On our previous trip to the Ad Temariam, I had seen several patients, amongst them a young man, suffering from remittent fever, and I gave him some medicine.
All pioneers who have broken virgin soil with a plow in a warm, damp, wooded country will remember that for a considerable time thereafter they suffered from various forms of remittent and intermittent fever.
Among them was one poor young fellow dying, in the next room to mine, of remittent fever.
The night after my arrival I was laid down with remittent fever, and a few days later I nearly died.
Field describes a boy with bilious remittent fever who would drink until his stomach was completely distended and then call for more.
They described his symptoms as those of bilious remittent fever, a severe epidemic of which was prevailing at the time, and from which several white men and many Indians died in that vicinity.
He also speaks of Wunderlich's case of remittent fever, in which the temperature reached 107.
His complaint was a remittent fever, taken on our short journey into the interior.
There are several instances of a relapsing or remittent form of poisoning--a form in which the patient more or less completely recovers consciousness, and then sinks back into a fatal slumber.
The fevers supposed to have been contracted in this way are, as a rule, continued or remittent in character, and they are known under a variety of names.
In favorable cases the fever becomes more remittent within one to three days; a moderate and pleasant perspiration breaks out all over the skin; the sleep becomes calm and natural, and the typhoid symptoms abate.
These vicissitudes of exertion and inertion of the arterial system constitute the paroxysms of remittent fever.
Defn: A periodical increase of violence in a disease, as in remittent or continious fever; an increased energy of diseased and painful action.
Why the great Chronothairmal practice, based on the remittent and febrile character of all disease; above all, on The law of Perriodicity, a law Midicine yet has wells of light to draw.
These remit and recur, and keep tune like the tides, not in ague and remittent fever only, as the Profission imagines to this day, but in all diseases from a Scirrhus in the Pylorus t' a toothache.
A third class, including agues, remittent fevers, and diarrhoea are not at all contagious, but arise from malarious exhalations.
Agues and Remittent Fevers are now but little known, and scarcely ever fatal, in this country.
They are generally remittentand intermittent bilious fevers.
During the summer and autumn, cholera infantum with children in large towns, diarrhoea, cholera morbus, dysentery, intermittent and remittent bilious fevers prevail.
The remittent fever is the most formidable of our autumnal diseases, especially when of a highly bilious type.
The contagious dysentery, of camps and hot climates, is a severe and often fatal disease, in which the preceding symptoms are complicated with remittent or typhoid fever.
In the severe forms of remittent and pernicious types of malaria it may be necessary for the patient to take as much as thirty grains of quinine every three days or so to cut short the attack.
In Concan they use the juice of the leaves as a liniment in remittent fevers, rubbing the hepatic region and in fact the entire body.
He seems to have been treated for remittent fever, chronic diarrhea, general debility, and palpitation of the heart.
A few days afterwards the attack was renewed with greater violence, and I was compelled to admit its reality, and acknowledge the supremacy of remittent fever.
I was again attacked by a remittent fever of an obstinate character.
Intermittent and remittent fevers are very prevalent; bowel complaints are common, and often fatal in the autumn.
It is notorious, that, in the last autumn, the remittent fevers in various parts of the country amounted to a species of pestilence, such as has scarcely been known in England from this cause since the days of Dr.
It is said to be indicated in “Malarial Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, especially curative in Chronic Malaria and Malarial Cachexia and all conditions even where Quinine fails.
In May, 1755, the fevers were "for the most part allied to that dangerous remittent which has for some years past more or less prevailed in different places of this kingdom.
Sutton, Account of a Remittent Fever among the Troops in this Climate.
Fatal cases of "ague and remittent fever" were also more numerous than usual.
The remittent form of fever was frequent in the course of the epidemic [of influenza], though seldom registered as the cause of death.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "remittent" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.