1 result for (book:tps7 AND heading:"delet session may 22 1982" AND stemmed:but)
Displaying only most relevant fragments—original results reproduced too much of the copyrighted work.
(Dr K., being still concerned about Jane’s finger—which had improved somewhat, but was still markedly bluish in cast—decided to prescribe a drug to dilute the clotting ability of blood somewhat: Persantine, in tiny pill-like form, to be taken three times a day. [...] This at once set up barriers in our thinking, but especially in Jane’s. Jane had also learned that everyone at the hospital was against her smoking, and had been told that nicotine helped restrict the blood flow in the tiny capillaries. [...] When Jane said that Dr. K had said her lungs were okay while she was at the Arnot, Dr K. defended that analysis by reminding Jane that she’d said her heart was good, but that through the stethoscope she’d heard various “wheezings and gurglings” in Jane’s lungs. [...]
(As of now her finger is maintaining its somewhat improved look, but it’s obviously not cleared up. The blueness seems to vary in intensity, but never leaves entirely. [...] I suggested to Jane that she cut her cigarette consumption in half, but she refused, even if this would be a form of natural therapy.
[...] She’d been out of her office, but returned my call to her nurse almost at once. [...] She’d suspected vasculitis when Jane had been first admitted to Arnot Ogden early in February, but tests had ruled it out. [...]
[...] We noticed increased redness, also, around the nails of the other fingers on the left hand, but that situation had prevailed to varying degrees for a long time.
[...] I’d called the Bumbalos, our neighbors across the street, for help, but they were away. [...]
(I made only one false turn driving to the emergency room at St. Joe’s, since we’d never been there before, but found the entrance easily. [...]
[...] I placed the cold film holder under Jane’s back as she lay propped up on the mattress, but the whole task went quickly. [...]
[...] Visitors were supposed to leave by 9 PM, but I stayed until 10:30: I was groggy by that time.
[...] We’ve learned that Dr. K. is an extremely conscientious person, but our way of thinking is quite outside of hers. [...]
[...] I asked for the graph, but Dr. K needed it for reference and record. [...]