1,517 results
- Books
Pathway to success / Astellas Pharma in partnership with the Bladder and Bowel Foundation.
Date: 2011- Books
Pathway to success / Astellas Pharma in partnership with the Bladder and Bowel Foundation.
Date: 2012- Archives and manuscripts
096360/Z/11/Z: Pigs Bladder Football
Date: c.2010-2011Reference: WT/C/6/3/49Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Archives and manuscripts
History of Urology: Bladder & kidney and Other Diseases of the Bladder pp.161-285 Ms draft and notes
Date: c.1950s-1960sReference: PP/EAU/G.2Part of: Underwood, Edgar Ashworth (1899-1980)- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese MS acu-moxa point chart: Bladder channel
Unknown- Ephemera
- Online
De Witt's Kidney & Bladder Pills : diuretic stimulant - urinary antiseptic.
Date: [1954]- Archives and manuscripts
'Hormones Released into the Circulation When the Urinary Bladder of the Anaesthetized Dog is Distended'
Vane, Sir John, FRS (1927-2004), PharmacologistDate: 1971Reference: PP/JRV/C/5/7Part of: Vane, Sir John Robert (1927-2004)- Archives and manuscripts
Draft ts., 'The Position of the Gall Bladder' by Cantlie, demonstrating that the gall bladder occupies a central position in the liver
Date: late 19th century - early 20th centuryReference: MS.7938/20Part of: Cantlie, Sir James, F.R.C.S. (1851-1926)- Pictures
A man gets up from his office chair and looks round feeling pain in the back; advertising De Witt's Kidney & Bladder Pills. Colour lithograph, 19--.
Date: [between 1900 and 1999]Reference: 996808i- Ephemera
- Online
Gravel & stone : Mr. A. Sparrow, "I suffered from stone in the bladder. I tried DeWitt's Pills & passed a stone within 48 hours"... : insist on DeWitt's Kidney & Bladder Pills.
E.C. DeWitt & Co.Date: [1920?]- Archives and manuscripts
'BV 746' [785-2366]
Date: 1959-1970Reference: GC/147/B.6Part of: Cade, Sir Stanford- Archives and manuscripts
'BIV 284-745'
Date: 1955-1969Reference: GC/147/B.5Part of: Cade, Sir Stanford- Archives and manuscripts
[BIII 196-270]
Date: 1954-1964Reference: GC/147/B.4Part of: Cade, Sir Stanford- Books
- Online
A general treatise on various cold mineral waters in England, but more particularly on those at Harrogate, Thorp-Arch, Dorst-Hill, Wigglesworth, Nevill-Holt, and others of the like Nature. With Their Principles, Virtues and Uses. Also a short discourse on solvents of the stone in the Kidneys and Bladder.
Short, Thomas, 1690?-1772.Date: MDCCLXV. [1765]- Books
- Online
Medicina practica: or, the practical physician: shewing the true method of curing the most usual diseases incident to humane bodies, viz. All Sorts of Aches and Pains, Gout, Agues, Apoplexies, Feavers, Cholick, Scurvey, Fluxes, Shortness of Breath, Apostems, Thrushes, Quinseys, Deafness, Dropsie, Stone in the Reins or Bladder: Women's Distempers, &c. with the preparation of the præcipiolum: or universal medicine of Paracelsus. To which is added, the chymical works of Hermes Trismegistus, Kalid King of Persia, Geber King of Arabia, Artefius Longævus the Jew, , Roger Bacon. Nicholas Flammel's Hieroglyphicks. George Ripley's Marrow of Alchymie. And an Account of their Lives. Collected from the works of the most eminent authors, both Ancient and Modern; and faithfully translated from their Respective originals, by William Salmon, m.p. Adorn'd with variety of curious sculptures.
Salmon, William, 1644-1713.Date: [1707]- Books
- Online
Cases of the successful practice of vesicæ lotura in the cure of diseased bladders by Jesse Foot, Surgeon. The Practice of Vesicae Lotura is thus far decisive: For Cases of diseased Bladders, which have hitherto been deemed fatal ones, it is a direct cure. It brings off Gravel lodged in the Bladder, and promises fairer than any former mode, upon the most obvious grounds, to dissolve the stone within.
