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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60419 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60419)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Treatise on Fever, by Thomas Southwood-Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: A Treatise on Fever
-
-Author: Thomas Southwood-Smith
-
-Release Date: October 4, 2019 [EBook #60419]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TREATISE ON FEVER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Chris Curnow, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A
- TREATISE ON FEVER.
-
-
- BY
-
- SOUTHWOOD SMITH, M.D.
-
- PHYSICIAN TO THE LONDON FEVER HOSPITAL.
-
-
- LONDON:
-
- LONGMAN, REES, ORME, BROWN, AND GREEN,
- PATER-NOSTER ROW.
-
- 1830.
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY G. HAYDEN,
- Little College Street, Westminster.
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- HIS GRACE
- THE DUKE OF SOMERSET,
- PRESIDENT;
-
- TO
- THE VICE-PRESIDENTS,
-
- TO
- THE TREASURERS,
-
- AND TO THE
- OTHER GENTLEMEN CONSTITUTING THE COMMITTEE,
-
- Of the London Fever Hospital;
-
- IN TESTIMONY
-
- OF HIS ADMIRATION OF THE DILIGENCE
- WITH WHICH
- THEY LABOUR TO PROMOTE THE PROSPERITY,
- AND THE
- CARE WITH WHICH THEY WATCH OVER THE INTERESTS OF THIS INSTITUTION;
-
- WHICH,
- IN THE MAGNITUDE OF THE BENEFITS IT CONFERS,
- NO LESS THAN
- IN THE INEXPENSIVENESS OF THE MEANS
- BY WHICH,
- THROUGH THEIR ECONOMY, IT IS ENABLED TO SECURE THEM,
-
- IS EQUALLED BY FEW ESTABLISHMENTS,
-
- AND
- SURPASSED BY NONE;
-
- THIS WORK IS INSCRIBED
-
- BY
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-The following Work is wholly of a practical nature: its object is to
-ascertain the real phenomena of Fever, and the most safe and effectual
-treatment of the disease. It was found impossible to include in this
-volume some researches of a statistical nature which it was at first
-intended to incorporate in the work.
-
-On looking over the account which has been given of the phenomena, I
-find that, by an oversight, I have omitted to make any mention of the
-peculiar odour which belongs to a fever-patient. It is so characteristic
-that a person, familiar with the disease, might in many cases be able to
-pronounce, merely from the odour of the effluvia that arises from the
-body, whether the disease were fever.
-
-I cannot allow this work to go forth to the world, without expressing my
-obligation to Dr. DILL, for the great assistance he has afforded me in
-the collection and arrangement of the cases which illustrate the
-symptoms and the pathology, and in the construction of the tables. And I
-am happy to avail myself of this occasion to bear my testimony to the
-excellent history which is drawn up of every case admitted into the
-house; to the completeness of the record which is kept of the morbid
-appearances on inspection; to the care which is taken of the sick, in
-the absence of the physicians; and to the able and zealous manner in
-which, as the resident medical officer of the Fever Hospital, he
-performs the arduous duties of his office.
-
- _S. S._
-
- _36, New Broad Street
- Dec. 1829._
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- Page.
- DEDICATION i.
-
- PREFACE iii.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Further Investigation of Fever necessary 1
-
- Facilities afforded by the Fever Hospital for prosecuting the
- Study 5
-
- Antient Doctrines relative to the Nature and Seat of Fever 7
-
- Hippocrates, Galen, Sydenham 8
-
- Modern Doctrines relative to the Nature and Seat of Fever 13
-
- Cullen, Brown, Stoker, Burne, Clanny, Clutterbuck, Broussais 14
-
- Errors common to all these Theorists 30
-
- Questions to be solved before Fever can be understood 33
-
- Precise Object of Investigation 34
-
- Proper Mode of conducting it 36
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Varieties of Fever 41
-
- Common Phenomena 42
-
- Importance of analyzing the Assemblage of the Symptoms, in order
- to ascertain the Common Phenomena 43
-
- Results of the Analysis 45
-
- Organs always diseased in Fever 48
-
- Functions always deranged in Fever 49
-
- Fever not Inflammation 50
-
- Distinction between Fever and Inflammation 52
-
- Common Phenomena of Fever exemplified in Plague 53
- in Yellow Fever, 54
- in the Varieties of Fever of Great Britain 54
-
- Different Varieties produced by different Intensities 58
-
- Received Classification and Nomenclature defective 60
-
- What is really meant by Genera and Species of Fever 70
-
- True Principle of Arrangement 71
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Of Synochus 77
-
- Division into Synochus Mitior and Gravior 77
-
- Succession of Phenomena in Synochus Mitior 78
-
- Indications afforded of Disease in the Nervous, Circulating,
- Secreting, and Excreting Systems 81
-
- Progress of Disease consists in progressive Increase in the
- Derangement of these Functions 85
-
- Phenomena of Recovery 91
-
- On what the Transition of Synochus Mitior into Synochus Gravior
- depends 93
-
- Classification according to the different Organs in which the
- several Affections have their Seat 95
-
- Synochus Gravior with Cerebral Affection 96
- Subacute Cerebral Affection 96
- Acute Cerebral Affection 107
-
- Cases illustrating Synochus Mitior 112
-
- Cases illustrating Synochus Gravior with Subacute Cerebral
- Affection 114
-
- Cases illustrating Synochus Gravior with Acute Cerebral Affection 116
-
- Synochus Gravior with Thoracic Affection 120
-
- Cases illustrating Thoracic Affection 123
-
- Synochus Gravior with Abdominal Affection 128
-
- Cases illustrating Abdominal Affection 137
-
- Synochus Gravior with Mixed Affection 142
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Of Typhus 148
-
- Division into Typhus Mitior and Gravior 149
-
- Typhus Mitior, with Subacute Cerebral Affection 149
-
- Cases illustrating Subacute Cerebral Affection 155
-
- Typhus Mitior, with Thoracic Affection 157
-
- Typhus Mitior, Cases illustrating Affection 159
- With Abdominal Affection 161
- With Mixed Affection 162
-
- Typhus Gravior 162
- In what it really consists 162
-
- Dangerous nature of the Error that it consists in Debility 164
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Of Scarlatina 168
-
- Characters by which it is distinguished from Continued Fever
- without an Eruption 168
-
- Division into Scarlatina Synochodes 171
- Typhodes 172
-
- Events which occasionally occur in Fever, but which form no
- essential part of it 173
-
- Preternatural Sensibility over the external Surface of the Body;
- Excoration and Sloughing; Erysipelas; Inflammation, &c. of the
- Glands; peculiar Affection of the Joints 173
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Of the Pathology of Fever 176
-
- Importance of connecting the Symptoms with the States of the
- Organs 176
-
- Pathology of Fever comprehends the Morbid Changes that take place
- in the Solids and Fluids of the Body 178
-
- I. GENERAL PATHOLOGY OF THE SOLIDS 179
-
- External Appearances of the Body after Death 180
-
- Morbid Appearances in the Head 181
- in the Thorax 184
- in the Abdomen 187
-
- I. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within
- the Head, or Cerebral Cases 193
-
- 1. Vascularity of Brain, Spinal Cord, and
- Membranes, with Gelatinous or slight
- Serous Effusion 193
-
- 2. Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &c.
- with Effusion of Coagulable Lymph and
- Formation of Pus 204
-
- 3. Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &c.
- with copious Serous Effusion 210
-
- 4. Vascularity, &c. with Preternatural
- Firmness of Brain 218
-
- 5. Vascularity, &c. with softening of Brain 224
-
- General Results established by preceding
- Cases 230
-
- II. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within
- the Chest, or Thoracic Cases 235
-
- III. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place
- within the Abdomen; or Abdominal Cases 246
-
- General Results established by preceding Cases 287
-
- IV. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within
- the Head, Thorax, and Abdomen, in the same individual, or Mixed
- Cases 291
-
- General Conclusion 322
-
- II. PATHOLOGY OF THE FLUIDS IN FEVER 328
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Of the Relation between the Phenomena of Fever; or the Theory of
- the Disease 333
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Of the Causes of Fever 348
-
- 1. Of the Immediate, or Exciting Cause of
- Fever 348
-
- 2. Of the Remote or Predisposing Causes of
- Fever 369
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Of the Treatment of Fever 375
-
- Modification of Treatment required in prominent Cerebral
- Affection 398
-
- Thoracic Affection 403
-
- Abdominal Affection 405
-
- Treatment of Scarlet Fever 408
-
- Treatment during Convalescence 418
-
- Appendix 425
-
-
-
-
- FEVER, &c.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- _Further Investigation of Fever necessary: Facilities afforded by the
- Fever Hospital for prosecuting the Study. Ancient Doctrines relative
- to the Nature and Seat of Fever. Hippocrates, Galen, Sydenham.
- Modern Doctrines. Cullen, Brown, Stoker, Burne, Clanny, Clutterbuck,
- Broussais. Errors common to all these Theorists. Questions to be
- solved before Fever can be understood. Precise Object of
- Investigation: proper mode of conducting it._
-
-
-On my appointment to the office of Physician to the London Fever
-Hospital, it was stated to me by the treasurer that, among the objects
-contemplated by the establishment of this institution, two things were
-conceived to be of paramount importance: first, the accumulation of
-facts by which the true nature of fever might be more certainly
-ascertained, and secondly the cautious trial of remedies by which a more
-sure and successful mode of treating this fatal disease might be
-discovered. During my connexion with this hospital I have faithfully
-endeavoured to the utmost of my ability to keep these objects in view,
-and I now venture to lay before the public the result of my
-observations, in the hope that they may contribute something, however
-little, to the stock of knowledge already accumulated.
-
-When we consider how many circumstances connected with the origin and
-the propagation of fever are wholly unknown, which if known might have a
-most important influence in preventing its occurrence, in arresting its
-progress or in lessening its mortality; when we consider in what
-profound obscurity the very nature of the agents that produce it is
-still involved; when we consider how easy it is to swell the long
-catalogue of its symptoms, but how difficult it is to discriminate
-which, even among the most prominent of the train, are the essential and
-which the adventitious, and how still more difficult it is to ascertain
-which are the invariable antecedents and which the invariable sequents,
-or which the causes and which the effects; when we consider how few
-comparatively of the external appearances have been ascertained to be
-the sure and certain signs of any known condition of the internal
-organs, and how often the existence of several known conditions of the
-organs remains altogether unsuspected until the demonstration of it is
-afforded by inspection after death, and when finally on all these
-accounts we consider how vague the objects must be that are aimed at in
-the treatment, and consequently how uncertain, how indiscriminate, how
-fruitlessly inert, how perniciously active, how unsuccessful, how fatal
-that treatment often is, it must be admitted that fever still presents
-to us a vast field, in the culture of which the difficulties to be
-overcome are not slight, and the most diligent labour that can be
-bestowed upon it may by no means be attended with a sure reward.
-
-Of many branches of science it is truly observed that much time and
-labour are necessary to establish a single important fact; of some parts
-of medical science this is eminently the case, but perhaps of none is
-the observation so just as of that which relates to febrile diseases. It
-is remarkable how entirely the most distinguished physicians of all ages
-who have treated of this subject coincide in the feeling, that with
-regard to this important class of disease it is impossible in the short
-life allotted to the most aged to do any thing more than add a little
-knowledge to the common stock. If there be any foundation for this
-feeling it can only be by every man faithfully endeavouring to
-contribute what he may be able, be the amount ever so small, that that
-stock can speedily become large or ever become complete.
