Interstate medical journal . astaken when the patients entered the hospital and when they reachedthe etherizing room, great enough seriously to regard. Theirreadings were, as a rule, slightly greater when they came to theoperating floor than at the time of the initial physical was due, no doubt, to fear or excitement. As a general rule, immediately after the start of anesthesia thereis a rise of from 10 to 30 degrees in the pressure, but after afew minutes it again falls to somewhere near the patients in-dividual level. This phenomenon is seen in both ether and in ni- INTERSTA


Interstate medical journal . astaken when the patients entered the hospital and when they reachedthe etherizing room, great enough seriously to regard. Theirreadings were, as a rule, slightly greater when they came to theoperating floor than at the time of the initial physical was due, no doubt, to fear or excitement. As a general rule, immediately after the start of anesthesia thereis a rise of from 10 to 30 degrees in the pressure, but after afew minutes it again falls to somewhere near the patients in-dividual level. This phenomenon is seen in both ether and in ni- INTERSTATE MEDICAL JOURNAL 21 trous oxide anesthesia, and it appeared also in four cases anes-thetized by rectal anesthesia. The rise is due, undoubtedly, to thesudden introduction into the blood of a foreign gas, which instantly OP. V/ERTHEIM KI5 ftaiXMIlE IWlir i>s i» us i«i in iu i.» id is* i » im n: if, i.« i% i» >â¢;» ;» us M» § I âp EXTREME OVT PULSE m § &T/VHTE» THENJBEHG * UNOBTAINABLE m an I s. Chart V.âTypical chart of shock, in which the fall in pressure and rise in ratewere practically simultaneous. The sudden drop at 1:30 p. m. is illustrativeof what manipulation of the pelvic and abdominal organs may produce inpressure changes.


Size: 2265px × 1104px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidinter, booksubjectmedicine