This is an intestinal antiseptic which is very valuable in the treatment of Blood Poisoning.
The latter is included with the bacteria that produce blood poisoning because it is a frequent cause of wound septicaemia.
The term commonly used in speaking of simple septicaemia and pyaemia is blood poisoning.
If poor judgment is used in caring for the vaccinated hogs, and the person who vaccinates them uses careless methods, heavy losses from acute indigestion, blood poisoning, or hog-cholera may occur.
This usually indicates an infectious disease of considerable severity, and occurs in blood poisoning, purpura hemorrhagica, hemorrhagic septicemia, and in urticaria.
Septicemia, or blood poisoning, may result from anasarca.
Other complications which may be mentioned are inflammation of the kidneys, blood poisoning, congestion of the brain, and inflammation of the tendinous sheaths and the tendons of the legs.
This last condition is seen in pyemia (blood poisoning).
Whereas, before, two-thirds of the patients so operated upon would die, probably of blood poisoning.
The retained membranes decompose, the poisonous products of decomposition and the organisms of decomposition themselves are absorbed, blood poisoning results, and the animal dies.
Endocarditis occurs as a complication of or sequel to pneumonia, blood poisoning, inflammation of the womb, rheumatism, or severe wounds or abscesses.
Sweating and fever, higher at night, are the more prominent signs of blood poisoning.
If the inflammation continues the pain becomes intense and throbbing; there is often entire loss of sleep and rest, fever, and even chills, owing to a certain degree of blood poisoning.
Some of the obscure diseases known as blood poisoning appear to be of the same general nature, these diseases resulting from a very general invasion of the whole body by certain pathogenic bacteria.
Those which most concern the surgeon, and those in which most remarkable relief has been obtained are erysipelas and the various forms of blood poisoning.
As excellent and only too common examples of these zymotic diseases may be mentioned tetanus, erysipelas, puerperal fever, typhoid fever, and those varied conditions which are generally grouped under the term "blood poisoning.
Pus prevents or rather delays the wounds from healing, and suppuration in wounds is a fruitful source of blood poisoning.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "blood poisoning" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.