Vol 37, No 3 (1941)
Academician Ivan Petrovich Pavlov and the development of his scientific legacy
Abstract
The long and unusually purposeful scientific activity of Academician Ivan Petrovich Pavlov covered with its fruitful influence the main fields of physiological science. In each area, touched by his keen observation and skill of experimental virtuoso (digestive tract, cardiovascular system, etc.), he created something new and opened new prospects for further research.
Academician Ivan Pavlov's teaching on types of nervous activity
Abstract
In developing the doctrine of higher nervous activity by the method of conditioned reflexes, Academician Pavlov, in the very first period of his work, encountered the fact of different reactions in different test animals (dogs) to the same experimental influence. In an effort to determine the difference in these reactions, he found in experimental animals certain types of nervous activity, understanding by types "those or other complexes of the basic properties of the nervous system". The definition and delineation of these types developed gradually and was subjected to various modifications as more accurate experimental data were accumulated.
On the treatment of lumboishyalgia
Abstract
The choice of treatment for sciatica is a difficult one for the physician because of the variety of etiopathogenesis of the disease. In the acute stage, heat, light therapy, aspirin, salicylic soda, antipyrine, and diaphoretics are used; potassium iodide is used if syphilis is suspected.
Aetiology and pathogenesis of Аdie syndrome
Abstract
Аdiе syndrome seems to be becoming one of the current issues in neurology. This is evidenced by the large number of papers devoted to it, mostly clinical. This is due, on the one hand, to the purely scientific interest of this syndrome and, on the other hand, to its practical relevance in neurology.
On the impact of pneumo-encephalography on the blood-brain barrier
Abstract
To study the effect of encephalography on the blood-brain barrier, we have carried out 48 studies. Our observations concern only some aspects of barrier function, mainly protective. Routine cerebrospinal fluid examination has also been carried out in order to ascertain changes in the barrier during meningeal reactions.
Endemic goitre in the Mari Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and the results of its control
Abstract
Endemic goitre in the MASSR was first established by Prof. M.F. Kandaratsky, who examined 26 settlements of the Tsarevokokshay and Cheboksary districts of former Kazan province on his personal initiative in 1886-1888. In the surveyed settlements were found 1030 goitered people, which was about 1/3 of all surveyed, the number of mentally and physically retarded and deaf-mute among the affected people reached 3.5%.
Military field surgery and the role of the doctor (not the surgeon) at the front
Abstract
Military field surgery is essentially emergency surgery, or more accurately, emergency traumatology in a complex combat environment. Military field surgery differs from peacetime surgery not only in the nature of injuries, the nature of their localization and course, but also (and most importantly) in the environment, the conditions under which treatment has to be carried out. Treatment of injuries, trauma treatment has nowadays grown into a large independent specialty - traumatology, which requires serious study and thorough training. The quality of medical care for traumatologists in our country is increasing every year.
Some observations by a surgeon in a troop area (from experience at DPM)
Abstract
In this report we would like to share our experiences of surgical work in the army area during the war with the White Finns. The environment in which the work took place presents a number of peculiarities. In the polar regions, in severe frost, in absolute absence of living quarters, suitable for medical facilities, in conditions of maneuver war, we had to organize the qualified aid to the wounded soldiers of the heroic Red Army. The operating theatre, dressing rooms, wards for the wounded and waiting for evacuation were deployed in heated tents, with temporary cookers.
Use of omentum in the treatment of infected wounds and ulcerodystrophic processes
Abstract
The bactericidal properties of the peritoneum have attracted the attention of many researchers. And we at one time paid tribute to the study of this question in clinic and experiment. We soon became convinced that the best way to study the bactericidal properties of the serous sheets was to turn to the omentum. The omentum is more accessible to experiment, is mobile, consists mainly of reticulo-endothelium, is covered entirely by peritoneum and is also richly supplied with blood. The problem of the serous leaflets and, in particular, the study of the properties of the omentum in the clinic and experiment has subsequently become a major topic for researchers in the clinic we supervise.
On the treatment of lupus erythematosus with acrychin
Abstract
The report of Prof. Prokopchuk (1940) about his successful treatment of lupus erythematosus with acrychin attracted general attention. At the same time, Prof. Olesov commissioned us to conduct a clinical trial of this method to determine its therapeutic value. The method proposed by Prof. Prokopchuk is very simple and consists in giving an adult patient 0.1-3 times a day, after meals, for 10 days.
