Stenosis of one or more bronchi results at times from cicatricial contraction following secondary infection of leutic, tuberculous or traumatic lesions.
Should the patient be in bad condition from previous ill-advised or blind attempts at extraction, endoscopy should be delayed until the traumatic esophagitis has subsided and the general state improved.
Cough may be excited by reflex irritation, overflow of secretions into the larynx, or by perforation of the posterior tracheal wall, traumatic or ulcerative, allowing leakage of food or secretion into the trachea.
The treatment of traumatic esophagitis consists in rest in bed, sterile liquid food, and the administration of bismuth subnitrate (about one gramme in an adult), dry on the tongue every 4 hours.
No attempt should be made to remove a foreign body until the traumatic lesions have healed.
An unvarying post-traumatic palpebral tic in an hysterical subject cannot be said to constitute the syndrome of Gilles de la Tourette, in spite of the coprolalia.
According to this correspondent, “this indeed is a universal experience, namely, that hard manual work is the best remedy for such functional incapacities of traumatic origin.
The psychology of traumatic amblyopia following the explosion of shells.
The case was presented as one of local traumatic hysteria.
According to Claude and Lhermitte, these data concerning hydromyelia, which they regard as secondary to trauma, are an argument in favor of the traumatic origin of certain syringomyelias.
Parsons seeks to explain the psychology of traumatic amblyopia in the light of deductions of Lloyd Morgan, Mark Baldwin and McDougall.
But the nervous and mental cases almost one and all give rise to =the suspicion= at least of =organic disease=, possibly traumatic in origin.
The picture of a complete traumatic neurosis not infrequently appears, aided perhaps by the psychic features of the gas attacks; and possibly some cases are entirely psychogenic from the beginning.
This case is cited by Donath as one in which traumatic hysteria has been proven to exist in a man without any sign of neuropathic or psychopathic taint, either in his previous history or in his relatives.
The most frequent sequel is stiffness of the ankle-joint and traumatic pes valgus.
It is only when the recovery is slow or the injury is followed by a traumatic flat foot that the surgeon begins to suspect that a more serious condition was present at the time of the original injury.
Fracture of the metatarsal bones is liable to be followed by traumatic flat foot, on account of the sinking of the arch, or painful large calluses forming on the sole of the foot may interfere with walking.
In traumatic gangrene it is the rule to amputate immediately through healthy tissue when restitution of the injured parts is known to be impossible.
The causes of traumatic fractures may be either predisposing or exciting.
During that practice I have had my attention directed to cases of idiopathic and traumatic tetanus.
In my judgment the symptoms in the case of Mr. Cook could not be referred either to idiopathic or traumatic tetanus.
It will be a question of great importance whether, in your judgment, they correspond with natural, that is, with traumatic or idiopathic tetanus, or with any other disease whatever.
Copland, which will enable you to judge whether Cook’s complaint bears a greater resemblance to general convulsions than to traumatic tetanus or strychnine tetanus.
A case of traumatic tetanus in a boy came under my observation in that hospital in 1843.
There was not, in your opinion, either idiopathic or traumatic tetanus?
The ordinary tetanus in this country is traumatic tetanus.
Cross-examination continued; Could traumatic tetanus occur within so short a time as a quarter of an hour after the reception of an injury?
The locking of the jaw is an almost constant symptom attending traumatic tetanus--I may say a constant symptom.
It is true that traumatic tetanus begins in four cases out of five by a seizure of the lower jaw; but then in the fifth case it does not so commence; and Sir B.
Traumatic agencies, like blows, falls, lacerations, and other injuries during labor, may result in pelvic peritonitis.
The only times they were reincorporated into it were traumatic (the Nazi occupation, for instance).
In trying to put an end to history, they seem to have provoked another round of it - more vicious, more enduring, more traumatic than before.
It must grow from within, by integrating experiences, including painful and traumatic ones.
All were the victims of pathological nostalgia, deep, disconsolate grieving and the post-traumatic shock of being uprooted and objectified.
Case of forty Lumbrici in a Boy who died with Traumatic Tetanus,” “Rep.
Freezing the Nerve: in traumatictetanus has been proposed.
USES: Tetanus, cardiac asthma, sciatica and whooping-cough; large doses have been given in traumatic tetanus.
It lies accessible to various experimental observations, as also to traumatic lesions and to the surgeon's art.
Getting back to the track, however," he went on, "I should begin by saying that Her Majesty appears to have suffered a shock of traumaticproportions early in life.
In other words, when she couldn't communicate, she went into this traumatic shock.
It is this attack on the deepest levels of the psychic organism that results in the trauma; and has results of its own, by the way, which succeed in stabilizing the traumatic shock on several levels.
The mental conditions leading to purposeless prevarication which supervene in the real hysterical mental states, or during the course of traumatic psychoneurosis are well known.
It was a case of hysteria which had developed largely upon a basis of injury--there was a traumatic psychoneurosis.
This way at least the loss of his wife was not as traumatic as it might have been.
