The Practitioner's Medical Dictionary (Gould, 1919)
x-disease. A condition of general malaise, with abnormal sensitiveness to cold, disturbances of digestion, respiration and cardiac action; its origin is unknown.
American Illustrated Medical Dictionary (1919)
x-disease'. A term, applied by James Mackenzie to a train of indefinite symptoms of ill health associated with coldness of the extremities, sensitiveness to cold, absence of reaction after a cold bath, dyspepsia, bowel disturbances, etc.; a remission in the symptoms is common, when the patient feels well, but a relapse usually occurs; respiration is slow and the heart's action may be slow or irregular; the nature of the disease is not yet known, whence its appellation re-disease.
A Practical Medical Dictionary (Stedman, 1922)
x-disease'. A term, applied by James Mackenzie to a train of indefinite symptoms of ill health associated with coldness of the extremities, sensitiveness to cold, absence of reaction after a cold bath, dyspepsia, bowel disturbances, etc.; a remission in the symptoms is common, when the patient feels well, but a relapse usually occurs; respiration is slow and the heart's action may be slow or irregular; the nature of the disease is not yet known, whence its appellation re-disease.
xanthocyanopia (zan-tho-si-an-o'pl-ah) [G. xanthos, yellow, + kyanos, blue + dps, eye.] Red-green blindness; partial color-blindness in which yellow and blue only are discriminated.
A Practical Medical Dictionary (Stedman, 1922)
xanthocyanopia (zan-tho-si-an-o'pl-ah) [G. xanthos, yellow, + kyanos, blue + dps, eye.] Red-green blindness; partial color-blindness in which yellow and blue only are discriminated.
xenoparasite (zen'o-par'a-slt) [G. xenos, host.] An ecoparasite which becomes pathogenic in cossequence of weakened resistance on the part of its host.
A Practical Medical Dictionary (Stedman, 1922)
xenoparasite (zen'o-par'a-slt) [G. xenos, host.] An ecoparasite which becomes pathogenic in cossequence of weakened resistance on the part of its host.
The Practitioner's Medical Dictionary (Gould, 1919)
xeroform (ter'-o-form). Tribromphenol-bismuth: an odorless, neutral powder containing 49.5% of bismuth oxide and 50% of tribromphenol. It is an Internal antiseptic, and is recommended as a specific against Asiatic cholera. Dose 7j gr. (0.5 Gm.).
American Illustrated Medical Dictionary (1919)
xeroform (ze'ro-form). Bismuth tribromphenolate, a yellowish insoluble powder, used as an intestinal antiseptic in doses of gr. 3-7$ (0.1-0.5), and externally as a substitute for iodoform.
A Practical Medical Dictionary (Stedman, 1922)
xeroform (ze'ro-form). Bismuth tribromphenolate, a yellowish insoluble powder, used as an intestinal antiseptic in doses of gr. 3-7$ (0.1-0.5), and externally as a substitute for iodoform.