-
-In bringing to this common stock my humble mite, that the offering may
-not be wholly worthless, I have confined myself as much as possible to
-the detail of the facts that have been observed, and the statement of
-the results that have been obtained from experience. By giving a
-connected view of the phenomena I have hoped that I might possibly
-assist the actual practitioner to form a more adequate conception of the
-disease and guide him to that particular remedy which experience shews
-to be best adapted to each of the more important affections he is likely
-to encounter. Out of the means furnished for the accomplishment of these
-objects by the receptacle of fever for this great metropolis I have
-endeavoured to select such specimens of the disease as will place before
-him a vivid and faithful picture of the most interesting aspects it
-assumes, and such a detail of treatment as will shew what particular
-remedies afford the best chance of success in each type and stage, and
-in the most common and therefore the most important modifications they
-present. If I have at all succeeded in my aim he will find himself
-placed in a good measure in the same situation with myself; his
-attention will be directed to the same phenomena in the order in which
-they occur in the series, and hence he will have the like means of
-judging of the relations which these phenomena bear to each other, as
-well as of the accuracy of the analysis that has been attempted of the
-more complicated, and the soundness of the inductions that have been
-made from a comparison of the whole.
-
-The London Fever Hospital is capable of receiving sixty-two patients: in
-most seasons of the year its wards are full: often there are numerous
-applications for admission which cannot be received for want of room:
-there pass through the wards from six to seven hundred patients
-annually. Two physicians are attached to the institution under whose
-care the patients are placed alternately in the order in which they are
-admitted: there is one assistant physician whose duty it is to perform
-the office of the ordinary physicians when either of these may be
-incapable of attending, and there is besides a medical officer resident
-in the house. A history of each case, containing an account of the age,
-occupation and residence of the patient, together with as full a
-statement of the symptoms of the disease and of the order of their
-succession as can be obtained is entered in the journal by the resident
-medical officer. Each of the ordinary physicians attends daily and
-enters in his journal a daily report of each of his own cases. The
-resident medical officer goes round the wards twice a day, namely, early
-in the morning and late in the evening, to observe if any change
-requiring attention may have taken place in any patient; and if any such
-change be observed by the nurses during the interval between these
-visits they are reported to him by the head nurse without delay; all
-such events with the modification of treatment they may have required
-are entered in the journals. Every case that terminates fatally is
-examined after death, and an account of the morbid appearances is
-entered in a book kept for the purpose. In this manner, in the progress
-of years a mass of facts accumulates relating to the statistics, the
-types, the symptoms, the causes, the diagnosis, the pathology and the
-treatment of the disease, whether successful or unsuccessful, which both
-on account of the fullness and accuracy of the record and of the extent
-of the period it embraces, cannot but be of great value.
-
-I am encouraged in the attempt to make this record, as far as it has yet
-gone, useful to the public by observing the feeling that prevails among
-those physicians who have studied fever with the greatest diligence, and
-who have contributed most to our knowledge of it, that it is a disease
-which is still little understood and the treatment of which remains
-extremely vague and uncertain. Perhaps there is no disease so little
-understood as the ordinary fever of this country and none by the
-mismanagement of which so much life is lost. Dr. Clutterbuck appears to
-me therefore to describe the situation of the physician to such an
-establishment as the Fever Hospital, not more candidly than truly when
-he says—“It becomes a duty incumbent on those particularly who have been
-placed in situations favourable for observing the disease, to give the
-result of their experience to the public, should it tend, in any degree,
-either to prevention or cure. The enquiry is by no means exhausted,
-considered either in a theoretical or practical point of view. There is
-still a want of uniformity of opinion among physicians regarding the
-nature of the present epidemic, as well as of fever in general: while, I
-am sorry to add, in practice we are not much better agreed;” and when he
-further adds;—“To ascertain these modifications” (that is the
-modifications which require a modification of treatment) “is the great
-desideratum, which nothing but the most cautious observation, aided by
-much time, and the joint efforts of numerous individuals, can fully
-supply.”[1]
-
-The slightest glance at the history of the doctrines which have been
-taught relative to the nature and the seat of fever from remote
-antiquity, and more especially a consideration of the variety and even
-the contrariety of the received opinions respecting both, in the present
-day, but too clearly shew that if the ancients were in error, there
-cannot be many points with regard to which the moderns are right, since
-there is scarcely one in which they are agreed. Further observation and
-investigation are therefore not yet superseded. There is as yet no
-uniformity of opinion among physicians even whether the primary seat of
-the disease be in the fluid or the solid parts of which the body is
-composed. Scarcely is the most ancient doctrine respecting it of which
-we have any record, that it consists in a morbid derangement of the
-fluids, and that the excitement which attends it is the result of an
-effort of Nature to expel the poison received into or generated within
-the system, obliterated from the imaginations or banished from the
-reasonings of physicians. When indeed we see a patient in the latter
-stage of some of the forms of fever with his dark or leaden skin,
-pouring forth its peculiar and fetid exhalation; with his foul tongue,
-his offensive breath, his vitiated and almost putrid secretions and
-excretions, we can understand why this doctrine should have taken a firm
-hold of the human mind and should have been able to maintain its ground
-through many centuries. Yet when the phenomena came to be observed with
-the accuracy with which we know that they were observed and recorded,
-and examined with the acuteness with which we have abundant evidence
-that some of the most powerful minds reasoned upon them, we may justly
-wonder that the order of the events, together with their great variety
-and opposite nature did not sooner suggest doubts of the accuracy of the
-theory and give to the inquiries of these celebrated men a new
-direction. But so far was this from being the case that when
-Hippocrates, considering the increased heat as the essence of fever,
-founded his division of the varieties of the disease upon this
-principle, whence his _causus_ or burning fever, his _leipyria_, or
-fever with the parts externally cold and internally hot, and his
-_epialus_, or mild fever, with a simultaneous feeling of heat and cold;
-when he ascribed these different forms of fever to the superabundance of
-one or other of the four humours, blood, phlegm, yellow and black bile,
-and considered the disease as the result of a contest on the part of
-Nature to expel the morbid humour, or to render it inert or harmless by
-the process of concoction, the mind of Galen so many centuries
-afterwards, was so well satisfied with this hypothesis, that his
-powerful genius contented itself with the mere amplification of the
-conjecture and the addition of similar conjectures of his own. Whence
-assigning the different sources by which a morbid heat, which he also
-considers as the essence of fever, may be excited in the body, he states
-“that the fevers thus produced are modified by the prevalence or
-putrefaction of one or other of the four humours of Hippocrates; that of
-the three kinds of intermittent the quotidian arises from the corruption
-of phlegm, the tertian from that of the yellow and the quartan from that
-of the black bile; that in whatever part of the body the heat begins it
-ultimately extends to the heart; that as soon as this happens the
-general commotion of the vessels commences, and that in this manner
-Nature is employed in exerting her powers, endeavouring to assimilate
-the good humours to the parts which are to be nourished and to expel the
-bad, but that if at any time Nature is unable to expel all the morbid
-humour either from its thickness, its abundance or its tenacity, or from
-some obstruction of the passages, or from her own want of power, it will
-necessarily undergo putrefaction, if it remain long in the body, and
-produce the most fatal effects unless it be expelled by the process of
-concoction.” And so many centuries after Galen wrote, Sydenham who
-brought to the study of medicine one of the most acute, upright and
-independent minds that ever adorned it, commences a work on fever, which
-for fidelity of observation, for graphic description, for accurate
-discrimination, for bold and yet cautious treatment, has been justly
-considered an almost perfect model, with the following extraordinary
-assumptions:—
-
-“That reason dictates that a disease is nothing else than Nature’s
-endeavour to thrust forth with all her might the morbific matter for the
-health of the patient; that seeing it has pleased God, the Governour of
-all things, so to constitute human nature that it may be fitted to
-receive the various impressions that come from abroad, it must
-necessarily be subject to many diseases; that these diseases proceed
-partly from particles of air ill agreeing with the body, which having
-once insinuated themselves into it, are mixed with the blood, and affect
-the whole with a morbific contagion; and partly from various ferments or
-putrefaction of humours which are detained in the body beyond due time,
-either because it was not able to digest them, on account of the
-incongruity of their quality, or to evacuate them on account of their
-bulk; that these circumstances being so nearly joined to the human
-essence that no man can clearly free himself from them, Nature provided
-for herself such a method and concatenation of symptoms as that she
-might thereby expel the peccant matter, which would otherwise ruin the
-whole fabric; that the plague, for instance, is nothing but a
-complication of symptoms by which Nature casts out the malignant
-particles, by imposthumes in the emunctories, or by some other
-eruptions, that were drawn in by the air; that the gout is nothing but
-Nature’s contrivance to purify the blood of old men, and to purge the
-deep parts of the body; that when Nature requires the help of a fever,
-whereby she may be able to separate the vitiated particles from the
-blood, or otherwise expel them, either by a sweat, a looseness, or some
-kind of eruption, she accomplishes this object in the whole mass of
-blood, and that by a violent motion of the parts; that when this object
-is accomplished suddenly, either by the health or death of the patient,
-the disease is acute; when, on the contrary, the matter of the disease
-is of such a nature that it cannot have the assistance of a fever for
-the separation of it; or when this kind of matter is fixed to any
-particular part, which is unable to exclude it, or when the blood is
-vitiated by the continual flow of new matter into it, in these cases,
-the matter being very slowly or not at all concocted, the diseases which
-proceed from such unconcocted matter are called chronic: that acute
-diseases proceed from a secret and inexplicable alteration of the air
-infecting men’s bodies; that these diseases do not at all depend on a
-peculiar crasis of the blood and humours any otherwise than the occult
-influence of the air has imprinted the same upon them; that they
-continue as long as this secret constitution of the air and no longer;
-that they do not come at any other time; and that these constitute
-epidemic fevers; that, on the other hand, acute diseases arise from this
-or that particular irregularity of particular bodies, which, because
-they are not produced by a general cause, do not therefore invade many
-at once; that this species comes every year, and at any time of the
-year; and that these may be called intercurrent or sporadic, because
-they happen at any time during the prevalence of epidemics.[2]”
-
-That conjectures so gratuitous, and so utterly incompatible with the
-structure and functions of the animal frame, should at such distant
-periods of the world, under such different conditions of society, and in
-such different states of science so entirely possess and satisfy the
-minds of three of the most extraordinary men that ever illustrated or
-extended any department of science, will appear the less wonderful when
-we consider that the doctrines relative to fever which displaced and
-succeeded these, originated in precisely the same error, and vary in
-their aspect only in conformity to the progressive advancement of
-general science. When the structure of the animal body became more
-generally studied; when the functions performed by its different organs
-became better understood; when the morbid actions constituting or
-resulting from the derangement of these functions became more closely
-investigated, the influence of the nervous system and the effects of
-vascular action, began to form the subjects of investigation, and from
-this period the attention of physicians was fixed less upon the fluid
-than the solid parts of the frame. The properties and motions of the
-fluids were now clearly seen to be dependent upon the action of the
-containing solids, and the action of the solids to be under the
-influence and control of certain laws peculiar to life. Disease, studied
-under this juster view of the animal economy, immediately assumed a new
-aspect, and theories arose so much more consonant to the known
-operations of the living body, so much more explicit in their language
-and intelligible in their nature, that the ancient doctrines were at
-once exploded, and the very terms in which they were expressed became
-suddenly, though, as it now appears, only for a short time obsolete.
