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" In quite a large number of cases it exceeded twenty ounces; the average loss among healthy infants being ten ounces. As a rule the infants began to gain in weight as soon as the temperature remained at the normal point but not until then. The symptoms... "
The Diseases of Infancy and Childhood: For the Use of Students and ... - Page 123
by Luther Emmett Holt, John Howland - 1922 - 1127 pages
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Transactions of the American Pediatric Society, Volume 7

American Pediatric Society - Children - 1895 - 244 pages
...loss among healthy infants being ten ounces. As a rule the infants began to gain in weight as soon as the temperature remained at the normal point but not...The symptoms presented by these infants were a hot and dry skin, marked restlessness, dry mouth, and a disposition to suck vigorously anything within...
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Transactions of the American Pediatric Society, Volume 7

American Pediatric Society - Children - 1895 - 242 pages
...loss among healthy infants being ten ounces. As a rule the infants began to gain in weight as soon as the temperature remained at the normal point but not...The symptoms presented by these infants were a hot and dry skin, marked restlessness, dry mouth, and a disposition to suck vigorously anything within...
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The American Gyna͡ecological & Obstetrical Journal: Formerly the ..., Volume 7

1895 - 768 pages
...loss among healthy infants was ten ounces. As a rule, the infants began to gain in weight as soon as the temperature remained at the normal point, but not until then. The symptoms were a hot and dry skin, marked restlessness, dry mouth and a disposition to suck vigorously anything...
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Diseases of children

Benjamin Knox Rachford - 1912 - 834 pages
...twenty-eight ounces. In quite a large number of cases it exceeded twenty ounces. As a rule, the infant began to gain in weight when the temperature remained...temperature there was considerable prostration and weakened pulse. In the less severe cases there were only crying and restlessness. The rapidity with...
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Buffalo Medical Journal and Monthly Review of Medical and ..., Volume 55

Medicine - 1900 - 1008 pages
...infant gets very little, frequently nothing at all from the breast at which it is being suckled. . . . The symptoms presented by these infants were a hot,...temperature there was considerable prostration and weakened pulse. With less severe cases there were only crying and restlessness. The rapidity with which...
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Transactions of the American Pediatric Society, Volume 9

American Pediatric Society - Children - 1897 - 252 pages
...good description of these cases in a paper entitled, " Inanition Fever in the Newly-born." He says: "the symptoms presented by these infants were a hot, dry skin, marked restlessness, dry mouth, and a disposition to suck vigorously anything within reach — everything indicated great thirst....
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