Results 291 to 300 of about 141,446 (365)
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1946
THE obstetrician finds his efforts in behalf of pregnant and parturient women consisting of the prevention and alleviation of four great menaces. These are pain, hemorrhage, toxemia and sepsis. The significant trends in practice, therefore, are perhaps best dealt with as pertaining to these subjects.
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THE obstetrician finds his efforts in behalf of pregnant and parturient women consisting of the prevention and alleviation of four great menaces. These are pain, hemorrhage, toxemia and sepsis. The significant trends in practice, therefore, are perhaps best dealt with as pertaining to these subjects.
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Unusual presentations in obstetrics and gynecology
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 2003The key to evaluating any patient in the emergency department is to remember to keep an open differential when taking the history and conducting the physical examination. Many of the unusual conditions and complications of gynecologic diseases or procedures discussed in this article can be diagnosed with a careful and complete gynecologic history and ...
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Obstetric anesthesia: Past present and future
The Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine, 2009Obstetric anesthesia is science and art combined, and obstetric anesthesiologists must be concerned simultaneously with the lives of (at least two) intricately interwoven patients - the mother and her baby (ies). Obstetric anesthesia, by definition, is a subspecialty of anesthesia devoted to peripartum, perioperatvie, pain and anesthetic management of ...
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Cervical incisions in present-day obstetrics
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1960Abstract 1. 1. Fifty-nine cases of cervical incisions, occurring in a 5½ period are presented. 2. 2. There was one fetal and one neonatal death in infants delivered after cervical incisions. There were no maternal deaths in the group. 3. 3.
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EVALUATION OF PRESENT DAY TRENDS IN OBSTETRICS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1950During recent years certain accepted principles for the care of the maternity patient and her infant have been challenged. Ideas have been expressed questioning the reality of labor pain or the need for analgesic and anesthetic drugs during labor. It has been claimed that labor pain is psychologically necessary for the mother.
D E, REID, M E, COHEN
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Obstetric and gynaecological presentations of hydatid disease
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 1982Summary. Hydatid disease of the female pelvis is rare in gynaecological practice. In Libya, where the disease is endemic, 14 women with pelvic hydatid disease were encountered in one hospital department between 1971 and 1979. Five of these women were pregnant, a hospital prevalence of 1 in 20000.
M S, Rahman, J, Rahman, A, Lysikiewicz
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Cardio-Obstetrics: Past, Present and Future
Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 2021Jasmine, Grewal +2 more
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