On stertor, apoplexy, and the management of the apoplectic state . Diagram to show space between Diagram to show space between symphysis and vertebral column with symphysis and vertebral column withmouth shut. mouth open. —The line representing the spine should, in both diagrams, have beenplaced more forward, in front of the mastoid process. Frontispiece. [ Vide page 32. ON STERTOR, APOPLEXY, AND THE MANAGEMENT OF THE APOPLECTIC STATE. ROBERT L. BOWLES, , Lond., CONSULTING PHYSICIAN TO THE VICTORIA HOSPITAL, FOLKESTONE ; PHYSICIAN TO THE ST. ANDREWS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL,


On stertor, apoplexy, and the management of the apoplectic state . Diagram to show space between Diagram to show space between symphysis and vertebral column with symphysis and vertebral column withmouth shut. mouth open. —The line representing the spine should, in both diagrams, have beenplaced more forward, in front of the mastoid process. Frontispiece. [ Vide page 32. ON STERTOR, APOPLEXY, AND THE MANAGEMENT OF THE APOPLECTIC STATE. ROBERT L. BOWLES, , Lond., CONSULTING PHYSICIAN TO THE VICTORIA HOSPITAL, FOLKESTONE ; PHYSICIAN TO THE ST. ANDREWS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL, FOLKESTONE ; FELLOW OF THE ROYAL MEDICAL CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY ; MEMBER OF THE CLINICAL, MEDICAL, AND ANATOMICAL SOCIETIES; LATE PRESIDENT S. E. BRANCH OF BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. Stertitque supinus. LONDON: BAILLIERE, TINDALL AND COX, 20 & 21, KING WILLIAM STREET, STRAND.[PARIS AND MADRID.] DEDICATED WITH KIND PERMISSION TO MY OLD AND REVERED FRIENDS, Sir JAMES PAGET, Bart.,Sir henry PITMAN, , AND Mr. GEORGE POLLOCK, WHO EARLY IN MY PROFESSIONAL LIFE ENCOURAGED ME TO PURSUE FURTHER THE INVESTIGATIONS I HAD THEN ALREADY BEGUN. PREFACE. For more than thirty years in the course of my profes-sional work, I have been observing and investigating thecauses and consequences of stertor, and considering itsrelations with the many forms of disease and accident inwhich it has been found to be present. During thatperiod I have learned, that not only may it be more orless injurious to the sufferer and interfere with the naturalcourse towards recovery, but that it may be, and often is,immediately and supremely dangerous to life. I have alsolearned that stertorous breathing can at all times bepromptly relieved by the judicious application of commonphysical laws, viz. by placing the patie


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