The right anterior corner of the right ventricle passes into the short stem, guarded by three semi-lunar valves, which divides into the two pulmonary arteries.
There are likewise two pulmonary veins, entering the left atrium by one orifice.
In other words it is a highly energetic hydragogue cathartic, especially indicated when we wish to drain off the fluid element of the blood, as in dropsy, asthma, pulmonary and cerebral congestion.
This liquid is valuable as a drink for those who are debilitated, suffering from pulmonary catarrh, and even for consumptives, who are accustomed to drink it every morning, sometimes with marvelous results, according to reports.
Linguist recommends the bark as a local astringent in uterine, intestinal and pulmonary hemorrhage and employs the following: Fluid Extract.
Like ipecacuanha it seems to have little tendency to act on the bowels or depress the vital powers, and it decidedly increases the secretion of the pulmonary organs.
White pitch is used in the Philippines to make plasters which they apply to the back and breast of patients suffering from bronchial or pulmonary complaints; it is also applied to indolent ulcers.
The climate of Malta is agreeable enough to tempt the visitor to prolong his stay, and, indeed, in the instance of pulmonary and other complaints, the atmosphere has often been found most serviceable.
A female in the last stage of pulmonary consumption, lived but seventeen days; and one very distressing case of a female .
Committee, and the other one was in the last stage of pulmonary consumption when she came to the asylum, and died in three weeks after her admission.
The atmosphere of a city is destructive where there is any pulmonary delicacy, and who shall say, where there is not pulmonary delicacy?
On the effects produced upon the air-cells of the lungs when the pulmonary circulation is too much increased.
In frogs, the function of pulmonaryrespiration is united with that of deglutition, and the air enters only by the nostrils, the mouth being closed during respiration.
Exclusion from light made no difference in the results, and these were solely influenced by occasional renewal of air from pulmonary respiration.
The skins of these, like those of the frogs and salamanders, received vivifying influence from the air, mainly acting, in conjunction with pulmonary respiration, to promote their existence.
Pulmonary tuberculosis is excluded by the usual means.
Pulmonary abscess formation and rupture into the pleura should not be awaited, for the foreign body does not often follow the pus into the pleural cavity.
Pulmonary abscess formation and "drowned lung" (accumulated secretion in the bronchi and bronchioli) are shown by the definite shadows produced (Fig.
Pulmonary gangrene has been followed by recovery after the endobronchial injection of oily solutions of gomenol and guaiacol (Guisez).
These symptoms and some of the physical signs may suggest pulmonary tuberculosis, but the apices are normal and bacilli are absent from the sputum.
Bronchoscopy should be done in all cases of chronic pulmonary abscess and bronchiectasis even though radiographic study reveals no shadow of foreign body.
Pneumonia and pulmonary edema may exist before tracheotomy, but they are rare sequelae.
The author's tampons for pulmonary hemostasis by bronchoscopic tamponade.
Should the pulmonary and laryngeal tuberculosis be fortunately cured, leaving, however, a cicatricial stenosis of the larynx, decannulation may be accomplished by laryngostomy.
Acute pulmonary abscess from other causes may require bronchoscopic drainage and gentle dilatation of the swollen and narrowed bronchi leading to it.
Pulmonary abscess develops sooner than in case of mineral foreign bodies.
When, on the contrary, cases arise causing pulmonary suffocation, the blood then regurgitates to the umbilical vessels, in order to reach the original branchia or placenta.
The most complete combination of the lungs with the nerves is the nose--pulmonary or olfactory sense.
The branchial vessels are tracheal and by no meanspulmonary vessels.
The 3-7th rib are thus appended to the 5 proper thoracic vertebræ, which stand in the signification of the pulmonary vertebræ.
That the nose consists of a great number of blood-vessels, as well as of arteriose olfactory nerves, is quite commensurate with its character or signification, as being a higher pulmonary organ.
The capillary vessels therefore attract the pulmonary blood, separate it, secrete and form new constituent parts; and then, after it has become homonymous, they repel it back again towards the lungs.
The number of vegetative systems is 3; the vascular, intestinal, and pulmonary system.
This nervous pulmonary substance is continued along the spinal cord and even along the nerves, there as veritable gray substance, here as the vascular membrane of the nervous mass.
When the lungs were developed from the branchiæ, the branchial arches were repeated as ribs or pulmonary arches.
A sensible pulmonary organ can only have arteriose nerves.
The pulmonary vesicles are nothing but ramified air-tubes, such as the insect has.
Around these the capillary vessels are extremely dilated, and the pulmonary vesicles have become very small.
Pulmonary infarcts are sometimes produced, as well as desquamation and hæmorrhage from the kidneys, albuminuria, or hæmaturia.
On the other hand, if the impure matter by which the blood is loaded be of the kind that causes the pulmonary solidifications of pneumonia, the latter disease is very likely to be developed if a cold on the lungs be caught.
During all this time an expert examiner can detect the slight but very significant changes already taking place in the pulmonary organs.
The heart has three cavities; in the larger animals it communicates with the windpipe, or the ramifications of the pulmonary artery receive the breath in the lungs and carry it to the heart.
