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Example sentences for "clinically"

Lexicographically close words:
clinging; clings; clingstone; clinic; clinical; clinician; clinicians; clinics; clinique; cliniques
  1. Clinically viewed, the case published by Dr Araujo must be regarded as unique.

  2. Although, from a statistical point of view, the investigation could hardly be expected to yield any very striking results; yet clinically viewed the study was most instructive.

  3. It is for this reason particularly that mild diet regulations are clinically more judicious than the absolute denial which on chemical and physiological grounds seems to be the scientific ideal.

  4. Many a time clinically when one-eighth grain has failed, a dose of one-fourth grain having been apparently necessary, a change to one-tenth grain has proved entirely and perfectly satisfactory.

  5. Clinically reflexes down these nerves interfering with the heart's action cause faintness and serious prostration, if not actual shock, and perhaps, at times, death.

  6. The purpose is to convey the fact that there may be no etiologic distinction between the two forms, and it is impossible to decide clinically in the beginning of an endocardial inflammation which form is present.

  7. In experimental tests the action does not last more than from fifteen minutes to half an hour, but clinically the effect of repeated doses is much more satisfactory.

  8. Clinically we know that many patients after serious illness never again have perfect circulatory strength.

  9. Clinically it is often difficult to determine before operation which variety is present.

  10. In consequence of this the pus may infiltrate the neck tissues beneath the fascia of the sterno-mastoid muscle and form a large abscess recognized clinically as a hard and painful swelling situated below the mastoid process instead of over it.

  11. Clinically it is associated with severe pain in the region of the vertebræ affected, and along the course of the nerves emerging in the neighbourhood.

  12. Clinically it is practically impossible to differentiate sarcoma from carcinoma; in the later stages the infection of the glands below the mandible is more marked in carcinoma.

  13. It would seem legitimate to assume that this tendency is here to be regarded as a manifestation of the phenomenon which is clinically described as dearth of ideas.

  14. Such reactions, though occasionally given by normal subjects, are more often given by insane ones, and seem to be somewhat characteristic of states of mental deterioration which are clinically rather loosely described as puerilism.

  15. Our cases of alcoholic dementia are clinically without evidences of disturbance of flow of thought.

  16. There can be no doubt that at least some of these cases are clinically perfectly typical ones of manic-depressive insanity, yet the test records strongly resemble, in some respects, those of dementia præcox.

  17. There is more doubt in regard to the associations of this symptom than as to the knee movement, but it has been clinically shown to be exaggerated in spastic spinal paralysis.

  18. It is made clinically most distinct by the fluting or puckering of the peripheral part of the roof-wall, giving the lesion a crenated appearance which is not {439} assumed by any other cutaneous efflorescence of multiple development.

  19. It would seem, from a careful study of all the cases here collected, that it is probable that the diseases commonly known clinically as pyæmia and septicæmia may be grouped as follows: 1.

  20. It would seem that the impregnation with tetanic virus or toxin must last in the nervous system a good deal longer than the apparent disease clinically lasts, but that this belated and concealed intoxication eventually passes.

  21. Re the controversy over Oppenheim’s traumatic neurosis, Nonne holds with the Charcot school that traumatic neurosis is clinically identical with hysteria.

  22. That such an effect does actually take place has been demonstrated clinically in literally thousands of cases.

  23. It has never been proved clinically or experimentally that this drug has any action whatever except that its irritant resin might, if taken in sufficient quantity, cause irritation of the stomach and vomiting.

  24. As clinically met with, the patches present are, as a rule, in all stages of development.

  25. Clinically and pathologically it bears some resemblance to papular eczema.

  26. The decision as to the patient being clinically tuberculous (ill with tuberculosis) must rest on the consideration of the clinical history and the results of the physical examination.

  27. The various combinations of gastric cancer with secondary hepatic cancer may be clinically grouped as follows: 1.

  28. It may not be amiss to combine with it iodide of potassium in moderate doses, but the practice of employing the latter to the exclusion of the former is both theoretically and clinically unsound.

  29. At the post-mortem table it is found with almost equal frequency in the four decades between twenty and sixty, but clinically it appears with greatly diminished frequency after forty years of age.

  30. In many of the cases clinically designated pure varix, the remains of such a sac may still actually persist.

  31. As to the actual anatomical lesion resulting in the cases which we designated clinically as contusion I can give no information.

  32. The slight amount of resistance offered by the cancellous ends was also clinically illustrated by the absence of severe synovial effusions when they were struck.

  33. Either or both of these pathological conditions are produced by the impact of the bullet with the spine, given a sufficiently high degree of velocity, and it is difficult to separate clinically the resulting symptoms.

  34. Clinically this was the form of nerve injury both of greatest comparative frequency and of interest from the points of view both of diagnosis and prognosis.

  35. The clinical evidence contained in these replies was to the effect that Mon-Arsone had been used in the various types of syphilis and that there was a certain beneficial effect, both clinically and as shown by the Wassermann reaction.

