Citations:hæmatopœtic

Adjective: optional spelling of

 * 1875, editing Robert Battey and W. F. Westmoreland, Atlanta Medical and Surgical Journal Dunlop, Wynne & Co.; Volume XII, №. 1, page #47:
 * In some intestinal derangements, due to lesion of the hæmatopœtic glands (liver and amyloid spllen), mercurial friction is recommended, and the use of nitric lemonade (Bud.)
 * 1880, Macmillan and Co., Nature; Volume XXII, page #520:
 * When, finally, the hæmatopœtic function of the spleen has been completely compensated by the marrow of the bones, the quantity of hæmoglobin returns to the normal figure, and may even surpass it.
 * 1891 J. S. Prettyman, in Medical Record, William Wood & Company; Volume 39, №. 23, page #649:
 * Rheumatism, as it is generally regarded, is not properly a disease, it is but a symptom, the expression of a general condition that is manifest in several ways—in lesions of the vascular and hæmatopœtic systems, extending to every tissue and structure of the body.
 * 1894, Two Monographs on Malaria and the Parasites of Malarial Fevers; page #106:
 * Whether this difficulty in recovering depends alone on the fact that the states of anæmia induced by the summer amœba are more serious in kind than the others, and the lesions of the hæmatopœtic organs, which occur during the acute infection, deeper ; or whether, on the other hand, it must be attributed to the persistence of a condition of post‐infective poisoning, we cannot now decide.
 * 1896, editing by Edward P. Davis and Hector Mackenzie, The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Lea Brothers & Co.; Volume CXI, page #115:
 * Enlargement of the spleen was constant, phlegmasia alba, dry pericarditis, and pleurisy being frequent complications. These could hardly be explained by a simple disturbance of the hæmatopœtic function.
 * 1898, The Hahnemannian Monthly; Volume XXXIII, page #735:
 * We all know that iron acts on the blood, and that it acts as a hæmatopœtic remedy, for the old school has employed it for years here.
 * 1904, British Veterinary Journal, Baillière, Tindall, & Cox; Volume IX, page #10:
 * Pfeiffer¹ says that “  The bacterial immunising subjects have their origin in the bone marrow, spleen, and lymphatic glands—i.e., in the hæmatopœtic organs, and that they are neither modified bacterial substances nor combinations of bacterial products with the albuminoids of the organism, but complex molecules, making up a part of the organism and helping in the vital processes.