He died of pulmonaryconsumption in 1791, in the sixty-second year of his age.
In Diastole, or dilatation of the heart, the conus is drawn from the basis to draw blood by the cava to the right ventricle, and air by the arteria venosa [pulmonary vein] to the left ventricle.
It seems obvious that this is a perverted description of the right auricle, and that Reid had no idea of the pulmonary artery as a distinct structure.
The next chapter is devoted to the description of the manner in which the blood passes through the substance of the lungs from the right ventricle of the heart into the pulmonary veins.
The right ventricle sends its charge into the lungs by the vessel which is called the vena arteriosa [pulmonary artery], but which in structure and function and all other respects is an artery.
This in like manner appears to be the left auricle and the pulmonary veins.
Case of 68 Ascarides causingPulmonary Disease,” in his ‘Dis.
Respecting animal hydatids affecting the lungs, the Cambridge Museum exhibits a simple acephalocyst from a monkey, and the Guy’s Hospital Museum shows a pulmonary hydatid from the kangaroo.
In other instances they have lodged themselves within the abdominal viscera and pulmonary organs.
Von Siebold has described yet another pulmonary nematode from the porpoise.
Thence they will be passively transferred to the stomachs of cetacea, whence they bore their way through the tissues to the bronchi and pulmonary vessels.
To prevent outbreaks of entozoal disease is one thing; to offer a radical cure when the parasites are firmly anchored within the pulmonary organs is quite another matter.
It was known before, that the pulmonary artery, the right ventricle, and the veins, contain the darker kind of blood, which was thence called venous.
So far as I know, this discovery of the course of the blood through the lungs, which is called the pulmonary circulation, is the one step in real advance that was made between the time of Galen and the time of Harvey.
So that Galen believed that there was such a thing as what is now called the pulmonary circulation.
Among his discoveries is that of the contagiousness of pulmonary tuberculosis.
But I have experienced a decisivepulmonary attack; and although at present it has passed away without any considerable vestige of its existence, yet this symptom sufficiently shows the true nature of my disease to be consumptive.
Suddenly a complete change took place; and though through life he was a martyr to pain and debility, every symptom of pulmonary disease vanished.
In man the vena cava carries the blood to the right side of the heart, the pulmonaryartery inosculates with the pulmonary veins, which convey it to the left side of the heart.
One fruitful source of death among them is pulmonary trouble of various types.
Within a week after leaving him he contracted a severe cold, which soon developed into acute pulmonary troubles of a complex type, and he began to decline.
It is then collected by the branches of the pulmonary vein, and conveyed to the left chamber of the heart.
Had these been younger subjects, and the paralysis of the veins had only affected the lungs, it is probable the disease would have been a pulmonary consumption.
Hence we have one cause, which prevents pulmonary ulcers from healing, which is their being perpetually exposed to the air.
This leaf consists of absorbent vessels, and pulmonary ones, to obtain its nutriment, and to impregnate it with oxygene.
Is not that hereditary consumption, which occurs chiefly in dark-eyed people about the age of twenty, and commences with slight pulmonary hæmorrhages without fever, a disease of this kind?
The arterial system consists of the aortal and the pulmonary artery, which are attended through their whole course with their correspondent veins.
The placenta is a pulmonary organ like the gills of fish.
Both the dark-eyed patients, which are affected with pulmonary ulcers from deficient venous absorption, as described in Section.
Alcoholic stimulants are available only as they act mechanically in sustaining cardiac and pulmonary activity, and where their free use is prolonged efficacy is quickly exhausted, and they tend rather to hasten a fatal result.
The failure in myotic power of the heart and in the muscles of respiration through reflex influence of par vagum and great sympathetic nerves, whereby pulmonary circulation is impeded, are among the earliest of phenomena.
This work describes the aorta and the pulmonary artery as well as the three valves at the root of each of the great vessels, and it speaks of experiments to test their validity.
The women age very quickly and the mortality among the Gipsies is great, especially among children; among adults it is chiefly due to pulmonary diseases.
The glaciated rocks of the glen are clothed with vegetation of peculiar luxuriance, flourishing in the mild climate which has given Glengarriff its high reputation as a health resort for those suffering from pulmonary complaints.
Pulmonary complaints are unknown, but fevers are very common, and the mortality among infants is pitiable.
If it were not for the climate, Quito would be in the midst of a perpetual pestilence; but notwithstanding the prevailing filthiness, there is very little sickness, and pulmonary diseases are unknown.
Tuberculin did, indeed, cure certain minor forms of tuberculous disease, such as the skin affection known as lupus, but it soon became evident that it was almost impotent in the treatment of pulmonary consumption.
The principal vascular arches are converted into the pulmonary artery, and the blood is diverted from the largest of the branchiae to the lungs.
The air carried by the windpipe acts upon the blood through the thin substance of the cells which constitute the pulmonary tissue, in which it traverses in an infinity of minute vessels, whose thin walls are permeable by the gas.
The branchiae disappear one after the other, by absorption, giving place to pulmonary vessels.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pulmonary" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: asthmatic; nasal; panting; puffing; pulmonary; sniffy; snoring; snuffy; stertorous; wheezing