  36. Clinically we were unable to detect any influence of either or both these compounds on syphilitic lesions, although each of them was of the variety which heals in a week or ten days under salvarsan treatment.

  37. Three more patients treated both by the Koch injections and by operation were reported as clinically improved.

  38. He used jejunal and ileac epithelium clinically in two instances: 1st, In a female dog which had had ‘chronic stomach trouble’ for six months.

  39. Clinically the typhoid toxin appears to cause the early production of arteriosclerosis.

  40. A considerable example of this class is the arteriosclerosis of granular kidney, but in many cases kidney disease is, clinically speaking, absent.

  41. The different types noted clinically depend upon the nature of the etiologic factors and the kind of arterial tissue with which the individual is endowed.

  42. This observation has been recently substantiated by Hultgen, who carefully studied clinically 460 cases of chronic alcoholism.

  43. Clinically speaking, then, hyperpietic arteriosclerosis is not a disease, but a mechanical result of disease.

  44. There are cases seen clinically that lend support to this view and there is experimental evidence also (v.

  45. Clinically the diastolic is probably more important than the systolic.

  46. The pure myxoma is extremely rare, and clinically resembles the lipoma.

  47. Clinically the temperature is estimated by means of a self-registering thermometer placed, for from one to five minutes, in close contact with the skin in the axilla, or in the mouth.

  48. In advanced cases it may be impossible to differentiate between a periosteal and a central tumour, either clinically or after the specimen has been laid open.

  49. It is recognised clinically by the presence of multiple tumours in the course of the nerves, and sometimes by palpable enlargement of the superficial nerve-trunks (Fig.

  50. Infection takes place through the umbilicus, and manifests itself clinically by spasms of the muscles of mastication.

  51. This is a nervous reaction due to a want of correspondence between the internal and the surface temperature of the body, and is known clinically as a rigor.

  52. It is common for portions of fascia, ligaments, or tendons to slough, and this may often be recognised clinically by a peculiar crunching or grating sensation transmitted to the fingers on making firm pressure on the part.

  53. It is recognised clinically by the characteristic cauliflower growth at the orifice of the sinus, and by the offensive nature of the discharge.

  54. A trunk-neuroma is recognised clinically by its position in the line of a nerve, by the fact that it is movable in the transverse axis of the nerve but not in its long axis, and by being unduly painful and sensitive.

  55. They are characterised clinically by acute pain, redness, transitory swelling from œdema, and subsequent desquamation of the surface layers of the epidermis.

  56. Gross alterations in the ends of the bone are thus brought about which can be recognised clinically and in skiagrams, and which tend to restrict the normal range of movement.

  57. Sarcoma of a phalanx or metacarpal bone may closely resemble a dactylitis both clinically and in skiagrams, but it is rare.

  58. It is characterized clinically by a myxedematous condition of the subcutaneous tissues and mental failure, and anatomically by atrophy of the thyroid gland.

  59. Kuhn presents an exhaustive analysis of 73 cases of congenital defects of the movements of the eyes, considered clinically and didactically.

  60. The symptoms of opium and morphine poisoning are so much alike, that clinically it is impossible to distinguish them; therefore they may be considered together.

  61. Clinically this lymph of Koch has led to wonderful cures in lobular pneumonia, for it produces pneumonia, broncho pneumonia, and congestion of the lungs in the tuberculous patient.

  62. Koch's lymph, Bacillinum and Avian tuberculin must be studied separately, clinically as well as experimentally.

  63. This explains the clinically observed fact, that unless treated, pulsion diverticula increase progressively in size, and consequently in distressing symptoms.

  64. Spasm secondary to disease of the stomach, liver, gall bladder, appendix, or other abdominal organ is clinically well recognized.

  65. Pfeiffer has tried to introduce it clinically in suitable cases, but has not so far succeeded in obtaining definite results.

  66. For such observations large amounts of blood are needed, which are clinically not frequently available.

  67. Brown regards this astonishing phenomenon as pathognomic for trichinosis, so much so, that in a case that was clinically obscure, he made, from the marked eosinophilia, the diagnosis of trichinosis which was later fully confirmed.

  68. The reliable preparation and conservation of the normal solution is however attended with such difficulties, that this method is not clinically available.

  69. The lesions of the gums so well recognized clinically are fully discussed under symptomatology.

  70. The case so frequently quoted by German authors in this connection is that of Fraenkel, who described both clinically and pathologically a case of scurvy in a boy eight years of age.

  71. This has not been considered a sign of scurvy, and when noted clinically or at postmortem has been passed over without comment, just as has been the case with cardiac hypertrophy.

  72. It corresponds clinically to the "beading" and the "rosary" so characteristic of infantile rickets and mistakenly termed the "rhachitic rosary.

  73. Clinically it varies in kind and degree according to the situation in which it develops.

  74. In our opinion it is probably better to regard these as clinically impure types.


  75. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "clinically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.