Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

1,164 results
  1. NLM Digital Collections - The heart : its physiology, pathology and clinical aspects 
    Publication: Philadelphia : P. Blakiston's Son & Co., [1923]
    ... premature arteriosclerosis, 417 pulmonary edema in, acute, 411 rheumatic endocarditis, acute, and exacerbations, 415 in heart failure, 278 sacculated ...
  2. ... Bull. Veterans Admin., 1936, 13: 170.— Iversen, P. [Acute rheumatic endocarditis with lengthened P-R interval] Ugeskr. laeger, 1928, ... Shapiro, M. J. Organized care of patients with acute rheumatic endocarditis. Minnesota M., 1931, 14: 428-30.—Tillich, A. ...
  3. ... of the physical signs of the heart in acute rheumatic endocarditis in children. Med. J. & Rec, N. Y., 1924, ... 417-428, 3 pi.—Thayer (W. S.). Notes on acute rheumatic disease of the heart. Johns Hopkins ... (T.). Endocarditis reumatica en una nina de seis anos. Rev. ...
  4. NLM Digital Collections - A text-book of the practice of medicine 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Saunders, 1897
    ... children and young adults are caused by primary acute rheumatic endocarditis ; and, although the latter affection cannot in truth ... occurs as frequently as in the case of acute endocarditis of rheumatic origin. AORTIC INCOMPETENCY. 597 The second variety, in ...
  5. ... case of a six-year-old boy with acute rheumatic endocarditis, in which he found at autopsy a saccular ... the condition found in acute ulcerative endocarditis— “malignant endocarditis.” From acute rheumatic fever the patient usually recovers, though with a ...
  6. ... primary, but it is more often secondary to acute rheumatic endocarditis. The valve leaflets are espe- cially involved and ... The cause in most cases is a previous endocarditis. There is often an antecedent history of acute rheumatic fever, chorea, growing pains in childhood, repeated tonsillitis, ...
  7. ... males. It is not infrequently of congenital origin. Acute rheumatic endocarditis is its most frequent cause. In some few ... are its principal complications. A strange sequel of rheumatic fever is chorea. ... acute rheumatism may become subacute or chronic. Muscular rheumatism ...
  8. ... twelve per cent, of all cases of acute rheumatic endocarditis. ACUTE ENDOCARDITIS. 47 Aortitis is apt to be associated ... not recognized. Chronic endocarditis as a sequel of acute rheumatic endocarditis usually affects the mitral valves in children and ...
  9. ... an illustration of the symptoms and progress of acute rheumatic endocarditis which terminated fatally. A seamstress, aged 27 years, ... relapses, espe- cially in a disease of a rheumatic origin. You will sometimes ... When ENDOCARDITIS. 427 the disease occurs in delicate or enfeebled ...
  10. NLM Digital Collections - A dictionary of practical medicine 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Blakiston, 1890
    ... change in the valves is a sequel of acute rheumatic endocarditis in a large number of instances, but similar ... Inflammation of the sclerotic and of the conjunctiva— " rheumatic ... 738 of either pericarditis or endocarditis, occurs in about one-half of all rheu- ...
first · previous · 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10 · next · last