-
-Cullen, building upon the foundation laid by Hoffman, rivalling in the
-number of his pupils, and exceeding in the brilliancy of his success, if
-not in the perpetuity of his fame, any name of antiquity, achieved with
-unexampled ease and suddenness this great revolution; and in opposition
-to the ancient theories taught, that the first change induced in the
-animal system, by the operation of the exciting causes of fever, is a
-diminution of the energy of the brain; that all the powers of the body
-and all the faculties of the mind, that the functions of sensation and
-motion, the processes of respiration, circulation, and secretion, all
-fail or are diminished in the general debility; that after a certain
-time a morbid increase of some of these functions, especially of the
-circulation, takes place with an augmentation of the heat; that these
-three states, that of debility, of cold, and of heat, bear to each other
-the relation of cause and effect; that the first state is the result of
-the sedative or debilitating influence of contagion, marsh miasmata,
-cold or any other exciting cause, and the subsequent states the result
-of the first; that the debility produces all the phenomena of the cold
-stage, and especially a spasmodic constriction of the extreme arterial
-vessels; that this spasm or atony of the extreme vessels exists not only
-on the first attack of the cold stage, but remains during the whole
-subsequent course of fever; that the spasm of the extreme vessels throws
-a load of blood on the central parts of the circulating system, which
-proves a source of irritation to the heart and arteries, and excites
-them to a greater action; that this increased action, the source of the
-heat and the other phenomena which constitute the second or hot stage
-continues till the spasm is relaxed or overcome; and that this
-excitement of spasm for the purpose of producing the subsequent reaction
-is a part of the operation of the _vis medicatrix naturæ_, the innate
-preserving power of the constitution. “Upon the whole,” says this
-celebrated theorist, “our doctrine of fever is explicitly this. The
-remote causes are certain sedative powers applied to the nervous system,
-which, diminishing the energy of the brain, thereby produce a debility
-in the whole of the functions, and particularly in the action of the
-extreme vessels. Such, however, is at the same time the nature of the
-animal economy, that this debility proves an indirect stimulus to the
-sanguiferous system; whence, by the intervention of the cold stage, and
-spasm connected with it, the action of the heart and large arteries is
-increased, and continues so till it has had the effect of restoring the
-energy of the brain, of extending this energy to the extreme vessels, of
-restoring therefore their action, and thereby especially removing the
-spasm affecting them: upon the removing of which, the excretion of
-sweat, and other marks of the relaxation of excretories take place.”[3]
-
-Whatever may be thought of the superior power of the theory of Brown,
-the pupil and rival of Cullen, to explain the general phenomena of the
-living body, whether in a state of health or of disease, the doctrine of
-the pupil relative to fever, differs in no essential respect from that
-of the master. Like his predecessor, Brown attributes all fevers to
-debility; and affirms that the distinctions which physicians have made
-about the differences of fever are without foundation; that they are all
-the same, differing only in degree; that the debility during the cold
-stage is the greatest; that of the hot less; that of the sweating stage
-which ends in health for the time, is the least of all: hence in a mild
-degree of the disease, as cold is the most hurtful power, its effect is
-gradually taken off by the agreeable heat of the bed or of the sun, and
-the strength thereby gradually drawn forth; that the heart and arteries
-gradually excited by the heat acquire vigour, and at last having their
-perspiratory terminations excited by the same stimulus, the most hurtful
-symptom is thereby removed, the hot fit produced, and afterwards the
-same process carried on to the breaking out of sweat; that the cause of
-all these diseases, from the simplest and mildest intermittent to the
-gaol fever and the plague is the same with that of diseases not febrile,
-to wit debility; differing only in this, that it is the greatest
-debility compatible with life, and not long compatible with it.
-
-This very year, from Dublin, from the largest hospital for the reception
-of fever in the British Empire, precisely the same doctrine has been put
-forth. “Common epidemic fever,” says Dr. Stoker,[4] “especially when
-contagious, as I have frequently asserted when speaking of its pathology
-and treatment, has not appeared to me at any time to be essentially
-inflammatory. Adynamic fever, a denomination for typhus fever, which I
-shall employ, as I have hitherto done to express the putrid or malignant
-fever of Sydenham; the slow nervous fever of Huxham; the nervous fever
-of common language; the synochus, typhus mitior, and gravior of Cullen;
-the gaol and hospital fever; the _fièvres essentielles_ of the French;
-the epidemic of the Irish writers; the contagious of Bateman; the typhus
-of Dr. Armstrong; and the proper idiopathic, or essential fever of Dr.
-Clutterbuck: whether it exists separately or independently; or is
-combined with any of the other forms of febrile disease, sporadic or
-symptomatic.”[5] “Typhoid or adynamic fever I consider to be generally
-symptomatic of morbid changes in the physical characters of the blood,
-and have, as on former occasions, stated what those morbid changes
-are—but I have arranged inflammation under the head of symptomatic
-fever, merely because it is more usually connected with some change in
-the structure of parts, discoverable after death: on the other hand,
-typhus fever is connected with morbid changes, that _primarily_ take
-place in the fluids, and produce morbid actions, and sometimes permanent
-changes of structure in the said parts. These changes too in the
-condition of the blood are distinguishable from those which we have
-stated to occur in inflammation; and the morbid actions excited
-relatively by those changes in the blood are also distinct. In
-inflammatory fever on the one hand, increased action, in typhoid fevers
-on the other, debility, is almost the immediate consequence. On account
-of this debility being an essential character of typhoid fevers, I
-denominated them adynamic.”[6]
-
-At the close of the last season, in a work,[7] the materials of which
-have been drawn professedly from the London General Hospitals, doctrines
-so similar have been laid down, that Dr. Stoker says of it—“the views
-taken, both of the nature and treatment of fever, by Dr. Burne, entirely
-accord with those which may be found stated in my Medical Reports from
-the Fever Hospital, as well as in my separate Essays on that subject.
-And as (when speaking of his denomination of fever) I have already
-remarked, this leaves, I think, no reasonable doubt of the epidemic
-fevers of London, having lately become more typhoid or adynamic, than
-they had formerly been. It is further satisfactory to me to find, that
-the treatment which I had long since adopted and recommended in our
-typhoid fevers has been found suitable to the prevention and cure of
-those in London; and that too in proportion as they have acquired more
-of that form, with which I was best acquainted.”[8] And Dr. Burne
-himself states, “that the adynamic fever has no local seat; that its
-nature is _a morbid condition of the blood_, produced by the operation
-of the primary cause, the respiration of a contaminated or poisoned
-atmosphere: that this morbid blood, acting on the brain and nervous
-system, is of itself sufficient in very many instances to bring about
-the very great derangement and imperfect performance of all the
-functions of the organic and of the animal life; which great derangement
-and imperfect performance of all the functions constitute the phenomena
-of adynamic fever.”[9]
-
-Instead of regarding with these authors a vitiated state of the blood as
-the essence of fever, Dr. Clanny, on the contrary, believes its
-proximate cause to be a want of power in the system to form blood. “The
-proximate cause of typhus fever,” he says, “is a cessation of
-chylification, and consequently of sanguification, during which time the
-lymphatics of the whole system act with increased vigour, and in this
-manner the lymph taken up by them from the system supplies, for the time
-being, the place of the chyle in the blood, and as long as this state
-continues the patient labours under an acute disease, heretofore called
-typhus fever. When the chylopoietic viscera resume their functions the
-disease gradually recedes, and health is ultimately restored.”[10]
-“Chylification, like secretion, is a function of the brain, which under
-peculiar circumstances, or states of the atmosphere, is impaired, and in
-severe cases is suspended altogether: hence typhus fever.”[11]
-
-Such are the leading opinions of those who maintain that the seat of
-fever is in the fluids, in which opinions we perceive a return to the
-old doctrines, although in the modern version, it is true they are
-somewhat modified and presented in a somewhat more definite shape.
-
-But in direct opposition to all such views of fever, it is zealously and
-ably maintained by a large and increasing sect, that this malady is
-strictly a local disease; that it has its primary and essential seat in
-one organ, and that it consists of inflammation of that organ. Thus Dr.
-Clutterbuck, who may be regarded as one of the most distinguished
-advocates of this opinion, in one of the best works which has ever
-appeared on the subject, contends that fever of every denomination and
-every degree is the result of inflammation; that the appearances which
-have led to the conclusion that it is a general disease primarily
-affecting every function of the body are fallacious, and that, when
-strictly examined, it will be found that all general or extensive
-derangements of the system, are referrible to local disease in one
-organ. “Fever, in regard to its effects on the system,” he says, “is the
-most general of all diseases, and gives rise during its progress to the
-greatest variety of symptoms. These, contemplated in the mass, present
-nothing but confusion. Like all complicated phenomena, they require to
-be subjected to strict analysis; that their order may be traced, and
-their relation to each other and to the exciting cause shewn. To the
-neglect of this may be ascribed the error, as I conceive it to be, which
-has been so generally fallen into, of considering fever as an universal
-disease, or one that affects for the first time the whole system; no one
-part being supposed to suffer necessarily before the rest. Whereas, when
-the disease is minutely scrutinized, and its first appearance accurately
-noticed (which indeed from the slightness and consequent neglect of the
-first symptoms is rarely done) it will be found to be strictly a
-_topical_ affection, the general disorder of the system being merely
-_secondary_, or symptomatic of this.”[12] In another work it is further
-stated, that all the varieties of idiopathic fever, which differ but in
-degree, as well as those which arise from specific contagion, as
-malignant sore throat, scarlet fever, small-pox, and so on, arise from
-one and the same affection of one and the same organ, and that that
-affection consists essentially in inflammation.
-
-A similar doctrine has for some time been taught in France by a man
-whose disciples have already spread over every country in Europe, and
-are fast diffusing themselves over the new world, and whose devotion to
-their master and his system, reminds us of days long past, when the
-attachment of the pupil to the sage was as reverential and as
-enthusiastic as that ever paid by true knight to lady-fair in the
-brightest days of chivalry. “Penetrated by the sublime views of Bichat
-as to the sympathies,” say M. M. Coutançeau et Rayer, two of the most
-ardent disciples of this school;[13] “rich in numerous facts observed
-with a rare sagacity, M. Broussais came to overturn, from the very
-foundation, the antique edifice of fevers. In his works as well as in
-his lectures, he has applied himself, for many years, to demonstrate,
-that the fevers which had been called essential, were nothing more than
-local diseases, inflammations, nay even gastro-enterites.”
-
-These writers go on to state that, according to Broussais, all fevers
-are of the same nature, those termed malignant differing from other
-fevers only by the violence and danger of their congestions; that all
-the causes of fever act locally; that, considered in a general and
-abstract manner, fever is invariably the result of a _primitive or
-sympathetic irritation of the heart_ through the effect of which its
-contractions are quickened, and that every irritation sufficiently
-intense to produce fever is an inflammation.[14]
-
-There is thus a perfect accordance in the doctrine of these two
-celebrated and rival theorists, Clutterbuck and Broussais, respecting
-the nature of fever: both are agreed that it is an affection of the
-solids of the body and that its essence consists in inflammation: both
-are agreed that that inflammation is strictly local, being seated in one
-organ: but in determining what that organ is, there is an entire
-discrepancy in their opinion. According to Dr. Clutterbuck the organ
-universally affected in every variety of idiopathic fever is the brain.
