[The Evolution of Modern Medicine by William Osler]@TWC D-Link book
The Evolution of Modern Medicine

CHAPTER V -- THE RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN MEDICINE
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I examined the body on the following day....

The aorta was considerably dilated at its curvature; and, in places, through its whole tract, the inner surface was unequal and ossified.

These appearances were propagated into the arteria innominata.

The aortic valves were indurated...." He remarks, "The delay of blood in the aorta, in the heart, in the pulmonary vessels, and in the vena cave, would occasion the symptoms of which the woman complained during life; namely, the violent uneasiness, the difficulty of breathing, and the numbness of the arm."(6) (6) Cooke's Morgagni, Vol.

1, pp.


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