1J. Appleton & CoSs Medical Publications. 



FLINT. 

 Manual of Chemical Examination of 



the Urine in Disease. With Brief Directions for tJie 

 Examination of the most Common Varieties of Uri- 

 nary Calculi. 



By AUSTIN FLINT, JR., M. D., 



Professor of Physiology and Microscopy in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College ; Fellow of the 

 New York Academy of Medicine; Member of the Medical Society of the County of New 

 York ; Resident Member of the Lyceum of Natural History in the City of New York, etc. 



Third Edition, revised and corrected. 1 vol., 12mo. 77 pp. Cloth, $1.00. 



The chief aim of this little work is to enable the busy practitioner to 

 make for himself, rapidly and easily, all ordinary examinations of Urine; 

 to give him the benefit of the author's experience in eliminating little 

 difficulties in the manipulations, and in reducing processes of analysis 

 to the utmost simplicity that is consistent with accuracy. 



" We do not know of any work in English so complete and handy as the 

 Manual now offered to the profession by Dr. Flint, and the high scientific reputa- 

 tion of the author is a sufficient guarantee of the accuracy of all the directions 

 given." Journal-of Applied Cliemistry. 



" We can unhesitatingly recommend this Manual." Psychological Journal. 



"Eminently practical." Detroit Review of Medicine. 



On the Physiological Effects of Severe 



and Protracted Muscular Exercise. With Special Ref- 

 erence to its Influence upon the Excretion of Nitrogen. 



By AUSTIN FLINT, JR., M.D., 



Professor of Physiology in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York, etc., etc. 



1 vol., 8vo. 91 pp. Cloth, $2.00. 



This monograph on the relations of Urea to Exercise is the result of 

 a thorough and careful investigation made in the case of Mr. Edward 

 Payson Weston, the celebrated pedestrian. The chemical analyses were 

 made under the direction of R. O. Doremus, M. D., Professor of Chem- 

 istry and Toxicology in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, by 

 Mr. Oscar Loew, his assistant. The observations were made with the 

 cooperation of J. C. Dalton, M. D., Professor of Physiology in the Col- 

 lege of Physicians and Surgeons ; Alexander B. Mott, M. D., Professor 

 of Surgical Anatomy; W. H. Van Buren, M. D., Professor of Principles 

 of Surgery ; Austin Flint, M. D., Professor of the Principles and Prac- 

 tice of Medicine; W. A. Hammond, M. D., Professor of Diseases of the 

 Mind and Nervous System all of the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. 



" This work will be found interesting to every physician. A number of im- 

 portant results were obtained valuable to the physiologist." Gin. Med. Repertory. 