Foot, Jesse, 1744-1826.Date: MDCCXCVIII. [1798]- Books
- Online
A disquisition of the stone and gravel, and other diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, &c. the Occult Causes of the Stone assign'd, its Principles explain'd; with the manner of its Accumulation; and by what means a Nucleus is first form'd, which generates the Stone; with the most rational Method of Cure. By Wm. Adams, Surgeon, London.
Perry, S. (Sampson), 1747-1823.Date: [1785?]- Books
- Online
Dr. Boerhaave's academical lectures on the theory of physic. Being a genuine translation of his institutes and explanatory comment, collated and adjusted to each other, as they were dictated to his students at the University of Leyden. ... . Containing the Structure and Action of the Spleen, Omentum, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Muscles and Skin; with the Nature of Sweat, Perspiration and Nutrition.
Boerhaave, Herman, 1668-1738.Date: MDCCXLIV. [1742-46]- Books
- Online
New discoveries and improvements in the most considerable branches of anatomy and surgery. Wherein four of the most dangerous operations are prevented, viz. I. The great Use of the Curve-Catheter, in a Suppression of Urine, and easing the racking Pain of the Stone in the Bladder. II. Ruptures of all Kinds cured without Cutting. III. The Diveded Tendon cured without Stitching. IV. The White-Swelling cured without Dismembering. V. The best Method for the Reduction of Fractures, and Dislocations. VI. The Nature of Gun-Shot, and other Wounds; and of the Errors committed in Bleeding. Vii. The True Seat of the Gonorrhaea demonstrated; and Cure of the Venereal Disease. Viii. Of the Circulation of the Blood in the Foetus, and the Nourishment thereof. IX. Of the Parts of Generation in Women, &c. The whole proposed by way of instruction; and illustrated with cases and cures, by Mr. Stuart, Surgeon.
Stuart, Alexander, 1673-1742.Date: M.DCC.XXXVIII. [1738]- Digital Images
- Online
Physalis alkekengi L. Rosaceae Chinese lantern, Winter Cherry, Bladder Cherry. Distribution: C & S Europe, W. Asia to Japan. Culpeper, in his English Physitian of 1652 writes: Winter Cherry ... are of great use in physic ...’ and recommends them for almost all kidney and urinary problems. In particular he seems to advocate the use of green berries in beer, for preventing kidney stones lodging in the ureters. It is called ‘aikakengi’ in the College’s Pharmacopoeia Londinensis of 1618. Belonging to the family Solanaceae, all its parts are poisonous except the ripe fruit. The green fruit and the rest of the plant contain atropinic compounds and will produce a dry mouth, rapid heart beat, hallucinations, coma and death if enough is taken. As the atropine is only present in the unripe fruit eating one will make the mouth go dry (and it has the most unpleasant taste), but it will also relax the smooth muscle in the wall of the ureter which helps passage of ureteric stones. Culpeper’s observations on its usefulness are supported by more modern observations. When ripe, the orange fruit inside its skeletal outer ‘lantern’ is edible, free of atropine, and delicious. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Physalis alkekengi L. Rosaceae Chinese lantern, Winter Cherry, Bladder Cherry. Distribution: C & S Europe, W. Asia to Japan Culpeper: In his English Physitian of 1652 writes: Winter Cherry ...are of great use in physic ...’ and recommends them for almost all kidney and urinary problems. In particular he seems to advocate the use of green berries in beer, for preventing kidney stones lodging in the ureters. It is called ‘aikakengi’ in the College’s Pharmacopoeia Londinensis (1618). Belonging to the family Solanaceae, all its parts are poisonous except the ripe fruit. The green fruit and the rest of the plant contain atropinic compounds and will produce a dry mouth, rapid heart beat, hallucinations, coma and death if enough is taken. As the atropine is only present in the unripe fruit eating one will make the mouth go dry (and it has the most unpleasant taste), but it will also relax the smooth muscle in the wall of the ureter which helps passage of ureteric stones. Culpeper’s observations on its usefulness are supported by more modern observations. When ripe, the orange fruit inside its skeletal outer ‘lantern’ is edible, free of atropine, and delicious. