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A brief account of the happy death of Mary Ann Clap
daughter of Mr. Jesse and Mrs. Betsey Clap, who died July 15, 1816, in the eleventh year of her age; exhibiting an example of meekness and submission; furnishing the clearest evidence of early piety; and imparting the sweetest consolation to pious friends -
The ligature preferable to agaric, in securing the blood-vessels after amputations
In which the dangerous and fatal consequences that may attend a dependence upon the latter, are offered to the consideration of surgeons; and the experiments made at Paris by Monsieur Faget, and at London by Mr. Warner, proved to be insufficient to authorize such a practice. By Henry Parker of Sandwich, sometime surgeon of the Royal Navy -
A concise and impartial account of the advantages arising to the public: from the general use of a new method of amputation. By Mr. O'Halloran, surgeon
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Bones of contention
the decision to amputate in early modern Germany -
A dissertation on the inutility of the amputation of limbs
Written in Latin, by M. Bilguer, Surgeon General to the Armies of the King of Prussia. Augmented with the notes of Mr. Tissot , Physician at Lusanne. Now first translated into English, by a surgeon -
Thoughts on amputation
Being a supplement to the letters on compound fractures, and a comment on Dr. Bilguer's book on this operation. To which is added A short essay on the use of opium in mortifications. By Thomas Kirkland, M.D. Member of the Medical Society at Edinburgh -
Practical observations upon amputation, and the after-treatment
By Edward Alanson, Surgeon to the Liverpool Infirmary -
Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ
more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London -
Practical observations on amputation, and the after-treatment
to which is added, an account of the amputation above the ancle with a flap: the whole illustrated by cases. By Edward Alanson, Surgeon to the Leverpool Infirmary