22 LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



AMERICAN PRACTICE OF MEDICINE., 



BY PROFESSOR faUNGLISON. 



t e'v [J I fl 3 IJ t | fj 1 SECOND EDITION, MUCH IMPROVED. 1 j^ *T J * fl I ^ ? 





I 



: 



THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE ; 



A TREATISE ON 





SPECIAL PATHOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS. 



SECOND 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 over Thirteen Hundred Pages. 



The Publishers annex a condensed statement of the Contents: 



Diseases ©f the Mouth, Tongue, Teeth, Gums, Velum Palati and Uvula, Pharynx and 

 (Esophagus, Stomach, Intestines, Peritoneum, Morbid Productions in the Peritoneum and 

 Intestines— Diseases of the Larynx and Trachea, Bronchia and Lungs, Pleura, Asphyxia, 

 Morbid Conditions of the Blood, Diseases of the Heart and Membranes, Arteries, Veins, 

 Intermediate or Capillary Vessels.— Spleen, Thyroid Gland, Thymus Gland and Supra 

 Renal Capsules, Mesenteric Glands.— Salivary Glands, Pancreas, Biliary Apparatus, Kidney, 

 Ureter, Urinary Bladder.— Diseases of the Skin, Exanthematous, Vesicular, Bullar, Pustular, 

 Papular, Squamous, Tuberculous, Maculae, Syphilides.— Organic Diseases of the Nervous 

 Centres, Neuroses, Nerves.— Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose.— Diseases of the Male and 

 Female Organs of Reproduction. — Fever.— Intermittent, Remittent, Continued. Eruptive, 

 Arthritic, Cachectic, Scrofulous, Scorbutic, Chlorotic, Rhachitic, Hydropic and Cancerous. 



Notwithstanding the numerous and attractive works which have of late been issued on the Practice of 

 Physic, these volumes keep their place as a standard text-book for the student, and manual of re ^ er . en , ce ct ^ 

 the practitioner. The care with which the author embodies everything of value from all sources, the inu " sir > 

 with which all discoveries of interest or importance are summed up in succeeding editions, the e ^ ce "^" 

 order and system which is everywhere manifested, and the clear and intelligible style in which his uiougiiw 



elusion, we congratulate the students and junior practitioners of America on possessing mtne p re sc«i 

 volumes a work of standard merit, to which they may confidently refer in their doubts and difficulties. 

 Brit, and For. Med. Rev. . , u 



u Since the foregoing observations were written, we have received a second edition of Dunghson s vjor , 

 & u u , ffic l eiu indication of the high character it has already attained in America, and justly a . u f L^' ~il and 



In the short space of two years, a second edition of Dr. Dunglison's Treatise on Special wiw 

 Therapeutics has been called for, and is now before the public in the neat and tasteful dress in wn en u 

 & Blanchard issue all their valuable publications. We do not notice the fact for the purpose of passu p J 

 studied eulogy upon this work, which is now too well known to the profession to need the commenuauu 

 the press. . 



"A cursory examination will satisfy any one, that great labor has been bestowed upon these vou f 

 and on a careful perusal it will be seen that they exhibit the present state of our know ledge rei \ A " 

 special pathology and therapeutics. The work is justly a great favorite with students of medicine. * 

 exigencies the learned author seems especially to have consulted in its preparation."— Western jv . 



prehensiveness. We have no space to go into details, and. therefore, conclude by sa y l °£' ™* * as 

 isolated defects might be pointed out, yet as a whole, we cheerfully recommend it Xo ,} h \^\° t ^ Lancet. 

 embracing much important matter which cannot easily be obtained from any other source.'— )*««* 



Hasse's Pathological Anatomy. 



AN ANATOMICAL DESCRIPTION OP THE DISEASES OF THE 



ORGANS OP CIRCULATION" AND RESPIRATION 



BY CHARLES EWALD HASSE, 



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



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

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