Treatment of psoriasis with acrychin
Abstract
The search for a rational therapy for psoriasis has so far encountered great difficulties due to the unclear etiology of the disease. In recent years, however, the theory of the parasitic origin of psoriasis has gained renewed interest due to the theory of filtering viruses.
On the treatment of carbuncles
Abstract
The choice of method for treating carbuncles depends on the stage of the disease and the course of the process. The first requirement in the treatment of carbuncles is to prevent the development of venous thrombosis, which can lead to septic thrombophlebitis. This is especially important in facial carbuncles, where thrombosis of v. facialis is particularly rampant. Prophylaxis consists of complete rest of the affected area.
X-ray diagnosis of diaphragmatic hernia
Abstract
Recognition of diaphragmatic hernia is very difficult for the clinician because of the variety of morbid phenomena and the lack of clear clinical symptoms. We observed two cases of traumatic diaphragmatic hernia, the differential diagnosis of which presented a number of difficulties. In addition, in both cases the in vivo diagnosis was confirmed operatively and then in section.
Stopping pulmonary haemorrhage during pleural obliteration
Abstract
On April 21, 1936, patient F., aged 26, a railway worker, was brought to the clinic of the Tuberculosis Institute with profuse pulmonary haemorrhage. He had previously been on the dispensary's register for six years and had been treated in 1930 with bilateral artificial pneumothorax for chronic fibrous cavernous tuberculosis.
Brodie's abscess
Abstract
On 1/IX 1938, patient N., aged 17, Russian, was admitted to the clinic with complaints of pain in the lower third of the left shin and in the ankle joint. Pains were crushing and sometimes shooting and occurred for no apparent reason, more often at night. She considered herself ill since April 1938, after suffering from influenza.
Blepharoplasty for scar eversions with a free auricular skin flap according to Goldfeder
Abstract
Many methods of blepharoplasty have been proposed to correct eyelid cicatrices. Some of them - plasty with a stem flap (Fricke, Diffenbach, Imre, etc.) - are old ways, widely adopted in the practice of oculists, other operations that appeared in a later period of plastic surgery - blepharoplasty free flap (Tirsch-Eversbusch, Lefort-Wulffe-Krause) also found a sufficient number of adherents.
Treatment of fungal nail lesions with 50% pyrogal ointment according to the method of Dr. A. M. Arievich
Abstract
A number of authors (Grigoriev, Jordan, Chernogubov, Geller, Saburo, etc.) propose different methods of onychomycosis treatment: mechanical, physical, biological and medicamentous. However, all authors, without exception, state great difficulties of nail treatment, its duration and frequent ineffectiveness. Therefore, the question of finding an effective method of onychomycosis treatment has occupied and continues to occupy the attention of our Soviet dermatologists (Chernogubov, Podvysotskaya, Kashkin, etc.).
Beck's multiple benign miliary lupoid
Abstract
Patient C., 29 years old, admitted to the hospital on 25/III 1939 complaining of a facial skin rash without any subjective sensations. Four months ago a rash appeared on the skin of the face in the area of the chin, which soon spread to the whole skin of the face. Some time later there was a thickening of the skin on the anterior surface of the left side of the neck in the form of two painless, dense nodules.
Pathogenesis of cerebral apoplexy
Abstract
Until recently, anatomical evidence of vascular wall lesions such as rupture of a secondary altered vessel wall, rupture of a miliary aneurysm, and necrosis of the vascular wall caused by anemia due to circulatory disturbances have dominated the explanation for cerebral haemorrhage. Recently this issue has been the subject of scientific discussion due to the work of Rosenblatt, Westphal and Behr. The issue is not only of theoretical but also of practical importance.
From the history of blood transfusion in the treatment of psychosis
Abstract
The history of the first experiments with blood transfusion shows that doctors of antiquity pinned extraordinary hopes on this method mainly because of the supposed effect of transfused blood on the psyche of the patient. It is no exaggeration to say that the first steps of the blood transfusion method were related to the treatment of mental illnesses.
