Anesthesia . ll quicklyand safely deepen the anesthesia, without the salivary gland activitythat would be produced by an amount of ether sufficient to obtain therelaxation called for. A glance at the statistics for the anesthol-ether sequence will fullyconvince anyone of the safety and desirability of this sequence. At theGerman Hospital, in the year 1905, 149 cases were given anesthesia bythis method, increasing in number each year until the year 1911, whenthere were 919. The Ether Rausch.—Coughlin ^ recently described the etherrausch. We quote voluminously from Coughlins article. The ether r


Anesthesia . ll quicklyand safely deepen the anesthesia, without the salivary gland activitythat would be produced by an amount of ether sufficient to obtain therelaxation called for. A glance at the statistics for the anesthol-ether sequence will fullyconvince anyone of the safety and desirability of this sequence. At theGerman Hospital, in the year 1905, 149 cases were given anesthesia bythis method, increasing in number each year until the year 1911, whenthere were 919. The Ether Rausch.—Coughlin ^ recently described the etherrausch. We quote voluminously from Coughlins article. The ether rausch, according to Coughlin, was used in this countrytwenty-five years ago. Lindner, of Dresden, has used it more than five ^Coughlin, William T.: J. Am. Med. Assn., July 1, 1911, 17, 18. 210 ANESTHESIA thousand times. Coiighlin is using it at the College Clinic, St. LouisUniversity Medical School. He reports two hundred cases, in some ofwhich he acted both as the anesthetist and ()])orator. The only fail-. A. Wire Frame of the Mask.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyorkandlondonda