A CASE OF DIDELPHIC UTERUS WITH LATERAL HEMATOCOLPOS, HEMATOMETRA AND HEMATOSALPINX, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE TREATMENT OF THESE CONDITIONS.Read in the Section on Obstetrics and Diseases of Women, at the Forty-fifth Annnal Meeting of the American Medical Association, held at San Francisco, June 5-8, 1894.
(JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, vX...)
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, vXXIII n6 (18940811): 234
Appendicitis Complicating Ovarian Cyst and Simulating Torsion of the Pedicle, with Three Cases
(Chicago: : American Medical Association Press., 1898
JAM...)
Chicago: : American Medical Association Press., 1898
JAMA. 1898;XXX(1):28-29. doi:10.1001/jama.1898.72440530028002k
American Medical Association Press
Description 4 pages ; 19 cm.
Note Cover title.
"Reprinted from The Journal of the American Medical Association, January 1, 1898".
"Presented in the Section on Obstetrics and Diseases of Women at the firty-eighth annual meeting of the American Medical Association at Philadelphia, Pa., June 1-4, 1897".
Bound in printed blue paper covers.
Source of Acquisition Gift of The Longo Family Trust, Lawrence D. and Betty Jeanne Longo, Trustees, 2015.
Huntington Copy Lawrence D. Longo and Betty Jeanne Longo Collection in Reproductive Biology.
Housed in a folder; in box 651087-651125.
Subject Appendicitis -- Case studies.
Ovaries -- Cysts -- Complications -- Case studies.
Alt Author: Longo, Lawrence D.
Former owner Longo, Betty Jeanne, former owner
Corp Author American Medical Association, publisher.
Add. Title Journal of the American Medical Association.
Place United States Illinois Chicago.
Related To Forms part of: Lawrence D. Longo and Betty Jeanne Longo Collection in Reproductive Biology
Bib Utility # on1059518667
ADVANCED ECTOPIC GESTATION WITH LIVING CHILD WITH REPORT OF THREE CASES Dr XO WERDER of Pittsburgh read a paper with this title in which he said that all these cases began as tubal pregnancy The time of rupture could be estimated from the history of every case In the first case it occurred at about the end of the second month in the second case it apparently occurred unusually late about the middle of the fourth month and in the third case severe cramps about six weeks after the last menstrual period indicated that rupture took place at that time although the complication with normal pregnancy and a subsequent abortion caused the symptoms to be rather mixed and consequently less definite than in the previous cases In none of the cases was the diagnosis attended with great difficulty In the advanced form of extrauterine pregnancy the only other conditon with which it might be confounded was normal uterine pregnancy Mistakes in diagnosis were less likely to occur than in the earlier forms of ectopic gestation although even the latter cases were not usually difficult to recognize
(74 Ectopic Gestation, Case I. (X. O. Werder.)
127 Ectopi...)
74 Ectopic Gestation, Case I. (X. O. Werder.)
127 Ectopic Gestation, Case II. (X. O. Werder.)
129 Ectopic Gestation, Case III. (X. O. Werder.)
Dr. Xavier Oswald Werder, Swiss doctor. Fellow American College Surgeons, American Medical Association. Member of Allegheny County Medical Society, the Pittsburgh Obstetrical Society, the South Side Medical Society, the American Medical Association, and the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. One of the founders of the Pittsburgh Medical Review.
Background
A Pittsburgh physician of high reputation was born in Cham, Switzerland, December 4, 1857, son of Oswald and Barbara (Felder) Werder, both of whom were also natives of Switzerland. Of his parents' four children Joseph and Marie also survive.
Education
Werder was educated partly in his native land and partly in this country, to which he came in 1873, at the age of sixteen. He prepared for the medical profession in a university of New York City, from which he was graduated in 1879. Soon after he engaged in general practice here in Pittsburgh. Later on, he went to Europe, and spent two years in special study, attending courses of lectures in Berlin, Vienna, London, and Munich.
Career
In 1889, having returned to his practice in Pittsburgh, he opened an office on Penn Avenue as a specialist in the diseases of women and abdominal surgery. He is now professor of the diseases of women in the West Pennsylvania Medical College, medical department of the Western University of Pennsylvania; consulting a gynecologist at the Allegheny General Hospital and St. Francis Hospital; gynecologist to Mercy Hospital; obstetrician to Roselia Maternity Hospital; and consulting surgeon to S. S. Hospital. He is a member of Allegheny County Medical Society, the Pittsburgh Obstetrical Society, the S. S. Medical Society, the American Medical Association, and the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, of which he has been the treasurer since 1889. He was one of the founders of the Pittsburgh Medical Review, and few are oftener quoted by their fellows in the profession than he.
Dr. Werder was married October 20, 1885, to Tillie C. Vogel, daughter of Joseph Vogel, a retired dry-goods merchant and a director of the German National Bank of this city. Eight children have blessed the union; namely, Marie, Hermann, Oswald, Coletta, Marguerite, Girard, Raymond, and Vincent. Dr. Werder is a Catholic in religious faith. In politics, he is a "sound money" man, although he usually votes the Democratic ticket.