-“Out of fifty cases,” he says, “of which I noted down the symptoms with
-the greatest minuteness at the bed-side of the sick, generally once and
-often twice in the twenty-four hours, throughout the disease, I find
-that no two of them correspond in the minute points though they all
-agree in the essential one, that is, in a manifest affection of the
-brain and its functions; various in degree and probably in extent, with
-numerous but accidental complications, from the affection of other
-organs.”[15] This affection of the brain, consisting of inflammation, it
-necessarily follows, as this author elsewhere states, that fever is
-nothing else than a species of phrenitis, or topical inflammation of the
-brain; that it might, therefore, be arranged in the order of phlegmasiæ
-with pleurisy, enteritis, and other symptomatic fevers, but that since
-the term phrenitis has been generally applied to a particular form of
-inflammation of the brain and implies delirium, which does not always
-occur in fever, although it is a frequent symptom, that of encephalitis
-would form a proper denomination for this entire class of diseases, and
-might be substituted for the term fever.
-
-Broussais, on the contrary, contends that the primary and essential seat
-of inflammation in fever is the mucous membrane of the stomach, or of
-the intestines, or both, but especially the former, and that, therefore,
-the proper designation of it is _gastro-enteritis_. While it had long
-been conceived that inflammation of the digestive organs is the cause of
-certain symptomatic fevers, Broussais maintains that the most important
-discovery (most important because so intimately connected with the
-treatment of the disease) that this affection is the cause of all
-fevers, idiopathic as well as symptomatic, and that there are in fact no
-essential fevers, is peculiarly and exclusively his own. Thus, according
-to this theorist, all the fevers of authors are connected with
-gastro-enteritis, simple or complicated. “The simultaneous or successive
-inflammation of the stomach and small intestines, designated by this
-term,” says M. Rayer, “is of all the phlegmasiæ the most frequent, and
-at the same time that which has been oftenest overlooked or mistaken. It
-is not designated in any nosological table. Not long ago gastritis
-itself was generally looked upon as a very rare disease: of twenty-eight
-thousand two hundred and ninety-nine sick admitted into the civil
-hospitals of Paris in 1807, six only were designated in the returns as
-labouring under inflammation of the stomach, whilst six thousand one
-hundred and forty-three were treated for continued or remittent fevers.”
-
-The prevailing doctrines relative to the nature and seat of fever at
-present then are two, the direct reverse of each other; one, that it is
-a general disease affecting the entire system; that this affection of
-the system consists of debility which is manifested first in a loss of
-energy of the brain, but which rapidly extends to every organ and every
-function, and that consequently _the absence of any primary local
-disease_, ought still to form, as it has so long formed, an essential
-part of the definition: the other, that it is in the strictest sense a
-local disease; that its primary seat is invariably fixed in some one
-organ; that the affection itself consists of inflammation; and that that
-inflammation is seated, according to one opinion in the brain; according
-to the other in the stomach.
-
-As must necessarily be the case, these different and opposite theories
-are found to have the most important influence on the practice
-recommended by their respective authors in the treatment of the disease.
-The advocates of the first deprecate all active interference: the grand
-evil to be contended with is debility: the physician can easily weaken,
-but he cannot easily strengthen: he can depress to any extent he
-desires, but he cannot communicate power as he wishes. In a malady
-therefore of which the very essence consists in loss of energy the main
-duty of the physician is to husband the strength of the patient with the
-most anxious care, this being the chief means, as Cullen expressively
-termed it, of obviating the tendency to death. The important inference
-is, that every kind and every degree of depletion that can add to the
-primary cause of the malady, must be abstained from with the utmost
-caution. By the clearest and shortest deduction this will necessarily be
-the result to which every mind must come that really believes that
-debility is the essence of fever, while he who admits its inflammatory
-nature must think it criminal to stand idle by and allow the most
-extensive derangements in the structure of vital organs to proceed,
-without even an attempt to check them, as long as it is in his power to
-use the lancet or to procure leeches. The very order in which the
-believers in debility enumerate the remedies they recommend affords a
-striking illustration of the extent to which their theory influences
-their practice;[16] while the advocates of inflammation state explicitly
-that the remedy of the disease is one, and in point of importance one
-only, namely, the remedy which all admit to be the only efficient agent
-in the treatment of inflammation. “Fever to be treated successfully,”
-says Dr. Clutterbuck, “must be treated upon the general principles of
-inflammation; but at the same time with the modifications arising out of
-the peculiar nature of the organ affected, and in some degree also the
-nature of the exciting cause. Blood-letting, which but a few years ago
-was looked upon with abhorrence in the cure of contagious fever, and the
-utility of which is still far from being generally appreciated, is
-proved by ample testimony to be not only the most powerful, but the
-safest of remedies.” And in every variety of fever, and in all its
-stages, leeches are to be applied to the stomach, according to
-Broussais, and scarcely any thing else is to be done except enjoining
-rigid starvation. Emetics, purgatives, bark, wine, are all denounced;
-nothing but leeches and “diete absolue:” a costive state of the bowels
-persisting during five or even ten days is a good symptom and not to be
-interfered with.
-
-That men who exhibit such talent for observation and such acute and
-active powers of the understanding as many of these authors exemplify in
-these very works, should, while writing with so much earnestness against
-each other, fall into one and the same error, and that an error so
-palpable, is no flattering exhibition of the state of the art of
-reasoning among the members of the medical profession. The degree in
-which the science of mind is neglected in our age and country, may it
-not be justly added? especially in our profession—that science upon the
-knowledge of which the conduct of every individual mind is so dependent,
-is truly deplorable. Medicine is an inductive science, the cultivator of
-which is peculiarly exposed to the danger of making hasty assumptions
-and of resting in partial views, yet it is not deemed necessary that he
-should be at all disciplined in the art of induction, or should be
-cautioned against any sources of fallacy in the practice of making
-inferences. All the partial and imperfect views of fever which have now
-been brought before the eye of the reader, originate in one or other of
-the following errors, obvious as they all are: either that of assuming
-as a fact what is merely a conjecture; or that of assigning to the genus
-what belongs only to the species; or that of characterising the disease
-by what appertains only to a stage; or that of mistaking the effect for
-the cause. On careful examination it will appear that one or other of
-these errors, which are as serious as they are palpable, has vitiated in
-a greater or less degree every generalization of fever that has hitherto
-been attempted.
-
-Thus the believers in debility derive their notion of the whole disease
-from the phenomena which occur in the first and the last stages only: in
-these, it is true, they may find abundant evidence of debility: but then
-they overlook the intermediate stage in which there are generally the
-most unequivocal indications of increased sensibility in the nervous and
-increased action in the vascular systems: in this manner they
-characterise the disease by what appertains only to certain stages of
-it. Again, when they contend that debility is not only the essence of
-fever in general, but is really characteristic of every type of it, they
-affirm what is indisputable of fevers in particular seasons, in
-particular climates or in particular constitutions; but beyond this
-their generalization cannot be extended: in this manner they assign to
-the genus what belongs only to the species. And when Cullen goes on to
-affirm that the proximate cause of all the morbid phenomena is a “spasm
-of the extreme vessels,” he commits the additional and more palpable,
-but not less common error, of assigning as an undoubted fact, as a real
-and ascertained occurrence, what is only a conjecture, and for which
-there is not, and for which he does not even attempt to adduce the
-shadow of evidence.
-
-Precisely similar to this is the error of those who for the most part
-belong to the same school, and who attribute the essence of fever to a
-morbid condition of the blood. The blood may be diseased in fever, but
-if it be so, these writers do not _know_ it, or at least they do not
-adduce any evidence that they are in possession of such knowledge: they
-do not appear so much as to have questioned chemistry; at all events, it
-is certain that they have hitherto received no satisfactory answer.
-There is no evidence on record that the alleged determination of the
-blood takes place in every type and every degree of fever: and if there
-were it would still be but one event among many, and one that occurs
-late in the series, and therefore could possibly be nothing more than an
-effect.
-
-In like manner those who maintain that inflammation of the brain is the
-sole cause of fever, assume as an established and admitted fact the
-universal and invariable existence of inflammation of the brain in this
-disease. Inflammation of the brain, without doubt, is demonstrable of
-many individual cases, and of some whole types: but beyond this there is
-no proof that the generalization can be carried: the evidence indeed in
-regard to many cases is entirely against the assumption, and is as
-complete as negative evidence can well be: consequently it must be
-admitted that even this hypothesis, in the present state of our
-knowledge, is founded on the error of assigning to the whole genus what
-belongs only to particular species: and it would be trifling with the
-reader to attempt to prove, that this is still more certainly and
-strikingly true with regard to inflammation of the mucous membrane of
-the stomach and intestines—an affection which in innumerable cases in
-which its existence is certain, clearly appears on the slightest
-examination of the succession of events, to be an effect and not a
-cause.
-
-No comprehensive view can be taken of fever, no just conclusion can be
-arrived at relative to its nature and seat until it be studied with a
-consciousness of the liability to such errors and a vigilant endeavour
-to avoid them. The present investigation has been undertaken with a deep
-consciousness of the danger and a watchful and unremitting care to avoid
-it. Even if the effort prove to be without success, the example can
-scarcely remain without use.
-
-The frequent and formidable disease on the investigation of which we are
-entering, cannot be understood until clear and exact answers are
-obtained to the following inquiries. 1. What is the series of phenomena
-which constitutes fever? 2. What are the particular phenomena which are
-common to all its varieties and combinations? 3. What is the order in
-which these phenomena occur in the series? 4. What are the organs, and
-what are their states, upon which these phenomena depend? 5. What are
-the external signs of these internal states, or what are the indications
-by which their existence may be known? 6. What is the external noxious
-agent or agents, or the exciting cause or causes of the disease? 7. What
-is the particular remedy, or the particular combination of remedies
-which is best adapted to each state of each organ? When these questions
-can be clearly and perfectly answered, and not till then, we shall know
-the disease and its treatment. In order to make any real progress in
-this knowledge we must therefore prosecute these inquiries. It appears
-to me that we are already in possession of ascertained facts, adequate
-to answer with a high degree of certainty, though perhaps not with
-absolute certainty, several of these questions. In keeping these
-inquiries steadily before our view in our investigation there will be
-this great advantage, that it will enable us clearly to perceive what we
-really know and what still remains to be ascertained.
