A mother, while nursing her infant, was seized with a paralysis, attended with the loss of muscular power on one side of her body, and the loss of sensibility on the other. The surprising and, indeed, the alarming circumstance here was, that she could... Lectures on clinical medicine, delivered at the Hotel-Dieu, Paris v.1, 1867 - Page 158by Armand Trousseau - 1867Full view - About this book
| Charles Bell - Anatomy - 1833 - 324 pages
...attended by the loss of power on one side of her body and the loss of sensibility on the other side. The surprising, and, indeed, the alarming circumstance...could hold her child to her bosom with the arm which possessed muscular power, but only as long as she looked to the infant. If surrounding objects withdrew... | |
| Natural theology - 1836 - 566 pages
...attended by the loss of power on one side of her body, and the loss of sensibility on the other side. The surprising, and, indeed, the alarming circumstance...could hold her child to her bosom with the arm which possessed muscular power, but only as long as she looked at the infant. If surrounding objects withdrew... | |
| Sir Charles Bell - 1852 - 458 pages
...paralysis, attended with the loss of muscular power on one side of her body, and the loss of sensibility on the other. The surprising, and indeed, the alarming...gradually relaxed, and the child was in danger of falling. The details of the case do not belong to our present enquiry ; but we see, first, that two distinct... | |
| 1853 - 638 pages
...paralysis, attended with the loss of muscular power on one side of her body, and the loss of sensibility on the other. The surprising and, indeed, the alarming...retained muscular power, only so long as she looked at the infant. If surrounding objects withdrew her attention from the state of her arm, the flexor... | |
| Thomas Wharton Jones - 1869 - 336 pages
...paralysis, attended by loss of muscular power on one side, and loss of sensibility on the other. Though she could hold her child to her bosom with the arm which retained muscular power, it was only so long as she kept her eyes on the infant. Such a case, again, is different from what... | |
| John Addington Symonds - Biography - 1871 - 468 pages
...paralysis, attended with the loss of muscular power on one side of the body, and the loss of sensibility on the other. The surprising and, indeed, the alarming...retained muscular power, only so long as she looked at the infant. If surrounding objects withdrew her attention from the state of her arm, the flexor... | |
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