165 results filtered with: Digital Images, Pictures
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A child drinking a cup of oral rehydration salts: treating diarrhoea in Kenya. Colour lithograph by Ministry of Health, ca. 2000.
Date: [2000?]Reference: 756179i- Pictures
- Online
A woman making a solution to cure her child's diarrhoea: child health in Kenya. Colour lithograph by Department of Child Health, ca. 2000.
Date: [2000?]Reference: 756114i- Pictures
Gastrointestinal diseases and fatal diarrhoea in infants: conditions in the home which lead to the disease, contrasted with hygienic conditions. Colour lithograph, 1926.
Langstein, Leopold, 1876-1933.Date: [1926]Reference: 5103iPart of: Atlas der Hygiene des Kindes- Pictures
Flies infecting food, leading a man to go towards a lavatory; representing summer diarrhoea as a manifestation of dysentery. Colour lithograph by G.C. Schulz, 1947.
Schulz, Gerhard C., 1911-Date: 5.47 [i.e. May 1947]Reference: 2000559i- Pictures
- Online
A man vomiting and with diarrhoea owing to infected water; and four scenes related to the results of water infection. Colour lithograph, 1952 (?).
Date: [1952?]Reference: 766956iPart of: Guangdong people's government hygiene regulations.- Pictures
- Online
Dr Sopo's advice on treating children with diarrhoea: use and preparation of oral rehydration salts in Kenya. Colour lithograph by the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation, ca. 2000.
Date: [2000?]Reference: 755271i- Pictures
Periarteritis nodosa in a 52-year old man with recurring diarrhoea and anorexia: detail views showing nodules on skull and ears. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1949.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1949Reference: 33250iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Pictures
- Online
A child with diarrhoea, malnutrition and vector related disease and means of prevention: The Disaster Risk Reduction Project in Kenya. Colour lithograph by P. Wambu, ca. 2000.
Date: [2000?]Reference: 755425i- Pictures
A woman holds a cup up to her child with instructions on sterilising water: preventing diarrhoea in Mali. Colour lithograph by M. Diané for MSP/AS Programme de Lutte Contre les Maladies Diarrheiques, 1987.
Date: 1986Reference: 766765i- Digital Images
- Online
Coreopsis tinctoria Nutt. Asteraceae. Plains coreopsis. Golden tickseed. Distribution: North America. Used by Cherokee as an infusion for diarrhoea. Drunk by the Lakota as a tea. Zuni women drink infusion of plant, minus roots, if they wish to have female babies
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
SEM of Campylobacter
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
Campylobacter, SEM
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
Campylobacter, TEM
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
Campylobacter, SEM
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
Bergenia ciliata (Haw.)Sternb. Saxifraginaceae. Elephant's ears. Named for Karl August von Bergen (1704-1759), physician and botanist, professor at Viadrina University, Frankfurt. Has hairy leaves, hence ciliata. Distribution: E. Afghanistan, Himalayas, Assam. Used for fevers, diarrhoea, bruises and boils, coughs, renal stones, diabetes, heart disease, haemorrhoids, stomach disorders (Harish et al www.ijabpt.com). It was described in the 1820s so there is no early literature. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Aralia spinosa L. Araliaceae. Devil's walking stick, Prickly ash, Hercules' club. Tree. Distribution: Eastern North America. Contact with sap causes skin irritation, raw berries mildly toxic to humans, causing diarrhoea and vomiting. Eaten by bears. Used medicinally by Native Americans for a variety of conditions. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Acanthus spinosus L. Acanthaceae. Bears breeches. Distribution: Southern Europe to Western Turkey. Herbaceous perennial flowering plant. Named for spiny leaves. Dioscorides recommended the roots applied for inflammation and spasms, and -when drunk- to promote urine, check diarrhoea, and for phthysis, ruptures and convulsions. The leaves are the model for those at the top of Corinthian columns. Tetraglycosides isolated from the plant show cytotoxicity in sea urchin eggs and crown gall tumour on potato disks. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Eucalyptus sp. (Eucalyptus)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Clostridium difficile
Annie Cavanagh- Digital Images
- Online
Clostridium difficile
Annie Cavanagh- Digital Images
- Online
SEM of Giardia
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
SEM of Giardia
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
SEM of Giardia, ventral view
David Gregory & Debbie Marshall- Digital Images
- Online
Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
S. Schuller- Digital Images
- Online
Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
S. Schuller