Our home physician- a new and popular guide to the art of preserving health and treating disease; with plain advice for all the medical and surgical emergencies of the family (1869) (14593476680)
Summary
Identifier: ourhomephysician00bear (find matches)
Title: Our home physician: a new and popular guide to the art of preserving health and treating disease; with plain advice for all the medical and surgical emergencies of the family
Year: 1869 (1860s)
Authors: Beard, George Miller, 1839-1883
Subjects: Medicine, Popular
Publisher: New York, E. B. Treat & co. Chicago, Ill., C. W. Lilley (etc., etc.)
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: The Library of Congress
Text Appearing Before Image:
first describe them anatomically,and afterwards speak of their nature and properties. The brain is a soft pulpy mass of a whitish color on the inside, butgrayish exteriorly. It occupies all that cavity which is formed by thebones of the skull; and is surrounded by two membranes ; the firstor outermost of which is called the dura mater, wThich lines the insideof the skull, and prevents its eminences from giving injury to thedelicate structure of the brain. This membrane also serves anotheruseful purpose; it helps to prevent concussions of this organ; for,sending off large folds which enter between the divisions of thebrain, it separates the whole mass into portions, which by its parti-tions it supports and protects from pressure, in the different motionsand positions of the head. Three of those partitions are considera-ble. The first commences at the inside of the forehead, and run-ning along the roof of the skull, descends to about the centre of the BRAIN, SPINAL COED, AND NERVES. 83
Text Appearing After Image:
EXPLANATION OF FIGURE II. This Plate shows the Nervous System ; consisting of the Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerves. The braingives origin to nine pairs of nerves; and the spinal cord, connected with the brain, gives off thirty-onepairs. There are, properly, two brains: the large brain, occupying the upper and front part of the skull,Ind the small brain which occupies the posterior and base of the skull. A. A. The two halves of the Large Brain. B. B. The two halves of the Small Brain. F. F. Spinal Cord, joined to the Large Brain.O. Branches of the Fifth Nerve going to the face, teeth, and eye.E. Fivejierves forming the Brachial Flexus, and going to supply the arms and hands.W. Branches of the Dorsal, or Nerves of the Back. Those near the lower F. are the Nerves of th«Loins. H. Sacral Nerves, going to the thighs, legs, and feet. Si ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY. back-part of the head. It divides the upper part of the brain intotwo great portions, called hemispheres. The second partition runshor
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