BLANCHARD & LEA'S PUBLIC ATlONS.-(Practice of Medicine.} 17 



DUNGLISON'S PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. 



ENLARGED AND IMPROVED EDITION. 



THE PRACTICE~OF MEDICINE. 



A TREATISE ON 



SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS. 



THIRD EDITION. 



BY ROBLEY DUNGLISON, M. D., 



Professor of the Institutes of Medicine in the Jefferson Medical College ; Lecturer on Clinical Medicine, &c. 

 In two large octavo volumes, of fifteen hundred pages. 



The student of medicine will find, in these two elegant volumes, a mine of facts, a gathering 

 of precepts and advice from the world of experience, that will nerve him with courage, and faith- 

 fully direct him in his efforts to relieve the physical sufferings of the race. Boston Medical and 

 Surgical Journal. 



Upon every topic embraced in the work the latest information will be found carefully posted up. 

 Medical Examiner. 



It is certainly the most complete treatise of which we have any knowledge. There is scarcely a 

 disease which the student will not find noticed. Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



One of the most elaborate treatises of the kind we have. Southern Medical and Surg. Journal. 



A New Work. Now Ready. 



DISEASES OF THE HEARTTIUNGS, AND APPENDAGES; 



THEIR SYMPTOMS AND TREATMENT. 

 BY W. H. WALSHE, M.D., 



Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine in University College, London, 8fC. 



In one handsome volume, large royal 12mo. 



The author's design in this work has been to include within the compass of a moderate volume, all really 

 essential facts bearing upon the symptoms, physical signs, and treatment of pulmonary and cardiac diseases. 

 To accomplish this, the first part of the work is devoted to the description of the various modes of physical 

 diagnosis, auscultation, percussion, mensuration, &c., which are fully and clearly, but succinctly entered 

 into, both as respects their theory and clinical phenomena. In the second part, the various diseases of the 

 heart, lungs, and great vessels are considered in regard to symptoms, physical signs and treatment, with 

 numerous references to cases. The eminence of the author is a guarantee to the practitioner and student 

 that the work is one of practical utility in facilitating the diagnosis and treatment of a large, obscure and 

 important class of diseases. 



r/\ 



THE GREAT MEDICAL LIBRARY. 



THE CYCLOPEDIA OF "PRACTICAL MEDICINE; 



COMPRISING 



Treatises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Materia Medica, and Thera- 

 peutics, Diseases of Women and Children, Medical Jurisprudence, &c. &c. 



EDITED BY 



JOHN FORBES, M. D., F. R. S., ALEXANDER TWEEDIE, M. D., F. R. S. 



AND JOHN CONNOLLY, M. D. 



Revised, with Additions, 



BY ROBLEY DUNGLISON, M. D. 



THIS WORK IS NOW COMPLETE, AND FORMS FOUR LARGE SUPER- ROYAL OCTAVO VOLUMES, 



Containing Thirty-two Hundred and Fifty-four unusually large Pages in Double Columns, Printed 

 on Good Paper, with a new /ind clear type. 



THE WHOLE WELL AND STRONGLY BOUND WITH RAISED BANDS AND DOUBLE TITLES. 



This work contains no less than FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN DISTINCT TREATISES, 

 By Sixty-eight distinguished Physicians. 



The most complete work on Practical Medicine extant; or, at least, incur language. Buffalo Medical 

 and Surgical Journal. 



For reference, it is above all price to every practitioner. Western Lancet. 



One of the most valuable medical publications of the day as a work of reference it is invaluable. 

 Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



It has been 1o us, both as learner and teacher, a work for ready and frequent reference, one in which 

 modem English medicine is exhibited in the most advantageous light. Me/lical Examiner. 



We rejoice that this work is to be placed within the reach of the profession in this country, it being unques- 

 tionably one of very great value to the practitioner. This estimate of it has not been formed from a batty ex- 

 amination, but after an intimate acquaintance derived from frequent consultation of it during the past nine or 

 ten years. The editors are practitioners of established reputation, and the list of coulributors embraces many 

 of the most emineul professors and teachers of London, Edinburgh. Dublin, and Glasgow. It is, indeed, the 

 great merit of this work that the principal articles have been furnished by practitioners who have not only 

 devoted especial attention to the diseases about which they have written, but have also enjoyed opportunities 

 for an extensive practical acquaintance with them, and whose reputation carries the assurance of their 

 competency justly to appreciate the opinions of others, while it stamps their own doctrines with high and just 

 authority. American Medical Journal. 



