Medical Definition of Podagral
1. Relating to or characterised by podagra. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Podagral
Literary usage of Podagral
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Brides and Bridals by John Cordy Jeaffreson (1873)
"In all slighter assaults on a human body, the gout never ventured near the
ring-finger, which only experienced the podagral twinges when the malady had laid ..."
2. The Critical Review, Or, Annals of Literature by Tobias George Smollett (1779)
"... it never would have waited to be collected in fuch a quantity as to form a
fit of the podagral gout. ..."
3. The study of medicine by John Mason Good, Samuel Cooper (1829)
"... hard drinking, or protracted exposure to a tropical sun, and is labouring
under a long train of dyspeptic, hepatic, or podagral symptoms. ..."
4. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1899)
"The oliguria of an actively podagral state may as quickly be succeeded by copious
urination, just as the mental irritability of suppressed gout may suddenly ..."
5. The New annual register, or General repository of history, politics, and by Andrew Kippis (1807)
"... both in his own person and in others, be uniformly found the podagral paroxysms
pass off with comparative ease and brevity by the use of bleeding, ..."
6. A Treatise on Insanity in Its Medical Relations by William Alexander Hammond (1883)
"... podagral mania, and many others of the kind in this classification, for I do
not believe that the cause in such cases exercises any influence as a ..."
7. The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half-yearly edited by William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan (1851)
"In this case the podagral erysipelas has disappeared, and my patient is in better
health than he has had for several months. [Dr. CHARLES BELL, brother of ..."
8. Brides and Bridals by John Cordy Jeaffreson (1873)
"In all slighter assaults on a human body, the gout never ventured near the
ring-finger, which only experienced the podagral twinges when the malady had laid ..."
9. The Critical Review, Or, Annals of Literature by Tobias George Smollett (1779)
"... it never would have waited to be collected in fuch a quantity as to form a
fit of the podagral gout. ..."
10. The study of medicine by John Mason Good, Samuel Cooper (1829)
"... hard drinking, or protracted exposure to a tropical sun, and is labouring
under a long train of dyspeptic, hepatic, or podagral symptoms. ..."
11. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1899)
"The oliguria of an actively podagral state may as quickly be succeeded by copious
urination, just as the mental irritability of suppressed gout may suddenly ..."
12. The New annual register, or General repository of history, politics, and by Andrew Kippis (1807)
"... both in his own person and in others, be uniformly found the podagral paroxysms
pass off with comparative ease and brevity by the use of bleeding, ..."
13. A Treatise on Insanity in Its Medical Relations by William Alexander Hammond (1883)
"... podagral mania, and many others of the kind in this classification, for I do
not believe that the cause in such cases exercises any influence as a ..."
14. The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half-yearly edited by William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan (1851)
"In this case the podagral erysipelas has disappeared, and my patient is in better
health than he has had for several months. [Dr. CHARLES BELL, brother of ..."