6 NEW WORKS AND NEW EDITIONS LATELY PUBLISHED EY LEA AND BLANCHARD. ' 



A NEW EDITION JUST, READY. 



Dunglison on New Remedies. 



JTJSfP REMEDIES, 



BY ROBLEY DUNGLISON, M.D.,&c.,&c. 



Fifth edition, with extensive additions. In one neat octavo volume. 



The numerous valuable therapeutical agents which have of late years been introduced into the 

 Materia Medica, render it a difficult matter for the practitioner to keep up with the advancement of 

 the science, especially as the descriptions of them are difficult of access, being scattered so widely 

 through transactions of learned societies, journals, monographs. &c. &c. To obviate this difficulty, 

 and to place within reach of the profession this important information in a compendious form, is the 

 object of the present volume, and the number of editions through which it has passed show that its 

 utility has not been underrated. 



The author has taken particular care that this edition shall be completely brought up to the present 

 day. The therapeutical agents added, which may b regarded as newly introduced into the Materia 

 Medica, together with old agents brought forward with novel applications, and which may therefore 

 be esteemed as "New Remedies," are the following : Benzole Acid, Chromic Acid, Gallic Acid, Nitric 

 Acid, Phosphate of Ammonia, Binelli Water, Brocchieri Water, Atropia. Beerberia, Chloride of Car- 

 bon (Chloroform,) Digitalia, Electro-Magnetism, Ergotin, Ox-gall, Glycerin, Hsemospasy, Haemostasia, 

 Hagenia Abyssinica, Honey Bte, Protochloride of Mercury and Quinia, lodoform, Carbonate of Lithia, 

 Sulphate of Manganese, Maticp, Double Iodide of Mercury and Morphia, lodhydrate of Morphia, 

 Iodide of lodhydrate of Morphia, Muriate of Morphia and Codeia, Naphthalin, Piscidia Erythrina, 

 Chloride of Lead, Nitrate of Potassa, Arseniate of Quinia, Iodide of Quinia, Iodide of Cinchonia, 

 Iodide of lodhydrate of Quinia, Lactate of Quinia, Pyroacetic Acid, (Naphtha, Acetone) Hyposulphate 

 of Soda, Phosphate of Soda, Iodide of lodhydrate of Strychnia, Double Iodide of Zinc and Strychnia, 

 Double Iodide of Zinc and Morphia, and Valerianate of Zinc. 



Hasse's Pathological Anatomy. 



AN ANATOMICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE DISEASES OF THE 

 ORGANS OF CIRCULATION AND RESPIRATION. 



BY CHARLES EWALD HASSE, 



Professor of Pathology and Clinical Medicine in the University of Zurich, SfC. 



Translated and edited by W. E. Swaine, M. D., &c. 

 In one octavo volume. A new work, just ready, October, 1846. 



" The advantages which Professor Hasse has possessed for the preparation of such a work as the 

 present, appear to have been considerable, and of" these he has manifestly availed himself to the 

 utmost. As a diligent student in the hospitals of Paris and Vienna, and subsequently as clinical 

 assistant to Professor Carus, and pathological prosector in the principal hospital at Leipsic, he pos- 

 sessed the means of observing and collecting materials for himself, whilst at the same time he was 

 forming that 'pathological collection,' which, under his auspices, has grown into a most interesting 

 and valuable museum. The present treatise, therefore, differs essentially from what is commonly 

 called a compilation. For although he has ' not relied solely on his own investigations, but has 

 largely availed himself of facts recorded by others,' he has been chary in making use of other men's 

 experience. The estimation in which the book is held in Germany, is sufficiently attested by the fact 

 that since its publication the author has had the offer of the chair of Clinical Medicine in five Universi- 

 ties, and holds that vacated by Professor Schoenlein, at Zurich." TheMedico-Chirurgical Review. 



A NEW WORK. PHILLIPS ON SCROFULA. JUST READY. 



> 



TS NATURE, ITS PREVALENCK, ITS CAUSES, AND THE PRINCI 

 PLES OF ITS TREATMENT. 



BY BENJAMIN PHILLIPS, M.D., F. R. S., ETC. 



In one neat octavo volume, with a plate. 



" The work of Mr. Phillips is immensely in advance of all others that have ever been written on 

 Scrofula. 



" The author has extended his researches over a wide and most interesting field. It has been a 

 fault with preceding writers, that they have riot enjoyed a very extensive sphere of observation, or 

 extended their inquiries so as to comprise the influence of the many causes which are supposed to be 

 capable of producing the disease. 



" He has even extended his inquiries to Russia, Austria, Prussia, Bavaria, Portugal, Holland, 

 France, Switzerland, Belgium and America, to China and the East Indies, Egypt, Syria and Greece ; 

 in short, we have fully presented to us, a body of authentic statistics bearing upon this disease, col- 

 lected with care, and arranged and classified in a philosophical manner." The N. Y. Journal of 

 Medicine. 



