Annual report of the Medical College of Bengal : fourteenth year, session 1848-49 / under the immediate control and superintendence of the Council of Education.
- Medical College of Bengal
- Date:
- 1849
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Annual report of the Medical College of Bengal : fourteenth year, session 1848-49 / under the immediate control and superintendence of the Council of Education. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by Royal College of Physicians, London. The original may be consulted at Royal College of Physicians, London.
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![PRACTICE OF PHYSIC. 1. Describe the principal organic diseases of tlie stomach, including the anatomical characters, and diagnostic symptoms. 2. Enumerate the varieties of colic, explain the causes, pathologj', and treatment of each. 3. Describe the symptoms, ordinary course, and treatment of erysipelas of the face. 4. Enumerate the morbid conditions of the urine, and the signs physical and chemical, by which they are recognized. Ex]ilain their patho- logy, specifying the diseases, primary or secondary, on which they depend. SURGERY. 1. What are the different varieties of ophthalmia? Describe their characteristic appearances and appropriate treatment. 2. What are the symptoms of iritis ? Detail the different forms of that disease, and the effects produced by it on the eye, if unskilfully or unsuc- cessfully treated. How is inflammation of the internal, to be distinguished from inflammation of the external tunics of the eye. 3. Describe the operation of amputation at the ankle joint. State its supposed advantages over amputation below the knee. 4. Wliat are the causes, symptoms, and treatment of infiltration of urine in the perenium ? MIDWIFERY. 1. What are the dififerent varieties of uterine hemorrhage, their causes, and treatment? 2. What do you infer from uterine hemorrhage being arrested during a pain, and what from its continuance chiefly during a pain ? 3. Describe the operation of Turning, its dangers, and the circum- stances under in which it is required. MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE. 1. The proofs of a wound having been inflicted diu-ing life. 2. The evidences of recent delivery in the living and in the dead subject, with the relative and absolute value of each sign. 3. The various modes in which death may be produced by asphyxia, with the distinctive characteristics of each. 4. The characters of general, moral and intellectual mania.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24766823_0056.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


