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COUNT CAVOCR'S ILLNESS

... do weO to know the fact that blooding b just frightfully carried on Rome or Naples at Turin. Count Cavour’s illness was 4> typhoid fever, the modem name congestive gastric. Typhus b different disease altogether. A chesnnt horse and horse cheennt are not ...

MEDICAL TREATMENT OF COUNT CAVOUR

... do well to know the fact that bleeding just frightfully carried on at Rome or Naples at Turin. Count Cavour's illness was typhoid fever, the modern name of congestive gastric. Typhus is a different disease altogether. A chestnut horse and a horse chestnut ...

Published: Monday 10 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Mail
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1048 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE TUTORIAL SYSTEM. TIIK LIVERPOOL FEVER AT ALEXANDRIA

... of from one to four weeks’ duration in hospital. In all of these cases, the type of the fever was rather inflammatory than typhoid, and in all.there was a degree of fidgetty, restless excitement and affection of the nervous system, quite out of proportion ...

Published: Wednesday 12 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Medical Press
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 508 | Page: 15 | Tags: none

444 Dublin Medical Press. CHLORIDE. OF LIME IN ULCERATED SURFACES. June 19, 1861

... pneumonia may supervene, but these are not hooping-cough, any more than hypostatic engorgement of the lungs in typhoid fever is the typhoid fever itself. What, then, is the testimony of therapeutics It is negative, so far as the whole range of antiphlogistics ...

Published: Wednesday 19 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Medical Press
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1393 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

THE ILL! We (Freeman Turin, the sth in culars of the illne M. de Cavou ports (serious en lieve. before

... aeasot ness of bloed. Oi cofiee after dinner, fit. The medics ing him so iron vomiting set in, a treated for apoplet that the typhoid long ignored, and blood-letting. A'i a panic spreading desolation. The are not amongst t' these painful circu lerated march ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: The Evening Freeman
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 595 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

COUNT CAVuUKS LAST HOURS

... know the fact that bleeding ia just as frightfully carried on at Home or Naples as at Turin. Count Cavour’a illness was “typhoid fever, the | nvidern name of congestive gastric. Typhus is a different disease altogether. A chestnut horse and 1 horse chestnut ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 736 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE EVENING PACKET—FRIDAY, JUNE 21. 1861. REPRESENTATION OF DROGHEDA

... half-dozen diseases dwindle into the self-same one. He tells of typhus; but this was the invention of the telegrams—a mistake for typhoid (the common name for gastric). He tells “pernicious fever: this the Frenck term for the same disease. So we are thus rid ...

wiii* u.v fortuU, who the bvitivdu - Duodon, who died in in the „f ,i„.„ il u mouth of December

... in their opir’on that Ciiunt Cavou** fe” a vlct !, to the Sangrodos of Tit *n. TJiey say tliat lie died, not of typhus, or typhoid, or gasliic fever, but of six Meetings. A coirespondeut. w.it'ng to the Morning Pott, says that he felt s’aj.ued when heard ...

Published: Thursday 13 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Daily Express
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2155 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE ILLNESS OF COUNT CAVOUR

... vomiting set in, and later in the night lie was bled and treated for apoplectic tendencies. Now they are afraid that the typhoid nature of the malady has been too long ignored, and the patient weakened by repeated blood-letting. All possible measures ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: Freeman's Journal
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1552 | Page: 2 | Tags: News 

THE ILLNESS OK COUNT CAVOUR

... violent vomiting set in, and later in the night he was bled and treated for apoplectic tendenc?e-. Now they are afraid that typhoid nature of the malady ha* been too leng ignored, ami the patient weakened repeated od-letting. A possible measures are taken ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: The Evening Freeman
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1560 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

W ajnTS

... he was again delirious. 1 saw to-day his own doctor, a very able professor in our university. told they leared that the typhoid fever would degenerate into jten't ptrniciense (if mistake not what you call putrid fever). The count,'’ said informant, has ...

Published: Saturday 15 June 1861
Newspaper: Weekly Freeman's Journal
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 3171 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

THE CENSUS OF 18G1

... that the facts only return again in strong opposition to their theories and books. What largo venesections, six in week, for typhoid fever in Turin may be (no doubt quite according to the local old- ...

Published: Wednesday 26 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Medical Press
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1829 | Page: 15 | Tags: none