and in the open air, and had no vessels to measure the blood, which falling on the ground, the quantity each person lost could not of course be known. The operation being over, he ordered them to lie in their tents, and though he gave no kind of remedy after bleeding, yet of the

I ordered the surgeons to bleed them in. both arms, and to go round to them all, with command to leave them bleeding till all were blooded, and then come and tie them up in their turns. Thus they lay bleeding and fainting, so long, that I could not conceive they could lose less than an hundred ounces each man.

More

Page 42 In the great majority of cases the functions of the brain in mental derangement are increased in force, while the circulation is depressed, extremely quick, and feeble, and the action of the heart giving way at the smallest Appears in 8 books from 1832-1976

Page 42 of blood, and yet these are often attended with raving delirium, great increase of muscular force, and are in fact What are termed high cases. The consequence, I am informed, of such practice, is either the more frequent Appears in 8 books from 1832-1976

Page 42 we do not use the lancet in cases without any such symptoms existing of disease going on in the brain, is that we have done so in several instances, and the result was not favourable: the patient became reduced from the loss of blood, and the excitement not abated, the powers of the constitution gave way, the tongue became typhoid, and the patient Appears in 6 books from 1832-1854

Page 83 That internal inflammations are very common in hot blooded animals; but idiopathic fever is peculiar to the human kind. It may be added, that processes of an inflammatory nature are fitted for repairing parts that have their functions interrupted, or their structure injured, but the effects of Appears in 5 books from 1814-1833

Page 91 Removed from kind Arbuthnot's aid, Who knows his art, but not his trade. Appears in 40 books from 1774-1995

Page 83 of all the discussions relative to topical congestion, it was impossible, however, not to remark the singular want of accordance between the prevalent opinions, and the local appearances. The brain, so constantly supposed to be the seat of inflammation, rarely exhibited the characters indicative of Appears in 4 books from 1829-1833

Page 83 a state—in some instances, this organ was much paler than usual; in a very few, amongst a great number of dissections, was there any evidence of sanguineous, or serous, effusion; nor was the latter to any considerable extent. The veins on the Appears in 4 books from 1829-1833

Page 81 having reviewed his notes on the anatomical examination of persons who have died of typhus fever, he can state as the result of his experience, that the morbid appearances in typhus fever are not those of common visceral inflammation. Appears in 4 books from 1829-1833

Less