Water is perhaps the most powerful diuretic we possess, although fewer experiments have been made with it upon animals than with the others. The diuretic action of water drunk by a healthy man is very marked, and it appears impossible to explain its elimination... The Dental Practitioner - Page 1861884Full view - About this book
| George B. Shattuck, M.D. and Abner Post, M.D. - 1884 - 650 pages
...again concretions which have been already formed. "Water is, perhaps, the most powerful diuretic which we possess, although fewer experiments have been made...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue... | |
| J. Murphy, J.L. Hamilton, H. Steele - Medicine - 1885 - 820 pages
...again concretions which have been already formed. " Water is, perhaps, the most powerful diuretic which we possess, although fewer experiments have been made...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue... | |
| Thomas Lauder Brunton - Adipose tissues - 1886 - 1306 pages
...calculi in the kidney or bladder ; or even to dissolve again concretions which have been already formed. Water is perhaps the most powerful diuretic we possess,...blood-pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue change, and thus multiplying the products of tissue... | |
| Thomas Lauder Brunton - Digestion - 1888 - 416 pages
...calculi in the kidney or bladder ; or even to dissolve again concretions which have been already formed. Water is perhaps the most powerful diuretic we possess,...blood-pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue change, and thus multiplying the products of tissue... | |
| Medicine - 1887 - 392 pages
...and water in the cells of the gland. WATER AS A DIURETIC. — Dr. Brunton says, in the Practitioner, that water is, perhaps the most powerful diuretic...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has the power of increasing tissue-change, and thus multiplying... | |
| Medicine - 1884 - 746 pages
...again concretions which have been already formed. " Water is, perhaps, the most powerful diuretic which we possess, although fewer experiments have been made...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue... | |
| Medicine - 1884 - 522 pages
...calculi in the kidney or bladder ; or even to dissolve again concretions which have been already formed. Water is perhaps the most powerful diuretic we possess,...blood-pressure, whether general or local. It has, as we have remarked, the power of increasing tissue change, and thus multiplying the products of tissue... | |
| Medicine - 1886 - 722 pages
...whom the cure would be dangerous, if not fatal. WATER AS A DIURETIC. T. LAUDEU BRUNTON (Practitioner) says that water is, perhaps, the most powerful diuretic...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has the power of increasing tissue-change, and thus multiplying... | |
| Medicine - 1886 - 930 pages
...treatment respectively. — Med. News. WATER AS A DIURETIC. — Dr. Brunton says, in the Practitioner, that water is, perhaps the most powerful diuretic...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has the power of increasing tissue-change, and thus multiplying... | |
| 1887 - 454 pages
...EDITED BY KATE J. JACKSON, M. I). Water as a Diuretic.— Dr. L. Brunton, in a recent article, states that water is, perhaps, the most powerful diuretic...impossible to explain its elimination by a mere increase in blood pressure, whether general or local. It has the power of increasing tissue-change, and thus multiplying... | |
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