Citations:hæmorrhagiæ

Noun: plural of

 * 1834, George Hume Weatherhead, A new Synopsis of Nosology, page #59:
 * In the hæmorrhagiæ the efflux of blood is occasioned by the diathetic tonic action of the capillary arteries, producing sanguineous exhalation ; whereas, in the hæmorrhœæ, the sanguineous flux ensues from the engorgement of the capillary veins, produced by their inability to forward their contents.
 * 1836, Anthony Todd Thomson, The London Dispensatory, part II., page #491:
 * In the hæmorrhagiæ it is useful when the discharge arises chiefly from an increased degree of irritability, and where the pulse, instead of being strong and full, is small, quick, and intermitting.
 * 1841, James Johnson and Henry James Johnson, The Medico‐Chirurgical Review, S. Highley; Volume XIV., page #54:
 * Most readers will be surprised to observe that the pyrexiæ are postponed to the hæmorrhagiæ, and to the phlegmasiæ — rather a strange fancy ; seeing that fever is a necessary accompaniment of all the phlegmasiæ, and also of all active hæmorrhages.
 * 1884, A. Smith quoted in Midland Medical Miscellany and Provincial Medical Journal, J. Richardson & Co.; Volume III., page #191:
 * […](3) the symptoms by which gout is manifested are those of inflammation of the neuroses, of the hæmorrhagiæ, exhibiting the greatest variety of phenomena, which may exist separately, successively, or alternatively, according to the intensity of the malady, its regularity or irregularity, the strength of predisposition, and various other circumstances by which the patient is surrounded ; hence the diagnosis of gout in its anomalous forms is often extremely difficult[…]