BLANCHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



BUDD (GEORGE), M. D., F. R. S., 



Professor of Medicine, in King's College, London. 



ON" DISEASES OF THE LIVER. Second American, from the second and 



enlarged London edition. In one very handsome octavo volume, with four beautifully colored 

 plates, and numerous wood-cuts, pp.468. New edition. (Now Ready.) 



The reputation which this work has obtained as a full and practical treatise on an important class 

 of diseases will not be diminished by this improved and enlarged edition. It has been carefully and 

 thoroughly revised by the author ; the number of plates has been increased, and the style of its me- 

 chanical execution will be found materially improved. 



The full digest we have given of the new matter 

 introduced into the present volume, is evidence of 

 the value we place on it. The fact that the profes- 

 sion has required a second edition of a monograph 

 such as that before us, bears honorable testimony 

 to its usefulness. For many years, Dr. Budd's 

 work must be the authority of the great mass of 

 British practitioners on the hepatic diseases ; and it 

 is satisfactory that the subject has been taken up by 

 so able and experienced a physician. British and 

 Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review. 



We cannot too strongly recommend the diligent 

 study of this volume. The work cannot fail to rank 

 the name of its author among the most enlightened 

 pathologists and soundest practitioners of the day. 

 Medico-Chirurgical Review. 



We feel bound to sny that Dr. Budd's treatise is 

 greatly in advance of its predecessors. It is the first 

 work in which the results of microscopical anatomy 

 and the discoveries of modern chemistry have been 

 brought fully to bear upon the pathology and treat- 

 ment of diseases of the liver; and it is the only work 

 in which a method of studying diseases of this organ, 

 founded upon strictly inductive principles, is de- 

 veloped. Dublin Medical Press. 



Having thus attempted to give a brief summary of 

 the more important contents of this work, we would, 

 in conclusion, recommend it to every practitioner 

 and student as well worthy of a careful and patient 

 perusal. The New Orleans Medical and Surgical 

 Journal. 



BLOOD AND URINE (MANUALS ON). 

 BY JOHN WILLIAM GRIFFITH, G. OWEN REESE, AND ALFRED 



MARKWICK. One thick volume, royal 12mo., extra cloth, with plates, pp. 460. 



BRIGHAM (AMARIAH), M.D. 

 ON MENTAL CULTIVATION AND EXCITEMENT. In one neat volume, 



18mo., extra cloth. 



BRODIE (SIR BENJAMIN C.), M. D., c. 

 CLINICAL LECTURES ON SURGERY. 1 vol. 8vo., cloth. 350 pp. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



PATHOLOGICAL AND SURGICAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE DIS- 

 EASES OF THE JOINTS. 1 vol. 8vo., cloth, pp. 21G. 



BV THE SAME AUTHOR. 



LECTURES ON THE DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS. 1 vol. 



8vo., cloth, pp. 214. 



*%.* These three works may be had neatly bound together, forming a large volume of" Brodie's 

 Surgical Works." pp. 780. ' 



BIRD (GOLDING), A. M., M. D., &c. 

 URINARY DEPOSITS: THEIR DIAGNOSIS, PATHOLOGY, AND 



THERAPEUTICAL INDICATIONS. A new American, from the third and improved Lomioa 

 edition. With over sixty illustrations. In one royal 12mo. volume, extra cloth, pp. 338. 



nary secretion, which have contributed so much to 

 the increase of our diagnostic powers, and to the 

 extension and satisfactory employment of our thera- 

 peutic resources. In the preparation of this new 

 edition of his work, it is obvious that Dr. Golding 

 Bird has spared no pains to render it a faithful repre- 

 sentation of the present state of scientific knowledge 

 on the subject it embraces. 



The new edition of Dr. Bird's work, though not 

 increased in size, has heen greatly modified, and 

 much of it rewritten. It now presents, in a com- 

 pendious form, the gist of all that is known and re- 

 liable in this department. From its terse style and 

 convenient size, it is particularly applicahle to the 

 student, to whom we cordially commend it. The. 

 Medical Examiner. 



It can scarcely be necessary for us to say anything 

 of the merits of this well-known Treatise, which so 

 admirably brings into practical application the re- 

 sults of those microscopical and chemical researches 

 regarding the physiology and pathology of the uri- 



Although, of course, there are many topics which 

 are open to differences of opinion, vye cannot point 

 to any well-substantiated result of inquiry which 

 the author has overlooked. The British and Foreign 

 Medico-Chirurgical Review. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY; being an Experimental Intro- 

 duction to the Physical Sciences. Illustrated with nearly four hundred wood-cuts. From the 

 third London edition. In one neat volume, royal 12mo. 'pp. 402. 



