Citations:hæmatorrhœa

Noun: optional form of

 * 1830, William Harty, in Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal; Volume 34, Article II, page #60:
 * Hæmatorrhœa has altogether ceased ; the ecchymoses have almost disappeared, as well as the maculæ on the tongue and fauces ; those on the body are little altered in number or colour ; the pulse 120, and stronger ; no languor or complaint of any kind.
 * 1863, Daniel Brainard, in The Chicago Medical Journal; Volume VI, page #128:
 * Epistaxis, hæmatorrhœa, hæmatemesis, and hæmaturia are occasionally present to a dangerous extent.
 * 1865, The Hahnemannian Monthly; Volume I, №. 5, page #210:
 * Behold then the picture — it is of a woman. Her face is read and hot ; she has violent pain in the back and abdomen, and she has hæmatorrhœa,— partly of black clotted, and partly of thin, pale blood.
 * 1895, L. E. Russell, in Eclectic Medical Journal, John M. Scudder’s Sons; Volume LV, page #264:
 * She had been medicated with all the well‐known remedies for hæmatorrhœa without any perceptible change for the better.