-
-The phenomena which constitute fever, like those which belong to all the
-processes of nature, consist of a certain number of events. The events
-which take place in this disease are before our eyes: they are
-abundantly familiar to us all: no one man indeed has seen all the forms
-of fever which exist, nor observed all the symptoms of those species
-which he has witnessed, but accurate records are to be obtained of them
-all: records upon which we have this assurance that we may rely, that
-all the important events in this disease are so obvious and striking,
-and indeed force themselves so powerfully and constantly upon the
-notice, that there can be little danger that any one of consequence
-should be overlooked. Accordingly medical writings abound with the most
-minute, and, as far as can be judged, accurate histories of the symptoms
-which accompany all sorts of fevers, whether epidemic or sporadic. It is
-not in the observation of symptoms that the danger of error lies,
-because these are matters of sense, but the danger arises from a
-different source. Supposing, for example, that all the important events
-which accompany all the important varieties of fever have been
-ascertained, and that thus our first inquiry relative to the series of
-phenomena which constitutes the disease, is answered, still as many of
-these events are observed to be often absent, while it cannot be doubted
-that fever is nevertheless present, we must necessarily enquire in the
-next place, what is that particular combination of events which is
-_essential_ to the constitution of the disease, an enquiry which
-embraces the second question proposed for consideration, namely, what
-are the particular phenomena which are common to all the varieties of
-fever? Now in singling out this particular series of events from the
-great mass, we are liable to several sources of error. In the first
-place, we may stop too soon in our enumeration; in the second place, we
-may mistake the adventitious for the essential and the essential for the
-adventitious, and in the third place, we may overlook the real place
-which some particular event holds in the series, and so may suppose that
-to be antecedent which was truly sequent, and consequently assign that
-as a cause which is only an effect.
-
-The first thing to be done then is to ascertain the concourse of
-symptoms, and the second, to determine the order in which they occur:
-when these two points have been made out, what is essential and what
-adventitious, as well as what is the cause and what the effect, become
-at once clear and certain. But the difficulty lies in discerning amidst
-the infinite diversity and contrariety of symptoms which the different
-modifications of fever present, when we may safely assure ourselves that
-we are in possession of all the essential phenomena. Our guide is
-_invariableness_ of concurrence. If we can ascertain that a certain
-number of events _invariably_ take place in every form and every degree
-of fever, these events will give us the particular phenomena which are
-common to all the varieties of the disease. If we can further ascertain
-that these events _invariably_ concur in a certain order, we shall have
-discovered what events bear to each other the relation of cause and
-effect. And the establishment of this relation of events, this constant
-connexion with each other, this uniform antecedence and sequence appears
-to me to be the only theory after which it is consistent with the
-principles of sound philosophy to search. If I have endeavoured to
-establish this connexion, and have thus ventured, as I conceive, in a
-strictly philosophical sense to propose a theory, in doing so, I have
-carefully restricted myself to the attempt to deduce a legitimate
-conclusion from facts previously ascertained. It does appear to me that
-these three points, namely, the common phenomena, the invariableness of
-their concurrence, and their mutual relation are satisfactorily
-established. Whether I shall be able to communicate this conviction to
-the reader I do not know: but I hope he will at least coincide with me
-in opinion that this mode of investigating the disease affords us the
-best chance of arriving at satisfactory results.
-
-Whatever be the phenomena of fever they depend upon certain states of
-the organs. Whatever be the noxious agents or the exciting causes of the
-disease, and however they operate, they can induce the disease only by
-bringing about a certain condition in a certain number of organs, the
-individual events constituting the disease being nothing but certain
-changes in these organs. It is therefore of paramount importance to
-ascertain what the organs are which are implicated; what the conditions
-are which are induced in them; what organ sustains the first assault and
-what organs are attacked in succession. The pathology about to be laid
-before the reader will demonstrate the first two points: the
-establishment of the last two will be attempted by an examination of the
-history of the cases.
-
-Without doubt the life or death of the patient depends upon these
-conditions of the organs. In a practical point of view therefore, this
-is the kind of knowledge with which it is of the greatest importance
-that the practitioner should be familiar. Some of these conditions are
-indicated by certain signs during life: some of these indications are
-obscure, and may be easily overlooked or mistaken by those who have not
-acquired an accurate and extensive acquaintance with the disease. On the
-other hand, there are external appearances which are extremely apt to
-suggest a false notion of the state of the internal organs. These
-fallacious appearances are sure to lead those whom they deceive into a
-mistaken, often into a mortal practice. Certain conditions of vital
-organs, if allowed to remain long, will terminate in fatal changes of
-structure. Certain remedies, if applied in due season and with due
-vigour, are capable of removing those conditions. Life therefore must
-sometimes depend upon the power of making this diagnosis with accuracy.
-Of some of these conditions, the diagnostic marks are clear and certain;
-those which indicate other conditions, in the present state of our
-knowledge, are obscure and uncertain. I have thought no labour too great
-to put the reader in possession of all that I have been able to
-ascertain with regard to this most important part of the subject. In the
-attempt to communicate this information, I am conscious that I may incur
-the charge of tediousness, on account of the number of repetitions which
-occur, and which I have allowed to remain because I could see no means
-of removing them without sacrificing clearness to brevity. Elegance and
-conciseness, in a work of this nature, ought not for a moment to be
-considered if they endanger its practical usefulness. A knowledge of the
-condition of the internal organs, in fever, can alone guide us to a
-rational and successful treatment of this most dangerous disease. It is
-only by examining the body after death that we can acquire this
-information: it is only by observing the symptoms during life and
-comparing them with the morbid appearances after death, that we can
-discover the signs which indicate the existence of these states. For
-these reasons I have not hesitated to give numerous cases and to detail
-many dissections. If after the study of these cases and dissections the
-practitioner be enabled at the bed-side of the fever patient to discover
-with greater precision and certainty than heretofore the condition of
-the brain—the condition of the lungs—the condition of the intestines, he
-will not think the time he has devoted to the investigation ill spent,
-nor shall I think myself without reward for the labour it has cost me to
-draw up the record. It is only when from external appearances we are
-able to see what is going on within each of the great cavities of the
-body, as clearly as we should do if their walls were transparent, that
-our interference can be sure of doing good, or secure from doing
-mischief: it is this kind and degree of knowledge alone which can teach
-us both when to act and what to do; and what is of almost equal
-importance, when to stop and to attempt nothing; and if the perusal of
-this work should contribute in any measure to the attainment of this
-knowledge, I shall not have laboured wholly in vain, “to add something
-to the treasury of physic.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- _Varieties of Fever. Common Phenomena. Importance of this Analysis.
- Results of the Analysis. Organs always diseased in Fever: Functions
- always deranged in Fever. Fever not Inflammation: Distinction
- between these two States of Disease. Common Phenomena of Fever
- exemplified in Plague, in Yellow Fever, in the Varieties of the
- Fever of our own Country. Different Varieties produced by different
- Intensities of the same Affections. Received Classification and
- Nomenclature defective. What is really meant by Genera and Species
- of Fever. True Principle of Arrangement._
-
-
-Fever is a genus consisting of several species, and each species
-presents many varieties. The external characters of these varieties and
-the internal states upon which they depend, are so opposite, that no two
-diseases in any two parts of the catalogue of nosology present a more
-diversified appearance, or require a more varied treatment, than may be
-the case with two different types of fever. The fever of one country is
-not the same as the fever of any other country; in the same country, the
-fever of one season is not the same as the fever of any other season;
-and even the fever of the same season is not the same in any two
-individuals. Many of the circumstances which constitute these varieties
-in the fevers of different seasons and of individual persons, are slight
-and trivial; but some of them are of the greatest possible importance,
-and those diversities, especially, which distinguish the fevers of
-different climates, are intimately connected with the causes, whatever
-they be, which render the disease mild or severe, and, consequently,
-comparatively innoxious or fearfully mortal.
-
-Something there is, however, which, amidst this astonishing diversity,
-preserves the identity of the disease so completely and so obviously,
-that there never has existed any dispute about that identity, under any
-aspect which it has hitherto been observed to assume; so that all
-physicians, without exception, unhesitatingly accord the name of fever
-to the mildest form of the common fever of this country, to the yellow
-fever of the West Indies, and to the plague of Constantinople and of
-Egypt. Bring three persons, each exhibiting an exquisite specimen of one
-of these several forms of the disease into the same ward of an hospital,
-the external aspect presented by each would be so different, that an
-unprofessional observer would probably be able to discover in these
-modifications of the same malady no common property: yet there is no
-physician who would not, in each case, instantly pronounce the disease
-to be fever. There must, therefore, be something that establishes the
-identity of the disease under this diversity of aspect. What is that
-something? Whatever it be, it must be common to all the varieties of
-fever. Thus we are led at once to the second inquiry which we proposed
-to keep before us in this investigation, namely, what are the particular
-phenomena which are common to all the varieties and combinations of the
-disease?
-
-The importance of making this analysis has been felt by every person who
-has directed his attention to this subject from the remotest antiquity
-down to the present time. That it is not as easy to be made as the
-necessity of it is plainly to be perceived is abundantly attested by the
-want of success which has hitherto attended the efforts to perform it of
-the acutest minds, and the acutest minds, the pride and boast of our
-science have applied themselves to the task. Notwithstanding their
-labours however, the analysis made by Hippocrates has been received
-through succeeding ages with little variation, and continues to be
-received even in modern times with only slight modification. And yet
-that reflecting men of every age have not been satisfied with resolving
-all the essential phenomena of fever into heat, although they have all
-consented to designate the disease by some term expressive of that
-property,[17] is attested by proofs no less striking than instructive.
-We are informed by Van Swieten, that Boerhaave collected with much
-labour from a great variety of authors all the symptoms which they had
-observed in different fevers: that from these he threw out such as did
-not appear in all fevers, and that finding himself obliged to exclude
-one after another, he was at length greatly surprised to find the
-catalogue so short; it being ultimately reduced to three; namely
-shivering, frequent pulse, heat.
-
-This is a sufficient and an interesting proof that this illustrious
-physician saw the importance of making the analysis in question; it
-shews also, that his ingenuity suggested probably the best mode of
-conducting it which a philosopher sitting in his study could devise; and
-the only proper mode of conducting it the circumstances of his age and
-country did not place within his reach. Accordingly his success did not
-equal his labour: for out of the three phenomena which he fixes upon as
-those that are common to all the varieties of the disease there is not
-one which is invariably found in any type of it; while in innumerable
-cases the combination of the three is not found. Shivering does not
-occur in some of the worst forms of the malady; and where it does, it is
-confined to the commencement of the attack, or to that of its
-exacerbations. The pulse, instead of being always more frequent than
-natural, in some of the most formidable aspects assumed by the disease,
-has been observed to be as low as forty or even thirty in the minute,
-and, from the beginning to the termination of the attack, the heat in
-some cases is below the natural standard, as it generally is in the
-commencement of the cold stage.
-
-To the catalogue of Boerhaave, Cullen makes the following
-additions:—“languor, lassitude and other signs of debility, together
-with derangement of the functions, particularly a want of vigor in the
-limbs without any primary local affection.” This extension of the
-catalogue adds in no respect to the excellence of the generalization. It
-has all the vices which a definition can possess. The characters are not
-present in all cases; the very opposite are strikingly prominent in
-many, while the last, “without any primary local affection,” has so
-direct a tendency to mislead the mind, and positively to prevent it from
-observing the real phenomena of the disease, that it may well be
-questioned, whether the introduction of this single phrase into the
-definition of fever, has not been the occasion of far more practical
-mischief than has been compensated by any good that has been
-accomplished, or ever can be accomplished by all the rest of the
-nosology.
