English:
Identifier: plainhometalkabo00foot (find matches)
Title: Plain home talk about the human system--the habits of men and women--the cause and prevention of disease--our sexual relations and social natures
Year: 1896 (1890s)
Authors: Foote. Edward B(liss), 1829-1906. (from old catalog)
Subjects: Medicine, Popular Marriage
Publisher: New York : Murray Hill publishing company (etc., etc.)
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: The Library of Congress
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e bronchial tubes; andnot unfrequently lodge in the air-vesicles of the lungs. Thus ob-structed, thus coated, thus filled up, in the act of respiration, the airwith difficulty passes the blockade, and when it enters the cells ofthe lungs it finds tliem muffled almost to imperviousness ; in conse-quence of which the bloodis but partially relieved ofits carbonaceous qualities,and is insufficiently vital-ized by oxygen. The an-nexed cut, Fig. 86, rep-resents the canals andsinuses, or cavities, inthe bones of the face, inwhich catarrhal secre-tions are liable to occur.The dark patches are in-tended to illustrate thecavities, and the blacklines the canals. The lat-ter are not separate anddistinct tubes, as might beinferred by the lines madeto represent them. Thelines are simply designedto trace the course of thesmaller cavities whichunite the larger ones, andfurther to illustrate howcatarrhal secretions areconducted into the respi-ratory organs below, and also how they may reach and affect
Text Appearing After Image:
THE CAVITIES IX THE BOXES OF TITE FAOKSUBJECT TO CATARRH. 340 CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE BREATHING ORGANS. the eyes and ears. This cut beautifully illustrates the parts liableto the affection under consideration, and was designed expresslyfor this book. Catarrh is a common complaint. Almost everybody, at times, hasa touch of it, while some never know what it is to be free from thedistemper. Many people are affected with it who do not mistrustthat it is a disease. They imagine that the discharges from the headare but the natural wastes of the mucous membrane. Such personsought to be informed that the healthy mucous membrane secretesonly a sufficiency of mucus to keep it moist or free from uncomfort-able dryness, and that when there is a discharge from the nose oran expectoration of mucus from the throat, there exists a disease ofthat membrane known by the name of catarrh. This affection inmany cases, produces no painful symptoms, and presents no evidenceof its existence other than the acc
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