He became a skillful diagnostician of states of mind and a healer of such diseases as could be so treated.
A necessary qualification, which the diagnostician must possess, is that of being able to judge carefully the nearness of any given exostosis to articular structures.
In this way he is led to erroneous conclusions which the skilleddiagnostician has learned from experience to avoid.
The manner in which the weight is borne by the animal at rest, should attract the attention of the diagnostician and if the attitude of the subject is abnormal or peculiar, the examiner tries to determine the reason for it.
Showing point of view which may be most advantageously taken by the diagnostician in examining for distension of the capsular ligament of the tarsal joint.
Here, again, the diagnostician needs to possess skill as a horseman and good judgment as to individual temperament of different animals, under any condition which may exist at the time he makes his examination.
If one may reason that an animal assumes a certain position while at rest to allow relaxation of an inflamed tendon or ligament, such a fact enables the diagnostician to recall that this is indicative of some specific ailment.
The diagnostician should take note of local manifestations of hypersensitiveness, or heat if such exist, and, in addition, other conditions must be excluded before definite conclusions are possible.
This enigmatical term is frequently employed by thediagnostician when he is baffled in the matter of definitely locating the cause of lameness; when he has by exclusion and otherwise arrived at a decision that lameness is "high up.
But her illness had rapidly cleared up and now after ten days of observation an eminent diagnostician had thoroughly scolded her for simulation, and the girl was once more on their hands.
The diagnostician in making up his opinion must be governed largely by the time the condition has endured, and the immediate causes, giving especial care to the food and drink that has been consumed just prior to the attack.
When the congested blood spurts through into the heart it is called "arterial overflow," and the old diagnostician seems to have been content with giving this a name.
The diagnostician would consider, on the one hand, tic, and on the other, spasm.
Very intriguing to the diagnostician would be the cases of pseudotabes and pseudoparesis (Cases 23 and 26 of Pitres and Marchand), were such cases at all frequent.
This smooth and shining condition of the reddened patch is so characteristic of erysipelas that it arrests the attention of the diagnostician as soon as he observes it.
I have known bronchitis so severe as to divert in this way the attention of a skilful diagnostician from the primary disease.
The law readily observed by the diagnostician of diseases in general must here be recognized.
And when, as occurred quite frequently, their frank interest was broken by a return of the little gleam, the diagnosticianwould still have concurred.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "diagnostician" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.