The Hahnemannian monthly . set up in those wounded by the arrows, suggestedits trial in whooping-cough. Dr. Gennnell, of Glasgow, an old-school practitioner,was the first to test it, and reported that, given m the first stage, it cut short anattack ; in the second, reduced the frequency and violence of the paroxysms; andin the third hastened convalescence. Dr. E. A. Neatby has now tried it with goodresults, though whether such as to supersede our ordinary remedies in its favor isanother question.—Monthly Horn. Review. Mezereum en Aural Affections.—A study of the aural symptoms of mezereumis co


The Hahnemannian monthly . set up in those wounded by the arrows, suggestedits trial in whooping-cough. Dr. Gennnell, of Glasgow, an old-school practitioner,was the first to test it, and reported that, given m the first stage, it cut short anattack ; in the second, reduced the frequency and violence of the paroxysms; andin the third hastened convalescence. Dr. E. A. Neatby has now tried it with goodresults, though whether such as to supersede our ordinary remedies in its favor isanother question.—Monthly Horn. Review. Mezereum en Aural Affections.—A study of the aural symptoms of mezereumis contributed to the New England Medical Gazette by Dr. Howard M. Bellows. Heconsiders that the most characteristic symptom for it to be that the ears feel as iftoo open, as if air was pouring into them, or as if the tympanum were exposed tocold air, with a desire to bore with the fingers into the ear. This indication isbased on the experience of three of the provers, and is thus good pathogeneticallyas well as MNIAN ohfhly. AUGUST, 1894. TOXEMIA OF PREGNANCY-A REVIEW OF ITS CAUSES, DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT WITH REFERENCE TO THE PREVENTION OF ECLAMPSIA. BY L. L. DANFORTH, , NEW YORK CITY. (Read before the American Institute of Homoeopathy, Denver, June, 1894.) At a meeting of this Institute held at Atlantic City in June,1891, I presented a paper entitled Albuminuria of Pregnancy. Iconsidered the various causes of albuminuria in pregnancy so far asknown, and endeavored to define the relationship of this conditionto its most dreaded sequel—eclampsia. In view of such facts as Ithen possessed I maintained that renal albuminuria was of no specialsignificance unless associated with symptoms and conditions referableto a disordered state of the nervous and muscular systems and thatthese systems were usually the result of an abnormal state of theblood to which we now apply the general term toxaemia. There is no subject in the whole field of obstetric medicine ofgreater


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhomopath, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookyear1865