Diseases of the nose and throat : a text-book for students and practitioners.
- Ivins, Horace F.
- Date:
- 1893
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Diseases of the nose and throat : a text-book for students and practitioners. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library at Yale University, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library at Yale University.
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![rBICB mid JEAGLETOJS^ Three Charts of the Nervo-Vascular System. Part I.—The Nerves. Part II.—The Arteries. Part III.—The Yeins. A New Edition, Revised and Perfected. Arranged by W. Henry Price, ]\[.D., and S. Potts Eagleton, M.D. Endorsed b}' leading anatomists. Clearly iiiul beautifully printed upon extra durable paper. TART I. The Nerves.—Gives in a clear form not only the Cranial and Spinal Nerves, show- ing the formation of the ditferent I'lexnses and their branches, but ateo the complete distribution of the Sympathetic Nekvks. tart II. The Arteries—Gives a unique groui)ing of the Arterial system, showing the divisions and subdivisions of all the vessels, beginning from the heart and tracing their CONTINUOUS distribution to the periphery, and showing at a glance the terminal branches of each artery. PART III. The Veins—Shows how the blood from the periphery of the body is gradually collected by the larger veins, and these coalescinfj forming still larger ve.ssels, until they finally trace themselves into the Right Auricle ot the heart. It is therefore readily seen that The Nervo-Vascular System of Charts offers the following superior advantages :— 1. It is tJie only arrangement which combines the Three Systems, and yet each is perfect and distinct in itself 2. It is the only instance of the Cranial, Spinal, and Sympathetic Nervous Systems being represented on one chart. o. From its neat size and clear type, and being printed only upon one side, it may be tacked up in any convenient place, and is always ready for freshening up the memory and reviewing for examination. Price, post-paid, in United States and Canada, 50 cents, net, complete; in Great Britain, 3s. 6d.; in France, 3 fr. 60. For the student of anatomy there can pos- sibly be no more conci^•e way of acquiring a knowledge of the nerves, veins, and arteries of the human system. It presents at a glance tlieir trunks and branches in the great divis- ions of the body. It will save a world of tedi- ous reading, and will impress itself on the mind as no ordinary vaile mecum, even, could. Its price is nominal and its value inestimable. Ko student should be without it.—Pacific Record of Medicine and Surgery. These are three admirably arranged charts for the use of students, to assist in memor- izing their anatomical sndies.—Buffalo Med. and Surg. Jour. PUJIDY Diabetes: Its Cause, Symptoms a:^^Treatment By Chas. W. Purdy, M.D. (Queen's University), Honorary Fellow of the Roval College of Physicians and Surgeons of Kingston ; Member of the College ()[' Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario ; Author of Bright's Disease and Allied Affections of the Kidneys ; Member of the Association of American Physicians ; >[ember of the American ^Medical Association ; Member of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, etc. CoNTKNTs.—Section I. Historical, Geographical, and Climatological Con- siderations of Diabetes Mellitus. II. Pln'siological and Pathological Considera- tions of Diabetes :\rellitus. III. Etiology of Diabetes IMellitus. IV. Morbid .\nniomy of Diabetes Mellitus. V. S3'mi)tomatolog3^ of Diabetes Mellitus. VI. Trer.tme'nt of Diabetes Mellitus. VII. Clinical Illustrations of Diabetes Mellitus. Vni. Diabetes Insipidus ; Bibliography. l3mo. Dark Blue Extra Cloth. Nearly 200 pages. No. S in the Fhysicinna' and Students' Heady-Jleference Series. Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.25, net; in Qreat Britain, 6s. 6d.; in France, 7 fr. 75. Tliis will prove a most entertaining as well ns most interesting treatise upon a disea.se •A liich frequently falls to the lot of every j>raotitiom'r. The work has been written with a special view of brimming out tlie features of t'le (lisease as it ocurs in the United States. The author has very judiciously arranged the little volnme, and it will offer inany nleasant attractions to the ]>ractiti()ner.—iVW/inVie Joiinuil of Medicine and Surgery. While many monographs liave been pub- lished which have dealt with the subject of diabetes, we know of none wliicli so tlioroughly considers its relations to tlie geographical conditions which exist in the United Slates, nor which is more complete in its summary of the symi)ton)atology and treatment of this affection. A number of tables, showing the l)ercentageof sugar in a v«!ry large number of alcoholic beverages, adds very considerably to the value of the work.—Medical Neivs.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21019010_0549.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)