Rheumatism may be thought of, with respect to arthritic inflammation caused thereby, as a sort of pyemia. From Wordnik.com. [Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1] Reference
Three of the ladies made it through the first ward, with its cases of scrofula, scabies, eczema, defluxions, and stinking pyemia, before deciding that their charitable inclinations could be entirely satisfied by a donation to L'Hôpital, and fleeing back to the dispensary to shed the rough hopsacking gowns with which we had been furnished. From Wordnik.com. [Dragonfly in Amber]
This last condition is seen in pyemia (blood poisoning). From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
He also quotes a case of pyemia in a boy of seven, whose temperature rose to 107. 6o F. From Wordnik.com. [Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine] Reference
He also quotes a case of pyemia in a boy of seven, whose temperature rose to 107.6 degrees F. From Wordnik.com. [Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine] Reference
Richards was suffering from pyemia, as a result of a carbuncle; he was very ill, with no prospect of recovery. From Wordnik.com. [Acts and resolves passed by the General Court] Reference
Occasionally the inguinal lymphatic glands (in the groin) undergo suppuration, and pyemia may supervene and prove fatal. From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
When abscess occurs in the cord the matter may escape into the scrotal sac and cavity of the abdomen and pyemia may follow. From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
Moist gangrene often spreads and involves deeper tissue, sheaths of tendons and joints producing septic synovitis or septic arthritis leading to pyemia and death. From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
In a few instances it may assume a chronic type, when all the symptoms become mitigated, and thus continue for some time, until septicemia, pyemia, or exhaustion causes death. From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
The Crows and Creeks are usually delivered prone upon the stomach, and the placenta is rapidly expelled, either in the same posture or while standing; in rare cases it is delayed, and then it is allowed to remain until it decomposes, and, remarkable to say, pyemia rarely follows, probably on account of the naturally strong constitution of the race. From Wordnik.com. [Labor Among Primitive Peoples] Reference
Umbilical pyemia. From Wordnik.com. [The Veterinarian] Reference
Bay), Philip Moisel (pyemia, Heytesbury street), Michael Hart (phthisis. From Wordnik.com. [Ulysses] Reference
Essential fevers are subdivided into ephemeral fevers, which last but a short time and terminate by critical phenomena; intermittent fevers, in which there are alterations of exacerbations of the febrile symptoms and remissions, in which the body returns to its normal condition or sometimes to a depressed condition, in which the functions of life are but badly performed; and continued fevers, which include contagious diseases, such as glanders, influenza, etc., the septic diseases, such as pyemia, septicemia, etc., and the eruptive fevers, such as variola, etc. From Wordnik.com. [Special Report on Diseases of the Horse] Reference
Construction of the building and adaptability to the purposes of a hospital in different seasons; light and ventilation by windows; supplied with water and gas fixtures; rooms in the building or contiguous buildings for office, apothecary shop, laundry, kitchen, dining rooms, store rooms, bake houses and privies; estimate of expense in fitting up and repairing building and out-houses; capacity of hospital, estimating fifty square feet floor surface for each patient with ordinary wound or disease, and in wards set apart for pyemia, hospital gangrene, erysipelas and typhoid fever, 100 square feet; pitch of rooms and number of wards; number of hospital tents. From Wordnik.com. [Guide for inspection of hospitals and for inspector's report,] Reference
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