

600 

















I 



i this 



i the 



. tlit 





lei. 

 rial illus- 



■ Je]. 



the liver 



mndice]. 



Yellow, or 



[I..]. I 'US. 



. jaundice]. Af 



j Ictei 

 . form], 

 tundice. 



mndice; 

 ] i with yellow 



i Jaund 



Atrophy of the Liver. 



rapid 



jaundice, 



try. 



i marked 



»ur- 



• intains 



I in 



I 



lid - 



Hematogenic, 

 ■I in 



I.. Urobil 



IDEOMOTION 



ments. The skin and conjunctivae are colored yellow, 

 i : mi, but no true jaundice exi-ts. 



Ictus | I , a stroke]. A sudden or unforeseen 



ait.: I. epilepticus, an epileptic in. I. paralyti- 



cus I. solis, sunstroke. 



Id [idus, the dividing or division]. In biology, ac- 



Weismann's theory of the germ plasm, a 



vital unit of the third degree, having a definite struc- 



turi rminants, which in their turn are made up 



an "ancestral germ-plasm," or unit 



■ primar) constituents of the species. 



nts an individuality, and is probably 



ntical with the "microsome" of the nuclear rod. 



tn : Idant. 



-id, or ide (id) [/ (us, a term]. A suffix used in chem- 

 istry to den mbination of two elemental*} sub 

 stani 



Idant (i f -dant) [idus, the dividing or division]. In 

 biology, according to Weismann's theory of the germ- 

 plasm, a vital unit of tin- fourth degree; a group oi 

 . differing from the latter in not being perfectly 

 invi quantities, but only relatively constant, 



th( ir constitution being modified from time to time, so 

 thai the ids which previousl) belonged to the idant A 

 may later take part in the composition of the idant B 

 or C. A chromosome (chromatosome) or nuclear rod, 

 composed of vital units or ancestral plasms, termed 

 ids or microsomata {microsomes). 



-ide [eldog, resembling in form]. A suffix denoting 

 resemblance to the object with the name of which the 

 gnated body is combined. 



Idea I ,form or semblance]. A men- 



tal representation of something perceived. I. -chase, 

 a condition in acute mania in which disconnected ideas 

 Bow rapidly through the mind. It is a term 

 much used by German authors. I., Fixed, that form 

 of mania in which one dominant idea controls all 

 actions. I., Imperative, a morbid idea or insane 

 suggestion imperiously demanding notice, the patient 

 often being painfully conscious of its domination over 

 his will. 



Ideation (i-de-a* -shuti) [Idea, form or semblance]. The 

 formation of a mental conception ; the cerebral action 

 by which, or in accord with which, an idea is formed. 



Identical {i-den* -tik-al) [identicus, the same]. The 

 same. I. Points, corresponding points of the two 

 retinae, or the two positions in normal eyes where the 

 image of an object is focused upon the retin e. 



Identism (i-den' -tizm) [idem, the same]. The theory 

 that chancre, chancroid, and gonorrhea are due to one 

 and the same poison or virus. 



Identist [i-den'-Hst) [idem,the same]. A term applied 



to one who believes in the identity of certain diseases, 



. , that gonorrhea and hard and soft chancre are 



due to the same sp irus, or that typhus and 



typhoid ire identical. 



Identity ' tit-c) [idem, the same]. Absolute 



sameness. I., Personal, one's personal existence; 

 the continuity of oik's state as a person ; the reality 

 of the "t anj person; in law, the fact of 



being the person he is assumed to be; thai which 

 is commonly proved by the establishment of simi- 

 larity 01 ■ , physical characteristics, 

 marks, and peculiar habits. 



Ideo-dynamism [i-de-o-di' '-nam-izm) [Idia, idea; 

 ! The domination of an idea; the 

 uggested idea over the subse 

 quent acts of a person who is, or has been, hyp- 

 notized. 



Ideomotion (i-de-o-mo' '-shun) \\6ta, idea; motio, a 

 moving]. Motion or action due to some idea, and 

 neither purely voluntary nor reflex. 