Materials for the study of echinococcal disease in the Crimean ASSR
Abstract
Theses of V. G. Potapov, Associate Professor, Stalin Crimean Medical Institute, for the degree of Doctor of Medicine on "Materials for the study of echinococcal disease in the Crimean ASSR". Defended at the meeting of the Council of Professors of Kazan State Medical Institute on March 31, 1941.
Treatment of bronchial asthma with small doses of copper
Abstract
Observations show that small doses of heavy metals act in an inflammatory way on the reticulo-endothelial system and alter the state of allergy. On this basis, 50 patients with bronchial asthma were treated with a colloidal copper preparation called Cupridium.
X-ray treatment of bronchial asthma
Abstract
Based on his own experience and literature data, the author confirms the positive effect of radiotherapy for bronchial asthma. The best results are obtained with X-ray irradiation of the lungs (with the inclusion of gilus) and with the combined irradiation of the lungs and spleen.
Effects of cold and heat on the gastrointestinal tract
Abstract
Cold and heat have been used since time immemorial to influence gastrointestinal tone and secretion. However, there is still no physiological justification for these interventions. The authors attempted to resolve this issue by inserting rubber cylinders connected by tubes to a writing instrument into the stomach and intestine and recording the pressure changes in these organs on a kymograph.
The interaction between the autonomic-endocrine system and vitamin metabolism
Abstract
The administration of vitamins has a normalising effect on pathologically altered autonomic-hormonal regulation. In pituitary insufficiency with a tendency to spontaneous hypoglycaemia Diehl and Kirchmann managed to normalise the glycaemic curve after glucose load by administering a complex of vitamin B and vitamin C.
Vitamin C for tuberculosis
Abstract
The vitamin C content in the blood and urine of 100 patients with various forms of tuberculosis and 10 healthy individuals was examined. Two days before the experiment, the patients were not given any food containing large amounts of vitamin C.
100% oxygen (indications and methods of its use)
Abstract
The authors note that in both civilian and military traumatic surgery, not only shock but also direct vascular injury occurs. The latter, by slowing down the local circulation, aggravates the already impaired general circulation that always accompanies shock. In such cases, the authors recommend 100% oxygen inhalation as a means not only of controlling shock, but also of preserving the injured limb.
Practical use of sulfa preparations in surgical infections
Abstract
Streptocide (sulphonamide) is still the drug of choice for infections caused by haemolytic streptococcus and also for non-specific prophylaxis, because: 1) serious toxic complications are rare with it and nausea does not bother patients, 2) it is easy to reach a high concentration and to maintain the desired lower concentration over time, 3) it can be injected under the skin in 0.8% dilution and administered locally in crystalline form.
Sulfonamide in gonococcal endocarditis
Abstract
The diagnosis of gonorrhoeal endocarditis, as indicated by the authors, must be confirmed by 1) a gonococcal culture from blood, 2) the presence of an on- and off-putting diastolic murmur at the base of the heart. The report concerns 4 patients with endocarditis treated with sulphonamide.
Salpingitis and pelvic cellulitis
Abstract
The most common cause of pelvic inflammation is gonorrhoea. According to Curtis, 70 to 80% of all cases of salpingitis are caused by gonococcus. Gonococci are most often introduced with instruments and improper treatment, as well as during menstruation.
Surgical Society. Meeting on January 26, 1941
Abstract
Reports: Dr B.A. Timofeev (Head of Kazan Ambulance Service). On the organization of ambulance in Kazan. In 1939 there were 28,177 visits of the station and in 1940 - 21,781. It is necessary that medical institutions should provide a certain minimum of beds to accommodate patients through the ambulance.
Surgical Society. Meeting on March 21, 1941
Abstract
Dr. A. Ya. Pleshitser. Electrocardiogram for stomach operations (2nd message). The speaker reported on the results of electrocardiographic studies during gastric operations performed under local anesthesia using the creeping infiltrate method by prof. A. V. Vishnevsky.
Chronicle
Abstract
The Council of People's Commissars of the USSR by the decree of March 13, 1941 had awarded the Stalin prizes for outstanding scientific works in the field of medical sciences: 5 prizes of the first degree in the amount of 100 thousand rubles, 3 prizes of the second degree in the amount of 50 thousand rubles.