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SURGICAL SHOCK.

JAMA. 1899;XXXII(23):1331-1332. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450500061017.
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It is a matter of wonder that surgical shock has received such scant consideration at the hands of investigators in the field of surgery. This fact is forcibly borne in on the medical reader by the recently published work of Crile1. For the first time we have presented the accurate records of an extended and careful research into the cause of shock, conducted on the lines of experimental physiology. In a sense it might be said that the facts and conclusions in this essay are not all new, the chief addition to knowledge being the clear and unquestionable exposition of the mechanism of the production of shock, and as a consequence some very pertinent conclusions as to its prevention and treatment. It is of importance to surgeons to have it positively proved that, as a rule, the amount of shock is in direct proportion to the extent of excitable tissue

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