1
Royal Medical and London:Medico-Chirurgical Transactions Volume 75 (Paperback) - Livres de poche
2012, ISBN: 1130717216
[EAN: 9781130717211], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers … Plus…
[EAN: 9781130717211], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1892 Excerpt: . mould ( humus ). The mortar for the pavilion was formed by digging for the dolomite and mixing it with the lime. It should be remembered in support of this ingenious but somewhat peculiar theory that the identity of the tetanus bacillus and that found in garden mould (Nicolaier s) was demonstrated in Koch s laboratory, April 10th, 1887.1 Olshausen s cases (32, 38) were the ninetieth and hundred and thirty-sixth in a long series, and he is quite at a loss to understand their occurrence except by irregularity of ligature, upon which he lays great stress. Kaltenbach (17, 18) is himself uncertain about proper ligature in his cases: in one the pedicle was very thick, and not a proper one for the clamp treatment; in the other (17), after falling off of the clamp, a blackish eschar was found, under which was a bright white filament; when this was seized with the forceps the woman, who was an insensitive person as a rule, shrank back in great pain; two days later the first signs of trismus appeared. Nerve irritation was here probably the cause, while contagion was acting in Case 18. All clamp cases necessarily have the bruising, crushing, and tearing elements present, tending to the production of tetanus by nerve-irritation. Olshausen thinks that because 27 out of his 38 collected cases were treated extraperitoneally, there must be some serious element of danger in the method. There are certain indications that in several of the 27 cases the clamp was either insufficient or unequal. Stilling saw in three of his cases secondary haemorrhage from the pedicle, which could only be stayed by further tightening. My tables (vide Table D) show that there are more intra-peritoneal than extra-peritoneal cases recorded, viz. 35 to 29, which somewhat weakens Olshause.<
- NEW BOOK Frais d'envoiVersandkostenfrei (EUR 0.00) The Book Depository US, Gloucester, ., United Kingdom [58762574] [Rating: 5 (von 5)]
2
Royal Medical and London:
Medico-Chirurgical Transactions Volume 75 (Paperback)
- Livres de poche2012, ISBN: 1130717216
[EAN: 9781130717211], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers c… Plus…
[EAN: 9781130717211], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1892 Excerpt: . mould ( humus ). The mortar for the pavilion was formed by digging for the dolomite and mixing it with the lime. It should be remembered in support of this ingenious but somewhat peculiar theory that the identity of the tetanus bacillus and that found in garden mould (Nicolaier s) was demonstrated in Koch s laboratory, April 10th, 1887.1 Olshausen s cases (32, 38) were the ninetieth and hundred and thirty-sixth in a long series, and he is quite at a loss to understand their occurrence except by irregularity of ligature, upon which he lays great stress. Kaltenbach (17, 18) is himself uncertain about proper ligature in his cases: in one the pedicle was very thick, and not a proper one for the clamp treatment; in the other (17), after falling off of the clamp, a blackish eschar was found, under which was a bright white filament; when this was seized with the forceps the woman, who was an insensitive person as a rule, shrank back in great pain; two days later the first signs of trismus appeared. Nerve irritation was here probably the cause, while contagion was acting in Case 18. All clamp cases necessarily have the bruising, crushing, and tearing elements present, tending to the production of tetanus by nerve-irritation. Olshausen thinks that because 27 out of his 38 collected cases were treated extraperitoneally, there must be some serious element of danger in the method. There are certain indications that in several of the 27 cases the clamp was either insufficient or unequal. Stilling saw in three of his cases secondary haemorrhage from the pedicle, which could only be stayed by further tightening. My tables (vide Table D) show that there are more intra-peritoneal than extra-peritoneal cases recorded, viz. 35 to 29, which somewhat weakens Olshause.<
- NEW BOOK Frais d'envoiVersandkostenfrei (EUR 0.00) The Book Depository, Gloucester, UK, United Kingdom [54837791] [Rating: 5 (von 5)]