¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Neuritides
1. neuritis [n] - See also: neuritis
Lexicographical Neighbors of Neuritides
Literary usage of Neuritides
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Textbook of Nervous Diseases for Students and Practicing Physicians: In by Robert Bing, Charles Lewis Allen (1921)
"THE DIFFERENT CLINICAL FORMS The neuritides may be grouped according to different
principles ; for example: 1, according to their course into acute, ..."
2. The Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Diseases by William Alanson White, Smith Ely Jelliffe (1913)
"the possibility of accurate recognition, it probably does not at present permit
of a place in any therapeutic consideration of the neuritides. ..."
3. A Text-book of medicine for students and practitioners by Adolf von Strümpell (1901)
"These are the special " toxic neuritides," in the strict sense of the word, ...
Besides these neuritides, directly of toxic origin in the strict sense of ..."
4. The Treatment of Syphilis with Salvarsan by Wilhelm Wechselmann (1911)
"It is not improbable that the incomplete healing of such syphilitic neuritides
may lead to subsequent processes of degeneration in the optic nerve. ..."
5. Alienist and Neurologist (1887)
"... neuritis and the post febrile neuritides in general are not considered. ...
neuritides, had likewise to be omitted, unless we had been prepared to write ..."
6. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1906)
"Combining the peripheral neuralgias, neuritides, ... The line of separation
between neuralgias and neuritides is difficult to draw. As in previous years, ..."
7. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1913)
"... unilateral and confined to the territory of the crural nerve, and is, I believe,
the only observation of its kind among the alcoholic neuritides. ..."