Cases are not unfrequently presented of inflammatory action, more especially where it is internal--traumatic cases and others--which the practitioner finds it impossible to subdue with medicine.
For traumatic trismus, use the B D current, of vigorous force.
In other cases the blood escapes beyond the sheath and collects in the surrounding tissues, and a traumatic aneurysm results.
Aneurysm of the femoral artery beyond the origin of the profunda branch is usually traumatic in origin, and is more common in Scarpa's triangle than in Hunter's canal.
Less frequently a traumatic aneurysm forms some considerable time after the injury, from gradual stretching of the fibrous cicatrix by which the wound in the wall of the artery has been closed.
The traumatic or strain factor in the production of the disease may be manifested in a less obvious fashion.
In course of time a traumatic arterial aneurysm may develop from such a hæmatoma.
Such a vessel also is liable to be ruptured by external violence and so give rise to traumatic aneurysm.
Such wounds may also be followed by reactionary or secondary hæmorrhage, or later by the formation of a traumatic aneurysm.
It is liable to traumatic affections from a fall on the shoulder, pressure, or over-use of the limb.
In certain cases the symptoms of traumatic shock blend with those resulting from toxin absorption, and it is difficult to estimate the relative importance of the two factors in the causation of the condition.
An adventitious bursa forms over the acromion process in porters and others who carry weights on the shoulder, and may be the seat of traumatic bursitis.
Brachial aneurysm# usually occurs at the bend of the elbow, is of traumatic origin, and is best treated by excision of the sac.
Traumatic neurasthenia is like simple neurasthenia in {234} most details.
In acute traumatic neurasthenia there may be, in addition to the symptoms observed in simple neurasthenia, high fever, and such a fever has been observed to go as high as 113 degrees Fahrenheit.
The principle of treatment and the operation to be selected in any given case, depends upon its origin, whether traumatic or spontaneous.
Dupuytren[17] performed it successfully for a traumatic axillary aneurism.
In one case, at least, the gluteal artery has been tied with success (for traumatic aneurism) just where it leaves the pelvis, without the tumour being opened.
For below the elbow spontaneous aneurism is almost unknown, and even traumatic aneurisms are extremely rare.
In a similar operation lately performed by the author for traumatic aneurism, the result of a stab, very little blood was lost, though no incision was made above the clavicle.
He said: "The plaintiff was suffering from traumatic sacro-illiac disease, traumatic sinovitis of the knee and wrist and from traumatic myositis of the muscles of the back.
There are two elements in the temptation: there is the smooth and flattering speech, the outpouring of compliment and pretended affection expressed in vii.
Every sin is preparing for us a band of shame to be wound about our brows and tightened to the torture-point.
Ardern's description of a case of traumatic tetanus is very interesting, because it contains so many elements that are familiar in the history of this affection.
He had much to say of cataract, dividing it into traumatic and spontaneous, and suggesting operation by needling, a gold needle being used for that purpose.
Such an ulcer is properly considered oftraumatic or mechanical origin, as it is induced as the direct effect of mechanical irritation or arrest of blood-supply.
Chronic arthritis following a traumatic cause, and persisting obstinately in the injured joint is probably rheumatoid, if not strumous, gouty, or periarthritic.
Some are of traumatic origin, but more often the patient was in apparent health up to the time of the appearance of the disease.
This form of abscess may be of traumatic origin, but more frequently the inflammatory process arises in the cellular tissue of the ischio-rectal fossa; in some cases the morbid action is due to ulceration of the rectum.
Traumatic pharyngitis must be treated on general principles.
Aside from toxic and traumatic causes, ulcer of the intestine occurs as the result of dysentery, typhoid fever, and tuberculosis--diseases mentioned in the order of frequency in the production of intestinal ulcer.
Traumatic pharyngitis results from deglutition of boiling water or of acrid or caustic substances; from inhalation of hot air, of steam, or of flame, and is most usually associated with traumatic oesophagitis or with laryngitis.
When recession occurs under appropriate treatment, the color passes through various shades of violet, blue, green, and yellow, as in ordinary traumatic ecchymosis.
But these traumatic cases, which for a time gave the symptoms of gastric ulcer, recovered in from two weeks to two months, whereas the persistence of the symptoms is a characteristic of simple ulcer.
On this conception, traumatic shock takes its place as a natural phenomenon and is divested of its mask of mystery.
In their quality and in their phenomena psychic shock and traumatic shock are the same.
Postoperative and traumatic neuroses are at once explained on the ground of noci-association, the resulting strain from which, upon the brain-cells, causes in them physical lesions.
It has long been known that the vasomotor, the cardiac, and the respiratory centers discharge energy in response to traumatic stimuli applied to various sensitive regions of the body during surgical anesthesia.
In like manner, the brain may be sensitized by the administration of large doses of thyroid extract prior to operation, the threshold to injury in such a case continuing to be low to traumatic stimuli even under anesthesia.
As the traumatic memories of the two world conflagrations receded, Germany resorted to applying its political weight - now commensurate with its economic and demographic might - to securing EU hegemony.
The United States became a monetary union only following its traumatic Civil War.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "traumatic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.