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Physalis alkekengi L. Rosaceae Chinese lantern, Winter Cherry, Bladder Cherry. Distribution: C & S Europe, W. Asia to Japan Culpeper: In his English Physitian of 1652 writes: Winter Cherry ...are of great use in physic ...’ and recommends them for almost all kidney and urinary problems. In particular he seems to advocate the use of green berries in beer, for preventing kidney stones lodging in the ureters. It is called ‘aikakengi’ in the College’s Pharmacopoeia Londinensis of 1618. Belonging to the family Solanaceae, all its parts are poisonous except the ripe fruit. The green fruit and the rest of the plant contain atropinic compounds and will produce a dry mouth, rapid heart beat, hallucinations, coma and death if enough is taken. As the atropine is only present in the unripe fruit eating one will make the mouth go dry (and it has the most unpleasant taste), but it will also relax the smooth muscle in the wall of the ureter which helps passage of ureteric stones. Culpeper’s observations on its usefulness are supported by more modern observations. When ripe, the orange fruit inside its skeletal outer ‘lantern’ is edible, free of atropine, and delicious. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Physalis alkekengi L. Rosaceae Chinese lantern, Winter Cherry, Bladder Cherry. Distribution: C & S Europe, W. Asia to Japan Culpeper: In his English Physitian of 1652 writes: Winter Cherry ...are of great use in physic ...’ and recommends them for almost all kidney and urinary problems. In particular he seems to advocate the use of green berries in beer, for preventing kidney stones lodging in the ureters. It is called ‘aikakengi’ in the College’s Pharmacopoeia Londinensis of 1618. Belonging to the family Solanaceae, all its parts are poisonous except the ripe fruit. The green fruit and the rest of the plant contain atropinic compounds and will produce a dry mouth, rapid heart beat, hallucinations, coma and death if enough is taken. As the atropine is only present in the unripe fruit eating one will make the mouth go dry (and it has the most unpleasant taste), but it will also relax the smooth muscle in the wall of the ureter which helps passage of ureteric stones. Culpeper’s observations on its usefulness are supported by more modern observations. When ripe, the orange fruit inside its skeletal outer ‘lantern’ is edible, free of atropine, and delicious. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
- Online
The history of the lateral operation: or, an account of the method of extracting a stone, by making a Wound near the great Protuberance of the Os Ischium, through the Common Integuments and Levator Ani, into the Side of the Bladder, without touching the Urethra, Prostate Gland, Vesiculae Seminales, or any other of the Urinary or Seminal Vessels; first attempted by Frere Jacques in France, and afterwards successfully perform'd by Professor Rau in Holland. With a postscript concerning the introduction and improvement of this method here in London. By James Douglas, M.D.
Douglas, James, 1675-1742.Date: MDCCXXVI. [1726]- Books
- Online
A treatise on dissolvents of the stone; And on Curing the stone and gout by aliment. Shewing, By Reason supported with Experiments, and Cases, the Probability of dissolving the Stone either in the Kidneys, or Bladder; and of preventing the Returns of the Gout by suitable Aliment, with proper Rules of Diet. Intermixed with Observations, which shew how Persons of different Constitutions, and also of different Habits of Body, whether too lean, or too fat, should regulate themselves, and their Diet for the Preservation of their Health. To which are added, Directions of Diet proper for Persons afflicted with Colds, Fevers, Quinseys, Coughs, Asthma's, Cholicks and Pains of the Stomach, Costiveness, Nervous Diseases, Cachexies, Dropsies, Tumours, or Scurvey. The Whole form'd for Usefulness in Families. By Theophilus Lobb, M.D. and Fellow of the Royal Society of London.
Lobb, Theophilus, 1678-1763.Date: MDCCXXXIX. [1739]