201 results filtered with: Digital Images
- Digital Images
- Online
West Midlands Tuberculosis sanatoria and public information
Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust- Digital Images
- Online
West Midlands Tuberculosis sanatoria and public information
Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust- Digital Images
- Online
West Midlands Tuberculosis sanatoria and public information
Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust- Digital Images
- Online
Gentiana lutea (Great yellow gentian)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Amulet. Sudanese, 19th century.
- Digital Images
- Online
A beared man holds up an enormous leg.
- Digital Images
- Online
C14 Chinese medication chart: Asthma etc.
- Digital Images
- Online
Severe malnutrition: kwashiorkor
- Digital Images
- Online
Rhododendron yakushuminum 'Grumpy'
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Rhododendron yakushimanum 'Grumpy'
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
The Ebola virus
Odra Noel- Digital Images
- Online
The Ebola virus
Odra Noel- Digital Images
- Online
Bone marrow: gelatinous transformation with AIDS
- Digital Images
- Online
Erythroxylum coca Lam. Erythroxylaceae Coca. Distribution: Peru . Cocaine is extracted from the leaf. It is no longer in the UK Pharmacopoeia (used to be used as a euphoriant in ‘Brompton Mixture’ for terminally ill patients). Cocaine, widely used as a local anaesthetic until 1903, inhibits re-uptake of dopamine and serotonin at brain synapses so these mood elevating chemicals build up and cause a ‘high’. Its use was often fatal. Coca leaf chewing was described by Nicolas Monardes (1569
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Treatment of acute pathologies, suojiao yongsha, lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Acute pathologies, thoracic oppression, Chinese lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Treatment of acute pathologies, bowel disease, lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Acute pathologies, intestinal prolapse, Chinese lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Treatment of acute pathologies, opisthotonos, lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Treatment of acute pathologies, head pain, Chinese lithograph
- Digital Images
- Online
Points for treating paralysis, Chinese woodcut
- Digital Images
- Online
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.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Salmonella detection by human epithelial type-2 cell
David Goulding, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute- Digital Images
- Online
Salmonella Typhimurium infection of a human epithelial cell
David Goulding, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute- Digital Images
- Online
Human macrophage rupturing after infection with Chlamydia
David Goulding, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute