Trousseau's Clinical Lectures. 



VOL. III. NOW READY. 



Lectures on Clinical Medicine, delivered at the Eotel-dieu, Paris. By 

 A. Trousseau, Professor of Clinical Medicine in the Faculty of Medi- 

 cine, Paris, &c., &c. 



Trousseau's Lectures on Clinical Medicine, so favorably received, as well by the 

 profession of the United States as abroad, are published in this country in connection 

 with the New Sydenham Society, under whose auspices the translation of Vols. II. and 

 III. have been made. Either of these volumes can be furnished separately, and in order 

 to still further extend the circulation of so valuable a work, the Publishers have now 

 reduced the price to Five Dollars per volume. 



Contents of Volume I. — Translated and Edited by P. Victor Bazire, M. D., <5"c. — 

 Lecture 1. On Venesection in Cerebral Hsemorrhage and Apoplexy. 2. On Apoplec- 

 tiform Cerebral Congestion, and its Relations to Epilepsy and Eclampsia. 3. Oh 

 Epilepsy. 4. On Epileptiform Neuralgia. 5. On Glosso-laryngeal Paralysis. 6. Pro- 

 gressive Locomotor Ataxy. 7.^0n Aphasia. 8. Progressive Muscular Atrophy. 9. 

 Facial Paralysis, or Bell's Paralysis. 10. Cross-paralysis, or Alternate Hemiplegia. 

 11. Infantile Convulsions. 12. Eclampsia of Pregnant and Parturient AVomen. 13. 

 On Tetany. 14. On Chorea. 15. Senile Trembling and I'aralysis Agitans. 16. Ce- 

 rebral Fever. 17. On Neuralgia. 18. Cerebral Rheumatism. 19. Exophthalmic 

 Goitre, or Graves' Disease. 20. Angina Pectoris. 21. Asthma. 22. Hooping Cough. 



23. On Hydrophobia. 



Contents of Volume II. — Translated from the Edition q/" 1868 {being the last revised 

 and enlarged edition), by John Rose C'ormack, M. D., Edin., F.R.S.E , ^c. — Lkcture 1. 

 Small-pox. 2. Variolous Inoculation. 3. Cow-pox. 4. Chicken-pox. 5. Scarlatina. 

 6. INIeasles, and in particular its unfavorable Symptoms and Complications. 7. Rubeola. 

 8. Erythema Nodosum. 9. Erythema Papulatum. 10. Erysipelas, and in particular 

 Erysipelas of the Face. 11. Mumps. 12. Urticaria. 13. Zona, or Herpes Zoster. 

 14. Sudoral Exanthemata. 15. Dothinenteria, or Typhoid Fever. 16. Typhus. 17. 

 Membranous Sore Throat, and in particular Herpes of the Pharynx. 18. Gangrenous 

 Sore Throat. 19. Inflammatory Sore Throat. 20. Diphtheria. 21. Thrush. 



Contents of Volume III. — Translated from the Edition q/1868. by John Rose Cormack, 

 M.D., Edin., F.R.S E., ^c. — Lecture 22. Specific Element in Disease. 23. Contagion. 



24. OziBna. 25. Stridulous Laryngitis, or False "Croup. 26 ffidema of the Larynx. 

 27. Aphonia: Cauterization of the Larynx. 28. Dilatation of the Bronchi and Bron- 

 chorrhcea. 29. Hemoptysis. 30. Pulmonary Phthisis. 31. Gangrene of the Lung. 

 32. Pleurisy: Paracentesis of the Chest. 33. Traumatic Efifusion of Blood into the 

 Pleura: Paracentesis of the Chest. 34. Hydatids of the Lung. 35. Pulmonary 

 Abscesses and Peripneumonic Vomicae. 36. Treatment of Pneumonia. 37. Paracen- 

 tesis of the Pericardium. 38. Organic Affections of the Heart. 52. Alcoholism. 62. 

 Spermatorrhoea. 63. Nocturnal Incontinence of Urine. 64. Glucosuria: Saccharine 

 Diabetes. 65. Polydipsia. 67. Vertigo a Stomacho Ldbso. 



3 Volumes Octavo, handsomely bound in Cloth, Price $5 GO each. 

 OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 



"Trousseau furnishes us with an example of the best kind of Clinical teaching. It is 

 a book that deserves to be popularized. The translation is perfect." — Medical Times 

 and Gazette. 



"Tlie great reputation of Prof. Trousseau as a practitioner and teacher of Medicine 

 in all its branches, renders the present appearance of his Clinical Lectures particularly 

 welcome." — Medical Press and Circular. 



"The publication of Trousseau's Lectures will furnish us with one of the very best 

 practical treatises on disease as seen at the bedside." — British and Foreign Medico- 

 Chirurgical Review. 



"A clever translation of Prof. Trousseau's admirable and exhaustive work, the best 

 book of reference upon the Practice of Medicine." — Indian 3Iedical Gazette. 



'The Lectures of Trousseau, in attractiveness of manner and richness of thoroughly 

 practical matter, worthily takes a place beside the classical lectures of Watson and 

 Graves." — British Medical Journal. 



" Trousseau is essentially the French Graves, and his lectures should sooner than 

 this have been translated into English." — Lancet. 



