Brown-Séquard added to the concept of internal secretions, fathered by Claude Bernard, the idea of a correlation, a mutual influencing of them and of the different organs of the body through them.
Yet to Brown-Séquard belongs the immortal credit, if not of the originator, at any rate of the resurrector of the idea of using gland extracts to influence the body.
Brown-Séquard was the first to show that extracts of sex glands could increase the capacity for muscular work.
The erratic Brown-Séquard pounded and hammered away for more than thirty years on the importance to life of the adrenal glands, since death occurred so quickly after their removal.
The Brown-Séquard conception inferred the existence of a postal system between cells, the blood supplying the highway for travel and transmission of the post, the post consisting of the chemical substances secreted by the glands.
Brown-Séquard in perceiving the duality of the brain.
Brown-Séquard announced his theory of the dual brain.
It was not until 1869 that Brown-Séquard first suggested that an important secretion was elaborated by the ductless glands and received into the circulation, but that suggestion proved to be epoch-making.
Brown-Séquard establishes the law may be enumerated as follows: 1st.
Brown-Séquard proved that paralyzed muscles have greater irritability, he also proved the correlative proposition respecting cadaveric rigidity and putrefaction.
Brown-Séquard himself, through experiments which conclude according to the Method of Difference.
Brown-Séquard afford brilliant examples of the application of the Inductive Methods to a class of inquiries in which, for reasons which will presently be given, direct induction takes place under peculiar difficulties and disadvantages.
It was facts of such a nature that led Brown-Séquard to his idea of strengthening cerebral activity by injections of the substance of testes.
In our own days, Brown-Séquard is an isolated instance of a seeker for a specific against senescence.
Brown-Séquard laid stress on the efficacy of emulsions of testis as opposed to chemical substances prepared from the gland.
As a rule, such Brown-Séquard epilepsies appear a number of months after trauma; as a result of irritation in the scar.
Re thoracic contusion, compare remarks of Lépine under Case 69, on Brown-Séquard epilepsy following thoracic wound.
This cerebellospasmodic form of the superior cervical type of spinal concussion is less frequent than a quadriplegic form with Brown-Séquard syndrome.
Here was a question of Brown-Séquard syndrome, probably due to a slight hematomyelia, but associated with no external lesion or any injury to the vertebral column.
Taking this for consent, Quard rattled the sheets of paper, tilted back his chair, and began to read.
She seemed unconscious of his quick, questioning glance, and Quardwithdrew temporarily into suspicious, baffled silence.
Quard wasn't the sort to be content at arm's-length: he must either come closer or go farther away, and might be depended upon not to adopt the latter course until the former had proved impracticable.
Suddenly, and quite without premeditation, she darted forward and plucked Quard by the sleeve just as he was on the point of staggering through the swinging doors of a corner saloon.
By the time of her return from breakfast, the next morning, Quard was waiting for her at the lodging-house.
She was wondering what good it would do her to threaten Quard with arrest.
At his suggestion they left the dining-room by the hotel entrance on Forty-fourth Street, and Joan waited in the lobby while Quard telephoned Gloucester.
Quard drank but sparingly, considerably to the relief of Joan.
Quard had more than once pointed out: "There's nothing sure in this game but the fact that you're bound to close sooner 'n you looked for.
Vastly different from the carefully overdressed, dandified person he had been at their first meeting, Quard stumbled on, his hands deep in pockets, head low between his shoulders, a straw hat jammed down over his eyes.
This objection has been answered by Brown-Séquard himself;[43] but a more plausible one might be raised.
By cutting the spinal cord or the sciatic nerve of guinea-pigs, Brown-Séquard brought about an epileptic state which was transmitted to the descendants.
To conclude, then: the inheritance of an acquired peculiarity in the experiments of Brown-Séquard can be explained by the effect of a toxin on the germ.
Perhaps the trophic disorders following the nerve lesions made by Brown-Séquard correspond to the formation of precisely this convulsion-causing poison.
Brown-Séquard himself says, ‘The changes in the eye of the offspring were of a very variable nature, and were only occasionally exactly similar to those observed in the parents.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quard" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.