INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



385 



spiralis, 291 ; hydatid disease, 

 291 ; vegetable parasites, 292. 



Parasitism, its extent in animal- 

 life and plant-life, 255. 



Pasteur, Lister's tribute to, 90, 98 ; 

 Pasteur's demonstration of strep- 

 tococcus, 95 ; work on anthrax, 

 102-107 ; on rouget, 107-109 ; on 

 rabies, 164-184. 



Pasteur Institutes, reports from, 

 171-184. 



Pathology, its beginning in micro- 

 scope work, 85-87. 



Periosteum, the, 47. 



Pernicious anaemia, Dr William 

 Hunter's work on, 314. 



Phrenology and cerebral localisa- 

 tion, 70-71. 



Phthisis, influence of bacteriology 

 on theory, diagnosis, care, and 

 prevention of the disease, 112- 

 119. 



Physiology, experiments in, 3-81 ; 

 problems of, 79. 



Plague, discovery of the bacillus 

 pestis, 205 ; Haffkine's work, 206 ; 

 inoculations at Bombay, Mora, 

 and Byculla Jail, 206, Daman 

 207, Lanauli 208, Kirki 209, 

 Belgaum 211, Umarkhadi Jail 

 214, Undhera 216, Khoja Com- 

 munity 217, Hubli 218-227, 

 Gaday 220, Dharwar and Ah- 

 mednagar 228 ; native theories 

 of the disease, 228 ; con- 

 cealment of cases, 221, 222, 

 225 ; Surg.-Gen. Harvey, 229 ; 

 general summary of preventive 

 treatment, 230-232 ; Yersin's 

 report on curative treatment, 

 232 ; inoculations at Glasgow, 

 232 ; Nhatrang, 233 ; the three 

 cases at Vienna, 307 ; inocula- 

 tions for diagnosis, 359. 



Plague Commission, report of, 207- 

 233, 236. 



Public health and inoculations, see 



Inspector's Reports, passim. 

 Puerperal fever, 90-96. 

 Pyaemia, 88-90. 



Quarantine, and diagnosis of 



cholera, 202. 

 Quinine, its action in malaria, 274. 



Rabies : the risk of infection before 

 Pasteur's time, 170; Pasteur's 

 first observations, 164 ; the virus 

 fixe, 166 ; general scheme of the 

 preventive treatment, 166-168 ; 

 results at Athens 171, Palermo 

 172, Rio 173, Paris 174-182, 

 Tunis and Bordeaux 184; cura- 

 tive treatment, possibility of, 183 ; 

 the"Buisson Bath," 183; cases 

 at Pasteur Institutes classed and 

 reported according to gravity of 

 bite, 168, and according to 

 strength of evidence of rabies in 

 the biting animal, 170; the fifteen 

 days of waiting, 179. 



Rabbits, painless form of rabies in, 

 175 ; subdural inoculation of, 

 323- 



Rats and plague, 230. 



Realdus, his account of the pul- 

 monary circulation, 5. 



Reaumur, experiments on digestion, 

 3°- 



Reflex Action, early observations 

 of, 62 ; the " consent and com- 

 merce" of the spinal cord, 63 ; 

 reflex action and convulsive 

 movements, 64 ; influence of 

 drugs on reflex action, 64. 



Reports, of Royal Commission on 

 experiments on animals, 87 ; of 

 inoculations of animals against 

 2 B 



