124 results
- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18: Paediatric pox - 'Thin skin and tender pulp'
- Pictures
Left foot, with inflammation, infection and decomposition of skin around nails in a 73-year old woman with Raynaud's phenomenon, coronary disease and peripheral arterial disease. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1947.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1947Reference: 32217iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Archives and manuscripts
Burroughs Wellcome & Co, Private Letter Book 1
Date: December 1881 - May 1897Reference: WF/E/03/01 (copy, part 1)Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
Burroughs Wellcome & Co, Private Letter Book 1
Date: December 1881 - May 1897Reference: WF/E/03/01 (copy, part 2)Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Burroughs Wellcome & Co, Private Letter Book 1
Date: December 1881 - May 1897Reference: WF/E/03/01Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Henry Wellcome Letter Book 7
Date: Aug 1903 - Jul 1904Reference: WF/E/01/01/07Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Henry Wellcome Letter Book 4 ['Letter Book HSW Personal 2']
Date: Nov 1896 - Jan 1899Reference: WF/E/01/01/04Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
Northern Region - Chilumba
Date: October 1980-July 1984Reference: WTI/LEP/C/2/5/6Part of: LEPRA (formerly The British Leprosy Relief Association, now LEPRA Health in Action)- Archives and manuscripts
Wellcome veterinary products - Promotional Leaflets
Date: 20th centuryReference: WF/M/PB/41/03Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
Polybactrin (topical antibiotic)
Date: c.1971-c.1990Reference: WF/M/PL/242Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18 woodcut: External medicine - Dermatitis
- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18 woodcut: External medicine - Psoriasis
- Pictures
- Online
List of symptoms of HIV infection that lead to AIDS from fever to red or purplish spots on the body; sixth of sixteen advertisement posters by the American Red Cross promoting education about AIDS. Colour lithograph, 1990.
Date: January 1990Reference: 667147i- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18 woodcut: External eye - 'Reversed eyelid'
- Pictures
Diabetic gangrene in a 57-year old woman: detail of right foot showing perforating skin of ulcer on sole and decomposition of skin around great toe. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1951.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1951Reference: 34093iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18 woodcut: External medicine - Facial dermatitis
- Videos
Professor Regan's beauty parlour.
Date: 2007- Digital Images
- Online
Chinese C18 woodcut: External medicine - 'String of pearls'
- Books
Glaxo brief : five minutes reading from Glaxo Laboratories. No. 66, August 1964.
Glaxo Laboratories.Date: 1964- Digital Images
- Online
C18 Chinese woodcut: Inflammation of the throat
- Mixed materials
Spinal disease and spinal curvature : their treatment by suspension and the use of the plaster of Paris bandage / by Lewis A. Sayre.
Sayre, Lewis A. (Lewis Albert), 1820-1900.Date: 1877- Archives and manuscripts
Temadex
Date: 1959-1963Reference: WF/M/PL/318Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Pictures
Chalky deposits growing under skin of fingers in 60-year old man with gout. Pen and ink drawing by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1949.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1949Reference: 33103iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Videos
Clinical oncology. Part 3.
Date: 1974- Digital Images
- Online
Calendula officinalis L. Asteraceae. Pot marigold, common marigold, ruds or ruddles. Calendula, because it was said to flower most commonly at the first of each month - the 'calends' (Coles, 1657). officinalis indicates that it was used in the 'offices' - the clinics - of the monks in medieval times. Annual herb. Distribution: Southern Europe. The Doctrine of Signatures, indicated that as the flowers resembled the pupil of the eye (along with Arnica, Inula and the ox-eye daisy), it was good for eye disorders (Porta, 1588). Coles (1658) writes '... the distilled water ... helpeth red and watery eyes, being washed therewith, which it does by Signature, as Crollius saith'. Culpeper writes: [recommending the leaves] '... loosen the belly, the juice held in the mouth helps the toothache and takes away any inflammation, or hot swelling being bathed with it mixed with a little vinegar.' The petals are used as a saffron substitute - ‘formerly much employed as a carminative
Dr Henry Oakeley