...
2
New York journal of medicine
On amputation and etherism in traumatic tetanus. It is probable that the
opponents of amputation in traumatic tetanus, even when the lesion itself calls for
the loss of the limb, will have modified their opinion since the discovery of
chloroform.
3
The London Medical Gazette
On amputation and etherism in traumatic tetanus. It is probable that the
opponents of amputation in traumatic tetanns, even when the lesion itself calls for
the loss of the limb, will have modified their opinion since the discovery of
chloroform.
4
Twentieth century practice
Of the pathology of chronic etherism not much is known. In the one or two fatal
cases in which a post-mortem examination has been made, no special
appearance was noted. The symptoms seem to be chiefly those of a purely
functional ...
5
A Practical Manual of Mental Medicine
The same is true of all the agencies that act by strongly impressing the feelings
and imagination of the patients, such as violent emotions, religions ceremonies,
pilgrimages, etc. IV. -OTHER INTOXICATIONS. (Absinthism, Etherism.
Chlokausm.
6
Twentieth Century Practice: Occupation diseases, ...
Etherism. Ether has a sweetish, pungent, hot taste, and when drunk gives rise to
a burning feeling of constriction in the mouth, fauces, and throat. Its action is
exciting, exhilarating, and intoxicating, very much like that of chloroform. Inhaled
it is ...
Thomas Lathrop Stedman,
1895
7
An Illustrated Dictionary of Medicine, Biology and Allied ...
Ethalium (e-tha' -le-u1n) [allialogg smoke, soot (referring to the spores)]. In
biology, a placentoid compound plasmodium formed by certain myCetozoa, e. g.
, the flowers of tan. Ether (e'-the1'). See Ether. Etherism (e/-the1'-izm). See
Etherism.
George Milbry Gould,
1903
8
The American Journal of the Medical Sciences
The etherism, sometimes exciting cough and sense of suffocation, aggravated,
for the time, the disease. The progress of the disease was not modified by their
use, since he died on the fifth day from the beginning of the attack; the usual
period ...
9
Edinburgh medical and surgical journal
A little after, t ese feelings diminished quickly, disappeared, and yielded to partial
etherism, limited to the points directly etherized. This local insensibility lasted for
forty-eight hours at least, and left the patients in a state of perfect calm. When ...
10
Physicians' Pocket Reference to the International List of ...
Acetylene poisoning Acute etherism Ammonia poisoning Amyl nitrite poisoning
Anœsthesia chloroform Anœsthetic for operation (unqualified) Asphyxia (
accidental) by fumes gas (accidental) smoke (conflagration excepted) stove
vapor ...
United States. Bureau of the Census, Richard C. Lappin,
1916