Citations:diarrhϾ

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of diarrhϾ

Noun: plural of diarrhœa

[edit]
1831 1857 1879 1904
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1831, Henri Milne‐Edwards, Pierre Henri L.D. Vavasseur, chapter VI, in John Davies, editor, A Manual of Materia Medica and Pharmacy[1], Whittaker, Treacher, and Co, page 175:
    It is very frequently and successfully exhibited in all cases requiring a tonic and stimulant medication, especially in dyspepsia and other atonic diseases of the digestive canal, in certain amenorrhœæ, chronic leucorrhœæ, in obstinate diarrhœæ, maintained by debility of the membranes ; in certain cases of gout, &c.
  • 1857, John Churchill, The British and Foreign Medico‐Chirurgical Review[2], volume XIX, page 124:
    But both he and Griesinger (says our author) convinced themselves that the coincidence was accidental ; that there was no causal relation between the dysenteric appearances and the Distomata, since in many such diarrhœæ the parasite could not be detected.
  • 1879, Rollin Robinson Gregg, chapter V, in An Illustrated Repertory of Pains in Chest, Sides and Back[3], 3rd edition, Duncan Brothers, page 84:
    We consequently prescribed Kali bichromicum 200, one dose, followed by Saccharum lactis, which in a day or two entirely relieved all the pains, and in a week so far relieved the diarrhϾ and recruited her strength, that she went down two nights of stairs, to her meals, a thing she had not before done since her first attack in August last.
  • 1904, Nil Fedorovich Filatov, Frank B. Earle, chapter V, in Semeiology and Diagnosis of Diseases of Children[4], 3rd edition, volume I, Cleveland Press, page 436:
    Such latent nests most often remain in the bronchial or mesenteric glands after old catarrhs to which rachitic and scrofulous children are so prone, therefore one must inquire if the child did not suffer with repeated or chronic bronchites and diarrhϾ.