1. Traditional Chinese acupuncture: a potentially useful antiemetic?;Dundee, J.W.; Chestnutt, W.N.; Ghaly, R.G.; Lynas, A.G.A.,1986
2. Failure of acupuncture to influence postoperative emesis in outpatients. IrJ';Milligan, K.R.; McKay, A.C.; Dundee, J.W.;Med Sci
3. November 1900 and signed by his attending physicians, Dr Paul Claisse and Dr A'Court Tucker, stated clearly that their patient had a meningoencephalitis due to a chronic suppuration of the right ear; there was no mention of any underlying luetic process. Wilde's symptoms comprised unilateral deafness dating from his imprisonment, fever, and intense headache, which required repeated opiates and local applications of leeches and icepacks. We are not told whether or not the deafness was progressive or whether it was accompanied by otorrhoea. Intractable headache does not suggest syphilis but favours a septic infection. The late Sir Terence Cawthorne was of the firm opinion that Wilde's death was the outcome of an intracranial complication of otitis media.23
4. The last illness;Cawthorne, T.
5. A medical appreciation;Wilde, Critchley M.Oscar;Med Hist,1959