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He was the only one who could make clinical thermometers.
I don't need any clinical thermometer to tell me how I feel!
A clinical thermometer is a thermometer used to measure body temperature.
He had a sheet of paper, a pencil, and a clinical thermometer upon the coverlet in front of him.
This was in contrast to the Army medical facilities, which between them had two clinical thermometers and one ophthalmoscope.
The first electronic clinical thermometer, invented in 1954, used a flexible probe that contained a Carboloy thermistor.
Have you a clinical thermometer, Fuji?"
Invention of a clinical thermometer by Thomas Clifford Allbutt.
However, mercury is a toxic heavy metal, and mercury has only been used in clinical thermometers if protected from breakage of the tube.
Sara's got a clinical thermometer up in her room--she used it for something or other when she was doing charity work in New York.
Practically the only tool of his profession that Dr. Reyd had salvaged was a clinical thermometer.
Clinical thermometer - Thomas Clifford Allbutt.
Clinical thermometers and many electronic thermometers are usually readable to 0.1 C. Special instruments can give readings to one thousandth of a degree.
To eliminate the risk of patient cross-infection, disposable probe covers and single-use clinical thermometers of all types are used in clinics and hospitals.
Medical supplies: forceps, a scapel set, gauze bandages, a clinical thermometer, a vial of alcohol, hypodermic syringes, and a hand saw.
The proposed directive will prohibit outright the placing on the market of clinical thermometers containing mercury, the reason being that alternatives to them have been available for some time.
Separations can usually be corrected by swinging the thermometer as is done to reset a mercury clinical thermometer; the centrifugal force forces the mercury together again.
The researchers conclude that "the current generation of electronic, digital clinical thermometers, in general, may not be sufficiently accurate or reliable to replace the traditional glass/mercury thermometers"
In 1866 Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt invented a clinical thermometer that produced a body temperature reading in five minutes as opposed to twenty.
In daily life, it can be found as the entrance optic in the new range of "in-ear" clinical thermometers and can be just seen as a small yellow window.
Albutt, a vicar's son from Yorkshire, invented the short clinical thermometer and ophthalmoscope and published his influential eight-volume System of Medicine between 1896 and 1899.
In September 1921 Kitasato founded, together with several medical scientists, the Sekisen Ken-onki Corporation with the intention of manufacturing the most reliable clinical thermometer possible.
Hill's work on blood pressure led him to believe "the arterial pressure can be taken in man as rapidly, simply, and accurately as the temperature can be taken with the clinical thermometer".
'Uh--uh--afraid our guests will be staying . . .' Fred's brow was sopping; he wished that he could again try Sara's clinical thermometer.
Though originally designed for the other end of the alimentary canal, it was ideal for my purposes; it was virtually unbreakable and gave accurate readings in half the time of an ordinary clinical thermometer.