Diseases of Medical Progress
- 27 September 1956
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 255 (13) , 606-614
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195609272551306
Abstract
The history of medicine is replete with examples of illness resulting from sound therpeuic endeavor. The emergence of a new syndrome while the patient is being treated for another condition has long been recognized in clinical medicine. However, in recent years the development of potent new therapeutic agents, improved surgical procedure and more efficient equipment has forced this facet of medicine into unprecedented prominence.This phenomenon may arise from a variety of causes. In the past, emphasis was placed on such things as product impurity, acute or chronic overdosage and ill defined individual sensitivity. In the diseases that are the . . .Keywords
This publication has 95 references indexed in Scilit:
- NEUROLOGICAL COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING THE ADMINISTRATION OF SERAThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1955
- THE ANTI-THYROID EFFECT OF PHENYLBUTAZONEThe Lancet, 1955
- Pneumonia occurring during ACTH and cortisone therapyTubercle, 1955
- CARDIOVASCULAR AND BLOOD VOLUME ALTERATIONS RESULTING FROM INTRAJEJUNAL ADMINISTRATION OF HYPERTONIC SOLUTIONS TO GAS TRECTOMIZED PATIENTSAnnals of Surgery, 1954
- LOW DIASTOLIC PRESSURE AS A CLINICAL FEATURE OF RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS AND ITS POSSIBLE ETIOLOGIC SIGNIFICANCEThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1954
- RE-EVALUATION OF THE ETIOLOGY OF POSTARSPHENAMINE JAUNDICEThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1954
- The Supply of Oxygen to Prematures and the Appearance of Retrolental FibroplasiaActa Paediatrica, 1953
- The present status of therapy of the cardiac arrhythmias with quinidineAmerican Heart Journal, 1951
- POTASSIUM LACK IN THE POST-GASTRECTOMY DUMPING SYNDROMEThe Lancet, 1951
- MyocarditisAmerican Heart Journal, 1947