| 1831 - 576 pàgines
...looked upon as of no importance, and unattended with danger, often assume a very alarming character. No injury of the head is too slight to be despised, or too severe to be despaired of. Punctured and lacerated wounds, more especially those penetrating all the layers of covering, are frequently... | |
| 1831 - 576 pàgines
...looked upon as of no importance, and unattended with danger, often assume a very alarming character. No injury of the head is too slight to be despised, or too severe to be despaired of. Punctured and lacerated wounds, more especially those penetrating all the layers of covering, are frequently... | |
| Robert Liston - 1840 - 844 pàgines
...and unattended with danger, often assume a very alarming character. No injury of the head, in fact, is too slight to be despised, or too severe to be despaired of. Punctured and lacerated wounds, more especially those penetrating all the layers of covering, are frequently... | |
| James Miller - 1849 - 516 pàgines
...as fully convinced, as are the members of the medical profession, of the truthfulness of the axiom, that " no injury of the head is too slight to be despised ;" and that whenever any serious concussion has been sustained, the greatest prophylactic caution is... | |
| John A. Orr (F.R.C.S.I.) - 1850 - 514 pàgines
...class of injuries may here be premised to save repetition. " No injury of the head, " says Mr. Liston, "is too slight to be despised, or too severe to be despaired of." The surgeon consequently must often enforce a strictness of general treatment that may seem uureasonable... | |
| James Miller - 1853 - 780 pàgines
...as fully convinced, as are the members of the medical profession, of the truthfulness of the axiom, that "no injury of the head is too slight to be despised ;" and that whenever any serious concussion has been sustained, the greatest prophylactic caution is... | |
| James Miller - 1856 - 712 pàgines
...as fully convinced, as are the members of the medical profession, of the truthfulness of the axiom, that " no injury of the head is too slight to be despised ;" and that whenever any serious concussion has been sustained, the greatest prophylactic caution is... | |
| Charles Stuart Tripler, George Curtis Blackman - 1861 - 188 pàgines
...conical ball, says Mr. Macleod, not only penetrates, but perforates, and almost always proves fatal. A musket ball may give rise to a fracture of the inner,...hospital, August 24, 1855. He said that when at the roar, a musket ball, which he found afterward, struck him on the head. On examination, a distinct linear... | |
| Eduard von Hofmann - 1878 - 836 pàgines
...trügerischen Verlauf der Kopfverletzungen hat ein neuerer Chirurg (Liston) treffend mit den Worten bezeichnet: No injury of the head is too slight to be despised or too severe to be despaired of. Der Gerichtsarzt hat nur allzu häufig Gelegenheit, die .Richtigkeit dieses Satzes zu erkennen, und... | |
| Medical Society of the State of New York (1807- ) - 1883 - 436 pàgines
...textures within the skull. Now it is that Liston's aphorism comes over us in full force, it may be, viz.: that " no injury of the head is too slight to be despised, or too severe to be despaired of." as we may be to-day, beyond some whose work has preceded us, with a more perfect histological and physiological... | |
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