-
-In the last attempt to improve the definition of fever with which I am
-acquainted, Dr. Wilson Philip says, “If we lay aside Dr. Cullen’s term
-pyrexia, (which it must be borne in mind is precisely Boerhaave’s brief
-catalogue) we shall considerably lessen the difficulty of giving such a
-definition of idiopathic fevers as shall apply to all cases. They may be
-defined as follows. Languor, lassitude, and other signs of debility,
-followed by a frequent pulse, and increased heat, without any primary
-local affection.”[18] Inasmuch as this definition contains fewer words
-than that proposed by Cullen, it may be liable to fewer objections, but
-it is less faulty only because it is shorter.
-
-This total failure of men, all of them of unquestionable acuteness, and
-some of them of splendid genius, in their attempts to discover the
-common phenomena of fever, affords a strong presumption that they have
-not pursued their object in the right path. Without doubt, before it is
-possible to succeed in any scientific investigation, it is necessary to
-form a distinct conception of the object of inquiry. Fever is not an
-entity, not a being possessing a peculiar nature; and the object of
-investigating it, is not to discover in what such nature consists, or
-what it is that constitutes its essence: but fever is a series of
-events, and the object of inquiry is to discover what the events are;
-what the events are that invariably concur in the series; and in what
-order they constantly succeed each other. When we have discovered this,
-we have ascertained all that we can ever know of what is termed the
-nature of fever, as it is this, and only this, that we can ever know of
-any object or process. Every natural object consists either of one
-single substance, or of several substances united; and our knowledge of
-that object is complete when we have ascertained what that single
-substance is; or what all the separate substances are that combine to
-form it. Every natural process consists of a number of events, and our
-knowledge of that process is complete when we have ascertained the
-events themselves, the order of their succession, and the events to
-which they give occasion. We can make no real progress in knowledge
-unless we keep steadily in view the kind of information which it is
-possible to acquire, and which it is to our purpose to seek; and
-dispossess our minds of the phantoms which have so long enthralled and
-abused them.
-
-In relation to our present subject then, the first object of enquiry is,
-what are the events which invariably concur in fever?
-
-Where shall we look for the events? Not in the symptoms. Symptoms are
-not events: they are only indications of events: symptoms depend upon
-states of organs: they are the external and visible signs of internal,
-and, for the most part, as long as life continues, invisible conditions.
-It is then to the state of the organs that we must look for the events
-of which we are in search.
-
-Are there any states of any organs that always exist in fever? Are the
-states constant? Are the organs affected constant; and can both be
-ascertained? If this can be truly answered in the affirmative; if it can
-be proved that there are certain conditions of certain organs which
-invariably exist in fever, in every type, in every degree, in every
-stage of it, we shall have arrived at a satisfactory conclusion relative
-to the first part of our inquiry.
-
-The evidence is as complete as observation during life and inspection
-after death can make it, that a morbid change does take place in a
-certain number of organs in every case of fever, from the most trivial
-intermittent to the most alarming continued fever, from the mildest
-plague to the most malignant typhus: that at the two extremes of this
-scale, and at all the intermediate gradations of it, there are certain
-organs which are always affected, and that the affection in all is
-similar.
-
-The identity of the organs is inferred from the indications they give of
-disordered function during life: the identity of the affection is
-inferred from the similarity of morbid appearances which they exhibit on
-examination after death.
-
-The organs affected are those which constitute the nervous system; those
-which constitute the circulating system, and those which constitute the
-systems of secretion and excretion. The spinal cord and the brain; the
-heart and the arteries, especially their capillary extremities; the
-secreting and the excreting organs, which in fact are composed,
-essentially, of the capillary extremities of the arteries; the secreting
-and the excreting extremities of these arteries, especially as they
-terminate in the external skin, and in the mucous membranes, which form
-the internal skin, this is the chain of diseased organs: derangement in
-the nervous and sensorial functions: derangement in the circulating
-function: derangement in the secretory and excretory functions, this is
-the circle of morbid actions.
-
-There never was a case of fever in which all these organs and affections
-were not more or less in a morbid state: there never was a concurrence
-of this morbid state, in this complete circle of organs, without fever.
-The events which _invariably_ concur in fever, then, are a certain
-deviation from the healthy state in the nervous and the sensorial
-functions; a certain deviation from the healthy state in the circulating
-function; a certain deviation from the healthy state in the functions of
-secretion and excretion. A deviation from the healthy state in one
-circle of actions will not present the phenomena of fever; a deviation
-from the healthy state in two circles of action will not present the
-phenomena of fever: there must be a deviation in the three circles
-before fever can exist. Such then are the common phenomena of fever.
-
-For obvious reasons the detail of the proof that these several events
-really and invariably take place, must be postponed until the phenomena
-themselves have been stated, or what is termed the history of the
-disease has been given.
-
-But it is not the invariable concurrence of a particular number of
-events that is alone sufficient to constitute fever: to this must be
-added invariableness of concurrence in a particular order. As will be
-shewn in the proper place, there is complete and irresistible evidence
-that these events do occur in one invariable order. Derangement in the
-functions of secretion and excretion never comes first in the series:
-derangement in the nervous and sensorial functions never comes last in
-the series: derangement in the function of the circulation never comes
-either the first or the last in the series, but is always the second in
-succession.
-
-The order of events then is first, derangement in the nervous and
-sensorial functions; this is the invariable antecedent: secondly,
-derangement in the circulating function; this is the invariable sequent:
-and thirdly, derangement in the secreting and excreting functions; this
-is the last result in the succession of morbid changes.
-
-Supposing the matter of fact to be as is here stated, and the proof that
-it is so will be adduced hereafter, it is clear that we are in
-possession of the true characters of fever. We know the events: we know
-the order in which they occur: we know therefore what it is that
-constitutes the disease, and we know consequently what it is by which it
-is distinguished from every other malady. No other disease exhibits the
-same train of phenomena in the same order of succession. In inflammation
-some of the phenomena are the same: but the order in which they concur
-is not the same; and this affords a clear and universally applicable
-mark of distinction between fever and inflammation. In inflammation
-there is similar derangement in the secreting and excreting functions:
-there is also sometimes similar derangement in the circulating function:
-but the derangement in the nervous and sensorial functions is seldom if
-ever similar: the derangement that does take place in these latter
-functions, while it is apparently different in kind, is certainly and
-invariably different in the order of its occurrence. In pneumonia, in
-enteritis, in hepatitis, the spinal cord and the brain are _never_ the
-organs in which the _first_ indications of disease appear: the earliest
-indications of disease that can be discovered have their seat in the
-affected organ itself: it is only after the disease has made some
-progress that other organs and functions are involved; and apparently,
-the last to be involved, and certainly the least to suffer, is the
-nervous system.
-
-We can now then answer the questions so often asked—are fever and
-inflammation the same? and if not the same in what do they differ? Fever
-and inflammation are not the same, because the term fever is
-appropriated to the designation of a certain number of events which
-occur in a certain series: the term inflammation, on the other hand,
-expresses another series of events, each event composing this train,
-succeeding each other in a different order: and the difference between
-the two series of events is precisely this difference in their
-individual phenomena and in their order of succession. What the physical
-and the physiological condition of the organs is, as contrasted with
-their condition in the state of health, has not yet been made out with
-regard either to fever or to inflammation: in the present state of our
-knowledge, therefore, we can neither affirm nor deny any thing
-respecting either the identity or the difference of that physical and
-physiological condition of the organs in these two classes of disease.
-What inflammation is beyond the series of events we are able to observe
-we do not know: what fever is beyond the series of events we are able to
-observe we do not know: we compare the events and we see that they
-differ: and since the use of names is to mark and to express
-differences, it is right to distinguish these different events by
-different terms. But though in the present state of our knowledge we are
-not justified in considering fever and inflammation to be the same, yet
-the close, perhaps the constant connexion between them, is a fact of the
-utmost importance to be known, and requires to be incessantly before the
-view of the practitioner. And of this we shall have but too abundant
-evidence in the sequel.
-
-Supposing the proofs hereafter to be adduced to be conclusive, that the
-events in fever and their order really are what has now been stated, how
-clearly and beautifully does this view of the disease enable us to
-recognize one and the same malady through all the modifications it
-undergoes, and therefore through the countless aspects it assumes. Out
-of the system of organs that are always affected in fever some may be
-more and some may be less diseased; and it is easy to see how, from this
-diversity alone, the utmost variety may arise in the external characters
-of the disease. Thus, at one time, the spinal cord and the brain may be
-intensely affected: consequently the patient may be seized with violent
-pains in the limbs; with ferocious head-ache; with early delirium, which
-may rapidly increase to such a degree of violence as to require
-restraint: or, on the contrary, all the muscles of voluntary motion may
-be seized instantaneously with such a loss of energy that they may truly
-be said to be paralyzed: at the same time the sensorial faculties may be
-overwhelmed almost as completely as they are in apoplexy: thus may be
-formed one type of fever: and such a concourse of symptoms is actually
-found to exist: it ushers in the plague when it first stalks into a
-devoted city to sweep away its thousands and its tens of thousands.
-
-At another time the disease may seize with peculiar violence upon the
-organs of secretion, and especially upon those which belong to the
-digestive apparatus: hence the liver may suddenly pour forth an immense
-flow of bile, so vitiated in quality as to irritate and inflame whatever
-it touches, and so abundant in quantity as rapidly to diffuse itself
-over every part of the body, and to tinge almost every tissue and every
-fluid: at the same time the stomach and intestines may be involved in
-such acute disease that the powers of life may be exhausted in a few
-hours by incessant vomiting and unconquerable purging: thus may be
-formed another type of fever, and such a concourse of symptoms actually
-occurs in the yellow fever of the West Indies.
-
-Now we may witness a severe though a less violent affection of the
-spinal cord and the brain than occurs in plague. There may be present
-great pain in the back and limbs; intense head-ache; early and violent
-delirium; a burning skin; a quick and strong pulse; urgent thirst, and
-constipated bowels: or, on the contrary, there may be not pain of the
-head, but giddiness; not delirium, but stupor; not a burning hot, but a
-moderately warm or a cool skin; not a frequent and strong, but a
-frequent and feeble pulse. In either case we have a fair specimen of the
-common fever of our own country, the first forming the variety which may
-be termed acute, the second subacute cerebral.
-
-Now again we may witness a concurrence of symptoms very similar to the
-latter in the commencement of the attack, only that there is from the
-beginning greater prostration of strength; and a rapid increase in the
-derangement of the nervous and sensorial functions: together with a
-brown and dry tongue; a tender abdomen, and dark and offensive stools:
-thus may be formed another type of fever to which is commonly assigned
-the name of typhus.
-
-In each of these cases the most urgent symptoms have their seat only in
-one set of the organs that compose the circle which we have said to be
-involved; but in every case all the other organs included in that circle
-are as really, though not as intensely diseased. When the spinal cord
-and the brain are so violently affected that the patient appears to be
-struck with paralysis or apoplexy, the attention is not strongly drawn
-to the state of the mucous membrane of the digestive apparatus; to the
-nature of the secretions and excretions of which it is the source; to
-the temperature of the system, or to the condition of the circulation:
-because the affection of the nervous system being overwhelming, and all
-the other affections being comparatively trifling, it is natural that
-the former should, in a manner, absorb the mind of the observer; yet, if
-the skin, the pulse, the tongue, the evacuations are examined, all will
-be found to be in a morbid state, and that morbid state will bear a
-certain proportion to the affection of the nervous system.
