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Alphabetical    [«  »]
pulsation 10
pulsations 6
pulsative 2
pulse 50
pulses 9
pulsific 1
puncture 4
Frequency    [«  »]
51 being
51 had
50 parts
50 pulse
50 upon
49 would
48 my
William Harvey
On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals

IntraText - Concordances

pulse

   Chapter
1 Pref| that the object of the pulse was the same as that of 2 Pref| imagine that the uses of the pulse and the respiration are 3 Pref| excessive repletion the pulse beats more forcibly, whilst 4 Pref| but in young persons the pulse is quick, whilst respiration 5 Pref| sometimes, too, in fevers, the pulse is rapid, but the respiration 6 Pref| entertained of the offices and pulse of the heart, perhaps, less 7 Pref| the action, motion, and pulse of both are the same? If 8 Pref| the use or meaning of this pulse of the right ventricle? 9 II | against the breast and the pulse is felt externally.~2. That 10 II | tension of the heart, the pulse of its apex, which is felt 11 II | strikes the breast and the pulse is felt without, the heart 12 III | arteries are dilated, yield a pulse, and are in the state of 13 III | contract, to pulsate, the pulse in the arteries also ceases; 14 III | contracts languidly, the pulse in the arteries is scarcely 15 III | perceptible. In like manner, the pulse in the right ventricle failing, 16 III | right ventricle failing, the pulse in the pulmonary artery 17 III | some resemblance to the pulse. For in the ratio of the 18 III | ratio of the tension is the pulse of the heart, fuller, stronger, 19 III | place, and that at which the pulse in an artery (especially 20 III | the arteries), and by the pulse is sent everywhere simultaneously." 21 III | opened after his death. The pulse in the corresponding arm 22 III | forcibly, seeing that the pulse of the arteries is nothing 23 V | produces a sound and yields a pulse both to the ear and the 24 V | veins to the arteries a pulse takes place, and can be 25 V | of the body; so that the pulse which we feel in the arteries 26 V | proposed in regard to the pulse of the heart and arteries, 27 VI | witness of their reality. "The pulse," he observes, "inheres 28 VII | blood is forced on by the pulse of the right ventricle, 29 VII | the right ventricle, the pulse of which should force the 30 VIII| heart by whose virtue and pulse the blood is moved, perfected, 31 IX | influence of the arterial pulse enters and is impelled in 32 IX | propelled by the heart at each pulse into the aorta; which quantity, 33 XI | when the body is warm, the pulse is full, and the blood carried 34 XI | prevent the force of the pulse from extending beyond it, 35 XI | its extreme term, a full pulse is felt in the part, especially 36 XII | force it receives from the pulse and power of the heart; 37 XII | recovering his courage, the pulse strength is increased, the 38 XIV | performs by means of its pulse; and that it is the sole 39 XV | in the temperature, the pulse and the rest, which impairing 40 XVI | of the attack,) when the pulse is always frequent, small, 41 XVI | in temperature, and the pulse becomes fuller and stronger. 42 XVI | way, in considering the pulse, why should one kind of 43 XVI | why should one kind of pulse indicate death, another 44 XVI | of all the other kinds of pulse, what may be the cause and 45 XVII| Or wherefore is there a pulse in the pulmonary artery? 46 XVII| pulmonary artery? Because the pulse of the arteries is derived 47 XVII| have either no perceptible pulse, or they rarely exhibit 48 XVII| times we are aware of a pulse in the teeth, in inflammatory 49 XVII| have readily perceived the pulse there. On the other hand, 50 XVII| often impossible to feel the pulse not merely in the fingers,


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