|
Authors
-
Billing, Archibald, 17 (3)
-
Caldwell, Charles, 177 (2)
-
Macculloch, John, 1773 (2)
-
Parsons, Usher, 1788-1 (2)
-
Bartlett, Elisha, 1804 (1)
-
Bell, Charles William. (1)
-
Burch, Thomas A., 1918 (1)
-
Clark, Alonzo, 1807-18 (1)
-
College of Philadelphi (1)
-
College, Academy, and (1)
-
Daniell, W. C. (Willia (1)
-
De Rosset, Armand John (1)
-
Deléry, Charles Franço (1)
-
Dobson, Thomas, 1751-1 (1)
-
Dunglison, Robley, 179 (1)
Titles
Format
Languages
Color (Film)
Sound (Film)
Film Technique
|
Found 23 results.
Show
10
20
50
results per page
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Johnson, Charles E. (Charles Earl), 1812-1876;
Medical Society of the State of North Carolina.
Date: 1854
Subject(s):
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Parsons, Usher, 1788-1868
Date: 1839
Subject(s):
Clinical Medicine;
Periostitis;
Enuresis;
Skin Diseases;
Breast Neoplasms;
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Deléry, Charles François, 1815-1880
Date: 1851
Subject(s):
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Potts, Jonathan, 1745-1781;
Smith, William, 1727-1803, dedicatee;
Dunlap, John, 1747-1812, printer;
College, Academy, and Charitable Schools of Philadelphia.
Date: 1771
Subject(s):
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
De Rosset, Armand John, 1767-1859;
Dobson, Thomas, 1751-1823, printer;
College of Philadelphia. Medical School
Date: 1790
Subject(s):
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Gaillard, E. S. (Edwin Samuel), 1827-1885
Date: 1856
Subject(s):
Malaria;
Atmosphere
|
-
|
|
|
An essay on the remittent and intermittent diseases including, generically, marsh fever and neuralgia: comprising, under the former, various anomalies, obscurities, and consequences and, under a new systematic view of the latter, treating of tic douloureux, sciatica, headach [sic], ophthalmia, toothache, and palsy, and many other modes and consequences of generic disease
Author(s):
Macculloch, John, 1773-1835
Date: 1830
Subject(s):
Malaria;
Neuralgia
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Caldwell, Charles, 1772-1853
Date: 1831
Subject(s):
Malaria
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Caldwell, Charles, 1772-1853
Date: 1831
Subject(s):
Malaria;
Temperament
|
-
|
|
|
Author(s):
Van Voorhis, John S.
Date: 1853
Subject(s):
Disease Outbreaks;
Malaria;
Typhoid Fever
|
An address delivered before the Medical Society of North Carolina: at its second annual meeting in Raleigh, May 1851
Subject: Malaria
Boylston prize dissertations on inflammation of the periosteum, eneuresis irritata, cutaneous diseases, cancer of the breast: also, remarks on malaria
Subject: Clinical Medicine
De la fièvre pernicieuse
Subject: Malaria
Dissertatio medica inauguralis de febribus intermittentibus, potentissimum [sic] tertianis: quam, sub moderamine viri admodum Reverendi, Gulelmi Smith, S.S.T.P. Collegii et Academiae Pennsylvaniensis praefecti ; ex curatorum perillustrium auctoritate, nec non amplissimae collegii et academiae facultatis decreto ; Deo maximo annuente, pro gradu doctoratus, summisque in medicina honoribus et privilegiis rite et legitime consequendis
Subject: Malaria
Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febribus intermittentibus: quam annuente summo numini, sub moderamine viri admondum Reverendi Gulielmi Smith, S.T.P. Academiae Philadelphiensis praefecti ; nec non, ex curatorum auctoritate perillustrium, et amplissmae facultatis medicae derecto, pro gradu doctoratus, summisque in medicina honoribus et privilegiis legitime consquenis ; eruditorum examini subjicit Armandus Joannes De Rosset, Wilmingtoniensis apud Carolinam Septentrionalem Societ. Med. Americ. Soc
Subject: Malaria
An essay on intermittent and bilious remittent fevers: with their pathological relation to ozone
Subject: Malaria
An essay on the remittent and intermittent diseases including, generically, marsh fever and neuralgia: comprising, under the former, various anomalies, obscurities, and consequences and, under a new systematic view of the latter, treating of tic douloureux, sciatica, headach [sic], ophthalmia, toothache, and palsy, and many other modes and consequences of generic disease
Subject: Malaria
An essay upon the nature and sources of the malaria or noxious miasma, from which originate the family of diseases usually known by the denomination of bilious diseases: together with the best means of preventing the formation of malaria, removing the sources, and obviating their effects on the human constitution, when the cause cannot be removed
Subject: Malaria
Essays on malaria, and temperament
Subject: Malaria
A glance at the fevers of the Monongahela valley
Subject: Disease Outbreaks
|