-
-In like manner when the organs of the digestive apparatus form the
-strong hold of the disease, the morbid condition of the spinal cord and
-brain, and the altered action of the heart and arteries, may attract
-less notice; but that morbid condition will be not the less real, and
-will contribute its portion of disease to the general derangement of the
-system, not the less certainly because the indications of its existence
-may be less obtrusive.
-
-And in the milder forms which the fever of our own country presents, in
-the most intense cerebral affection with which we ever meet, there will
-always be present unequivocal indications of deranged function both in
-the heart and arteries, and in the organs of secretion and excretion:
-while in cases in which the brain may be tolerably clear; in which there
-may be little or no headache; little or no pain in the limbs; no
-delirium; in which the disease may be chiefly seated in the mucous
-membrane of the stomach and intestines, and the prominent symptoms be,
-pain of the epigastrium, tenderness on pressure over the whole abdomen,
-a red tongue, and frequent stools, still if we examine the state of the
-pulse, if we look at the quality and the distribution of the nervous
-influence, if we observe the operations of the sensorial faculties, we
-shall find these functions to be as truly, though not as intensely
-deranged as if the full force of the disease were spent upon the organs
-in which these functions have their seat.
-
-Thus, although all these organs are invariably affected in every case of
-fever, yet in no two cases are all these organs affected in the same
-degree. Sometimes one system is more affected than another; sometimes
-one organ of one system, and these different degrees of affection, in
-these different systems, are variously combined and modified. How great
-then must necessarily be the diversity of symptoms presented by the
-different forms of fever! How incalculable are the varieties that result
-from difference of intensity alone. One degree of affection of the
-brain, for example, will occasion violent headache, constant
-watchfulness, great restlessness, a peculiar expression of the eye, and
-intolerance of light; in another there will be no headache, or none of
-which the patient will complain; there will be sleep though it be
-disturbed and unrefreshing; there will be no peculiar expression of the
-eye, and no intolerance of light. By one degree of affection the
-sensibility will be rendered preternaturally intense; by another it will
-be totally obliterated: one will produce violent delirium, another, only
-slight wandering, or unrefreshing slumber: one, violence requiring
-restraint; another, profound coma. In the circulating system the
-symptoms will alike vary. One degree will produce a quick, strong and
-hard pulse; another, a quick, small and feeble pulse; another, a slow
-and intermittent pulse. A similar diversity will be found in the
-temperature of the body: in one, the heat will be little changed; in
-another, it will be below the natural standard; in a third, it will be
-intense, and the organs of secretion and excretion will equally vary in
-the extent of their morbid changes.
-
-Thus, from one and the same affection of one and the same organ, not
-only different but opposite symptoms will be produced in all the organs
-involved in what we may call the febrile circle. When to this variety
-are added diversities occasioned by various stages of the diseased
-processes that are going on in the system; by the previous state of the
-organs affected; by the reaction of the affected organs one upon
-another, producing innumerable and ever varying combinations of
-different intensities of affection, in different sets of organs; and by
-the treatment to which the whole have been subjected, we cannot wonder
-if the symptoms of fever appear to be countless.
-
-That no two cases of fever can ever be precisely the same, and that it
-must be vain to seek for the common phenomena of the disease in the
-external symptoms, must now be obvious: and why success can never attend
-the search after these common phenomena in such symptoms as “shivering,
-frequent pulse, heat,” must be equally manifest. These as well as all
-other symptoms depend upon the state of the organs. But we have seen
-that in one degree of the same affection of the same series of organs
-there may be shivering; excited pulse; burning heat; while in another
-degree there may be no shivering, a slow pulse and a cold skin: so that
-from one and the same affection, differing only in the degree of its
-intensity, the symptoms may not only vary but be directly opposite. The
-proper object of pursuit in all these enquiries, therefore, is the real
-nature of the affection, and the symptoms are of consequence only as
-they are indications of the existence of that affection. Symptoms are
-not _the_ thing in which observation should terminate, but signs of the
-thing without the knowledge of which, in every individual case that may
-come under his care, the practitioner ought never to be at rest, and to
-the discovery of which they serve as guides.
-
-It is then in the organs alone that we can find a perfect uniformity:
-but their condition is as fixed and invariable as the return of day and
-night. All the operations of nature are uniform. When, in any case, we
-have succeeded in discovering what the operation is, we see that it
-never varies. The same causes, under the same circumstances, always
-produce the same effects. The causes of fever, whatever they be, under
-the same circumstances, always produce the same conditions of the
-organs. In proportion as we ascertain with clearness and precision what
-these conditions are, we observe that they recur in all cases with the
-most undeviating regularity, and when our knowledge of them shall have
-become complete, it is probable that we shall find that they are as
-constant in their return as that of the sun after its setting, and that
-they no more change in their nature or progress than the sun deviates
-from its path.
-
-The all important thing for the practitioner to know, then, it can never
-be too often repeated, is what these conditions are. It is greatly to be
-regretted that we do not know with precision the condition of the most
-important organs in the intense fevers of other climates. The condition
-of the most important organs in the various types of fever as they occur
-in our own country, we do now know with precision, and the main object
-of the present work is to give an account of these conditions, and of
-the signs which denote them.
-
-It is found that particular conditions of particular sets of organs give
-rise to certain groups of symptoms: these groups of symptoms have been
-supposed to form different genera and species, and have received
-specific names. Were the nomenclature of these genera and species of
-fever perfect, the name would in each case be expressive of the
-condition of the organs upon which the assemblage of symptoms it denotes
-depends, and perhaps in some greatly advanced state of our science, when
-these conditions have been perfectly ascertained and have become
-perfectly familiar, an approximation to this desirable classification
-and naming may be attempted with success. The state of our knowledge,
-however, enables no one to undertake the task at present, and in the
-mean time the slightest glance at the divisions which have been
-attempted of this class of diseases, is but too sufficient to shew the
-total absence of that kind of information, which, if there be any truth
-in the preceding observations, it is alone of value to possess.
-
-Thus febrile diseases are commonly divided into idiopathic and
-symptomatic—a division which is liable to the fundamental objection that
-the diseases included under the second section are not fevers but
-inflammations. There are no fevers but idiopathic fevers. It has been
-shewn that fever differs from inflammation both in the individual
-phenomena forming the train that constitutes the disease, and in the
-order in which the several phenomena succeed each other. There are, it
-is true, individual phenomena common to both; but since the series as
-well as the order in which the several phenomena stand in the series are
-different, to call both by the same name can only produce confusion and
-misconception.
-
-Of true or idiopathic fevers two great divisions are made; one
-comprehending intermittent and the other continued fevers: a division
-founded on the occurrence of the trains of the phenomena in an
-interrupted or in an uninterrupted series. Intermittent fever is further
-divided into intermittent and remittent, the interruption in the series
-being said to be complete in the one and incomplete in the other. In
-continued fever, on the other hand, the trains of phenomena are supposed
-to proceed in a perfectly uninterrupted series, whence the name
-continued. The single fact suggested to the mind of the practitioner by
-this classification is in the highest degree trivial.
-
-Of the particular groups of symptoms which have been brought together
-under the great class, continued fever, it is impossible to discover any
-kind of principle which has led to the formation of the distinct
-assemblages that have been made, or to their nomenclature when thus
-collected. Synocha, typhus, synochus, are the three genera which modern
-nosology, in the power and pride of its strength, has put forth as at
-once distinctive and exhaustive of this class of disease. The aggregate
-phenomena constituting synocha, form just that particular series which
-is common to some forms of fever and to all acute inflammations: namely,
-“Calor plurimum auctus, pulsus frequens, validus, et durus, urina rubra,
-sensorii functiones parum turbatæ.” The train of symptoms thus brought
-together do not alone form any variety of fever. The second group of
-symptoms forming typhus—“morbus contagiosus, calor parum auctus, pulsus
-parvus, debilis, plerumque frequens, urina parum mutata, sensorii
-functiones plurimum turbatæ, vires multum imminutæ:” and the third,
-forming synochus,—“morbus contagiosus, febris ex synocha et typho
-composita; initio synocha, progressu, et versus finem, typhus,”
-independently of their being brought together and named according to no
-known or even assigned principle, are liable to the further and the
-fatal objection, that they do not even occur in nature.
-
-Even Dr. Wilson Philip, who labours to reconcile to nature and to
-improve in accuracy and comprehensiveness these classifications and
-definitions, expressly admits that a simple synocha or typhus is a fever
-which we rarely, if ever meet with: for that however high the
-inflammatory symptoms at an early period may be, those of typhus always,
-at least in this country, sooner or later supervene; and that however
-well marked the symptoms of typhus may be in the progress of fever, in
-almost every case, the first symptoms are more or less inflammatory;
-that the fevers mentioned by authors, under the names synochus and
-typhus, are in fact no other than varieties of the synochus; that when
-the symptoms of debility predominate, the fever has been termed typhus;
-that when, on the contrary, the inflammatory symptoms are most
-remarkable, and present through the greater part of the disease, it has
-been called synocha.[19]
-
-Again, while according to this received arrangement a train of symptoms,
-every one of which is found in acute inflammation, is made a distinct
-genus of fever, numerous diseases, each forming an exquisite specimen of
-fever, are totally excluded from the order, and placed at a considerable
-distance in the nosology. Because scarlatina is a fever attended with a
-peculiar eruption on the skin; because rubeola is a fever attended with
-an eruption on the skin also peculiar; because variola is a fever
-attended with another peculiar eruption, and urticaria with another,
-these diseases are not made varieties of fever, but, designated by the
-term exanthemata, are formed into a separate order: while, on the other
-hand, fevers attended with petechiæ, with papulæ, with aphthæ, with
-vesicles, are accounted fevers, and accordingly are termed petechial,
-miliary, aphthous, erysipelatous, vesicular fevers; whence synochus
-petechialis, synochus miliaris, synochus aphthosus, &c.
-
-Without doubt is right that these varieties of disease should be
-discriminated and named; but this mode of classifying them has a
-necessary tendency to divert the mind from dwelling on those essential
-circumstances which make all of them mere varieties of one great
-disease; and to fix it upon those comparatively unimportant though
-obvious circumstances which simply modify the malady without in the
-least affecting its identity.
