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108 results
  • Sub Arachnoid Haemorrhage
  • Subarachnoid haemorrhage
  • Unusual form of cerebral haemorrhage
  • Submucous haemorrhage of the duodenum
  • Canine brain affected by cerebral haemorrhage
  • A pig's heart: Mulberry heart disease; haemorrhage
  • A pig's heart: Mulberry heart disease; haemorrhage
  • Post-partum haemorrhage. Lithograph after W. F. Victor Bonney.
  • Christ cures a woman with a haemorrhage. Etching, 17--.
  • Subcutaneous haemorrhage on the chest and abdomen due to haemophilia
  • Coagulen-Ciba : for the prevention and treatment of haemorrhage.
  • Subcranial haemorrhage over the anterior part of the left cerebral hemisphere
  • Effects of haemorrhage and strangulation on the blood in the brains of two rabbits
  • Transfusion Aparatus for injection of saline solution into the blood in cases of severe haemorrhage.
  • Antepartum haemorrhage during pregnancy: maternal health in Mozambique. Colour lithograph by Ministry of Health, 2003.
  • Dissections of diseased hearts: three figures, including hearts affected by forms of endocarditis and myocardial haemorrhage. Chromolithograph by W. Gummelt, ca. 1897.
  • Several sections of diseased spinal cord showing blood clots and haemorrhage, numbered for key. Coloured lithograph by Batelli after Ferdinando Ferrari, c. 1843.
  • Three sections of diseased heart and lungs showing blood clots and haemorrhage, numbered for key. Coloured lithograph by Batelli after Ferdinando Ferrari, c. 1843.
  • Stomach with punctiform haemorrhages
  • Sub-conjunctival haemorrhages in human
  • Haemorrhages of pregnancy and parturition, and abnormalities of the placenta. Lithograph after W. F. Victor Bonney.
  • Tourniquets: for compressing the principal arteries in amputations, and for suppressing violent haemorrhages proceeding from accidental wounds.
  • Acute haemorrhagic pericarditis
  • Haemorrhagic infarcts in a congested lung
  • Cichorium intybus L., Asteraceae. Chicory, succory. Distribution: Uses: 'Cichory, (or Succory as the vulgar call it) cools and strengthens the liver: so doth Endive' (Culpeper, 1650). The Cichorium sylvestre, Wilde Succorie, of Gerard (1633) and the leaves cooked into a soup for ill people. Linnaeus (1782) reported it was used for Melancholia, Hypochondria, Hectica [fever], haemorrhage and gout. Root contains 20% inulin, a sweetening agent. Dried, roasted and ground up the roots are used as a coffee substitute, best known as Camp coffee (Chicory and Coffee essence). This used to be sold in tall square section bottle with a label showing a circa 1885 army tent with a Sikh soldier standing and serving coffee to a seated officer from the Gordon Highlanders. The bottle on the label has now moved on, and since 2006 it shows the same tent but the Sikh and the Scot are now both seated, drinking Camp coffee together. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
  • Softening of portions of brain substance with small haemorrhagic effusions
  • Christ heals the haemorrhaging woman; women wash their linen in a pond. Etching by G. Bodenehr after C.J. Vernet and J.C. Tardieu.
  • Above, a bloodshot eye showing symptoms of haemorrhagic smallpox, below, an eruption of variola nigra on the abdomen of a patient. Colour lithograph after J.A. Philip, ca. 1900.
  • A congenital malformation of th uterus
  • Equisetum arvense (Horsetail)