Upon paroxysmal angina pectoris and other forms of cardiac pain : with some remarks on the diagnosis of fatty heart / by George W. Balfour.
- George William Balfour
- Date:
- [1881]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Upon paroxysmal angina pectoris and other forms of cardiac pain : with some remarks on the diagnosis of fatty heart / by George W. Balfour. Source: Wellcome Collection.
19/20 (page 873)
![1878.] PROF. FLEEMING JENKIN ON SANITARY INSPECTION. 873 Two strange fallacies deserve notice. One is, that it is of no use to put private sewers in good order so long as public sewers are in bad condition. This is eminently untrue, for the worse the con¬ dition of the public sewer the more necessary is it that each house should be cut off and protected by the perfection of its internal arrangements. The other fallacy is, that if town sewers were good, there would be no need for good internal fittings. This is certainly absurd, for, independently of the dangers which arise within the house itself, and which may be sufficiently serious, it may be said confidently that the best managed public sewer, re¬ ceiving, as it does, the taints of numerous diseases, must always be a source of some danger to all houses into vThich common-sewer gas is admitted. It is hoped that the medical profession may give their hearty support to the new movement; that they will do so may be augured from the ready adherence which the Presidents of the College of Physicians and the College of Surgeons gave to the scheme. The responsibility of a medical attendant is heavy enough, as it seems to the author to make him welcome any proper means by which he may be relieved from the responsibility of giving advice concerning drains and other engineering matters, —advice which has certainly, in thousands of cases, been beneficial, but which can neither be given with the fully trained knowledge of the engineer, nor be received as coming with such a clear authority. Moreover, in recommending the Association, the medical man will not exercise any invidious patronage ; he will merely tell his patients that a council of men, well known to them, have selected professional advisers, who are likely to be thoroughly competent, as having been carefully selected by such men, and who are cer¬ tain to gain immense experience in the course of their annual inspections. Article II.—Cases of Aneurism of the Aorta, treated by Iodide of Potassium. By Byrom Bramwell, M.D., Joint Lecturer on Clinical Medicine and Pathology in the University of Durham College of Medicine, Newcastle-on-Tyne ; Physician and Patho¬ logist to the Newcastle Infirmary, etc., etc. {Read before the Medico-Chirurgical Society of Edinburgh, 16th January 1878.) Mr President and Gentlemen,—During the past three years six cases of aneurism of the aorta and one case of aneurism of the innominate artery have been admitted to the Newcastle-on-Tyne Infirmary under my care. In this paper I propose to record as briefly as is consistent with scientific accuracy the notes of these cases. I have also added the notes of three other cases, which, for various reasons, are interesting. The treatment adopted in the seven Infirmary cases was the ad-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b3057674x_0019.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)