-
-It has already been stated that the grouping of the symptoms, or, in
-other words, the formation of the species of fever cannot be
-scientifically or usefully accomplished until we have arrived at a
-perfect knowledge of the condition of the organs upon which the trains
-depend; and that our knowledge of these conditions is so imperfect,
-especially with regard to many of the species, that this classification
-cannot possibly be made at present. It is not even known whether the
-condition of the organs in intermittent be the same as it is in
-continued fever. The mere periodicity in the recurrence of the febrile
-paroxysms by which this class of disease is at present characterised, is
-an exceedingly unsatisfactory principle of distinction, unless we at the
-same time knew the state of the system upon which that periodicity
-depends. The alternate transition of intermittent into remittent and
-continued, and of continued and remittent into intermittent fever, of
-which the history of epidemics affords so many striking examples, and of
-which Sydenham, Pringle, and all the older writers have recorded so many
-interesting accounts, as events which they themselves daily witnessed,
-seems to shew that there can be nothing amounting to a generic
-difference between these several diseases. The type, as far as we have
-the means of judging, appears to be determined entirely by the intensity
-of the disease. An intermittent increasing in violence and malignity
-changes into a remittent or a continued fever, and a continued or
-remittent, diminishing in violence and malignity, often assumes the form
-of intermittent. Speaking of the epidemic constitution of the years from
-1661 to 1664, Sydenham states that, in the year 1661, the autumnal
-intermittents which had prevailed for some years broke forth afresh,
-especially obstinate tertians; that increasing daily until August, at
-which time they raged fiercely and became extremely mortal, in many
-places seizing whole families, and destroying great numbers, decreased
-by degrees until October; and, disappearing at the approach of Winter,
-were succeeded by a continued fever, which differed from the Autumnal
-intermittent only in being continued, while the former returned in
-paroxysms: that both invaded almost alike; that those who violently
-laboured of either vomited; that in both the skin was dry; the tongue
-black, the thirst urgent, and that, at their declination, the morbific
-matter in both was readily exterminated by sweats. “It was manifest,” he
-adds, “that this fever belonged to the family of intermittents, because
-it rarely appeared in the Spring: it was a sort of compendium of the
-intermittents; and, on the contrary, every fit of the intermittent
-seemed to be a compendium of this fever; so that the difference chiefly
-consists in this, namely, that the continued fever once begun, perfects
-its effervescence with the same degree of heat; but the intermittents
-perform their business by parts, and at several times.”[20]
-
-In like manner, Pringle, among many other examples of the fact, which,
-indeed, he states to be of constant occurrence, gives an account of an
-epidemic that prevailed in the army of the Netherlands, and which in its
-worst form assumed the appearance of an ardent fever. He states that the
-men were suddenly seized with violent head-ache, and frequently with
-delirium: that, if sensible, they complained also of grievous pain in
-the back and loins; intense thirst; burning heat; great sickness and
-oppression at the stomach, sometimes with vomiting of bile, sometimes
-with evacuation of bile by stool, accompanied with tenesmus and pains in
-the back: that this fever generally remitted from the beginning upon
-bleeding and purging: that if these precautions were omitted, the fever
-went on in almost a continued form, and that its tendency to
-putrefaction was so great, that while many had spots and blotches, some
-had mortifications, which were almost always fatal: that this fever
-continued to rage throughout August; that it began to abate with the
-heat in the middle of September; that from this period its violence
-diminished, and the number attacked gradually decreased; and that now
-“the remissions became more free, so that insensibly, with the coolness
-of the weather, this raging fever dwindled into a regular intermittent,
-and entirely ceased upon the approach of Winter.”[21]
-
-What that condition of the system is, which, in forms of fever that are
-thus mutually convertible, causes one to persist in an uninterrupted
-series, another to remit, and another, after disappearing for a time, to
-recur in distinct and regular paroxysms, is wholly unknown. Sydenham,
-indeed, cuts the knot and removes the difficulty at once. Speaking of
-the return of the fits in intermittent, he replies to the inquirer into
-their cause,—“I would fain know why a horse comes to his growth in seven
-years and a man at twenty-one; or why some plants flower in May and some
-in June. I am persuaded that the progress of nature is as certain and
-regular in this case as in any other, and that the matter of a quartan
-and tertian ague is subject to Nature’s laws and governed by them, as
-well as any other bodies whatever.” The regularity of nature in the
-production of disease, no less than in the maintenance of health, cannot
-be doubted: but the point in question is not clearly one of those
-ultimate facts, into the reason of which it is wholly vain for the human
-mind to inquire.
-
-Hitherto, however, no one appears to have hazarded even a conjecture as
-to the cause of this striking difference between these two forms of
-disease; and pathology, as has just been observed, has afforded no clear
-light to enable us to determine whether the febrile circle of organs is
-similarly affected in both. Examinations of fatal cases have been made;
-but none on that large scale and with that accuracy which alone can
-render them of any value. I have endeavoured to ascertain the morbid
-appearances in the spinal cord and the brain, and in the mucous membrane
-of the respiratory and digestive apparatus, from those who have been
-long engaged in extensive practice in districts in which ague prevails:
-but I have been able to obtain no satisfactory answer, excepting that
-intermittent does not kill! Greatly as the severity of intermittent is
-without doubt diminished, in the present age, yet we cannot receive such
-an account without blessing the bark of the seventeenth and the skill of
-the nineteenth century!
-
-A similar want of knowledge exists relative to the condition of the
-organs in most of the Exanthemata. To supply that want in regard to the
-various forms of fever that prevail in this metropolis, which, there is
-good reason to believe, differ but little from the types that appear in
-other parts of the country, is one of the chief objects for which this
-work is undertaken.
-
-It is not the object of the present volume to treat of intermittent or
-of remittent fever, but only of that class which, in ordinary medical
-language, is termed continued. Of the apparently endless varieties of
-disease comprehended under the term continued fever, it is found that
-certain forms occur in this country with great constancy. Each
-particular assemblage of symptoms occurring in these different forms is
-said, in ordinary language, to constitute a type or species. Each type
-or species depends on a particular condition of the circle of organs
-that has been described. The causes that concur to produce this
-particular condition of this series of organs, will be treated of in
-their proper place. But these assemblages of symptoms never occur
-without being accompanied by these particular conditions of the organs;
-and these conditions of the organs are never found without having been
-connected with these assemblages of symptoms. In all the forms of fever
-hitherto observed this condition of the organs is found to be absolutely
-the same: it never differs in any thing but intensity; of this the
-evidence is complete and irresistible: the direct and legitimate
-inference is, that all these different forms of fever differ in nothing
-excepting in the intensity of the affection. Were the terms genera,
-species, variety, merely used as short expressions to denote this fact;
-to point out and to name different degrees of the same malady, degrees
-which it is important to discriminate, because they require material
-modifications of treatment, a clear and precise meaning would be affixed
-to these words: in nature there would be foundation for the distinction
-they imply: in practice there might be convenience in their use. But the
-nosological distinctions at present inseparably associated with these
-terms, appear to me to be either so vague and unmeaning, or when they
-cease to be indistinct, to excite notions so false and pernicious, that
-I think it right to abandon the use of them altogether. The more we
-investigate the subject, the more satisfied we shall become that
-continued fever is one disease and only one, however varied, or even
-opposite, the aspect it may present; but that it differs in intensity in
-every different case, and that this and this alone is the cause of the
-different forms it assumes. Many of these diversities it would be
-frivolous to distinguish: some of them, on the other hand, it is of the
-highest importance to discriminate. For all useful and practical
-purposes, it is necessary only to arrange the different assemblages of
-symptoms into two great classes, the one comprehending the mild and the
-other the severe forms of the disease. All the forms that continued
-fever can assume, and all the individual cases that can occur under
-either, must be mild or severe, and, therefore, must readily find its
-place under one or other of these divisions. The only real difference in
-the disease being a difference in degree, it is proper that the
-principle of the division, by which the varieties it presents are
-classified, should be founded on this, the only true distinction of
-which it admits.
-
-It is difficult to frame, and still more difficult to bring into use,
-new terms; and there is nearly equal inconvenience in using old terms in
-a new sense: but if the new meaning affixed to an old term be clearly
-intimated and rigidly adhered to, it is, perhaps, upon the whole,
-productive of less evil to adopt the old, thus determining and limiting
-the signification, than to propose a nomenclature entirely novel. For
-this reason, and only for this reason, I propose to adopt two words,
-borrowed from the nosology of Cullen, and in common use. These words are
-here employed merely to express differences of degree relative to one
-and the same disease. The mild degree may be denoted by the term
-synochus: throughout this work, this term will be used to express the
-milder form of fever; that is, its ordinary or common form, or that
-which it is found most frequently to present in this metropolis, and, I
-may add, in this country. The severer form, on the other hand, may be
-designated by the term typhus. Each will be found to present a distinct
-assemblage of symptoms; each will be found to depend upon a particular
-condition of certain organs; each will be found to require a peculiar
-treatment.
-
-For the purpose of distinguishing further important differences, that
-is, differences which bear an important relation to practice, it will be
-convenient to divide each of these two great classes into two minor
-sections. Thus, synochus may be divided into synochus mitior and
-synochus gravior; and typhus into typhus mitior and typhus gravior. This
-will afford convenient and ample means of throwing into distinct groups
-all the varieties of fever that occur in this country, which it can be
-of any practical importance to distinguish.
-
-This mode of viewing fever as one great and extensive malady never
-differing in nature, but in every two cases differing in intensity, and
-giving rise by these differences in intensity to various forms of
-disease, thus affords a principle of arrangement applicable to all those
-various forms, which, while it is at once simple and comprehensive, is
-at the same time in the highest degree practical. It directly leads the
-mind to the observation of the real, the important differences that
-exist or that may arise; those differences which must influence and
-guide the treatment, if it be not altogether blind, and in the worst
-sense of the term empirical. This principle might easily be extended,
-and I think with advantage, so as to comprehend the exanthemata, and all
-the forms of fever which have hitherto been known to exist, or which can
-arise. Scarlet fever, for example, is continued fever attended with a
-peculiar eruption upon the skin: at one time it occurs in a mild, at
-another in an exceedingly severe form: the assemblage of symptoms in the
-first are precisely those which it is intended to comprehend under the
-term synochus: the assemblage of symptoms in the second are those which
-are designated by the term typhus: thus scarlet fever exhibits at one
-time the synochoid, and at another the typhoid type; the first being
-what is commonly termed scarlatina benigna, the second scarlatina
-maligna; and each type is capable of existing in two degrees of
-severity, one of which may be conveniently distinguished by the term
-mitior, and the other by that of gravior.
-
-In like manner small-pox is a fever attended with a peculiar eruption
-upon the skin, which eruption modifies the disease in a very remarkable
-manner, and gives it a history and progress peculiarly its own; but it
-is as much a genuine fever as typhus, and ought no more to be taken out
-of this class on account of the eruption upon the skin, than scarlatina,
-which likewise modifies, in a very considerable degree, the whole train
-of febrile symptoms, and is attended with a peculiar condition of some
-exceedingly important internal organs. Small-pox, like all the diseases
-of this class, occurs in two widely different forms; the one mild, the
-other intensely severe: in the first the concourse of symptoms are
-precisely those of the synochoid, in the second of the typhoid type.[22]
-And the same I am satisfied is true of the plague, of the yellow fever,
-and of all the different forms which this great disease, of many aspects
-and names, but of one uniform and unchanging nature, presents.
-
-These distinctions and names then, though it were easy to raise
-objections against them, may serve for all useful and practical
-purposes. They tend to impress upon the mind the great fact that all the
-modifications of the disease are still only modifications, and do not
-affect the identity of its nature; and they afford convenient sections
-under which to detail the symptoms that attend and discriminate the
-important diversities in degree as they present themselves in practice;
-to exhibit the condition of the organs upon which those diversities
-depend, and to explain the treatment which experience teaches to be
-appropriate to these several states.
-
-The present work will be restricted to the consideration of the
-modifications of fever which we have proposed to designate by the terms
-synochus, typhus, and scarlatina.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- _Of Synochus: Division into Synochus Mitior and Gravior. Succession of
- Phenomena in Synochus Mitior. Indications afforded of Disease in the
- Nervous, Circulating, and Excreting Systems. Progress of Disease
- consisting in progressive Increase in the Derangement of these
- Functions. Phenomena of Recovery. On what the Transition of Synochus
- Mitior into Synochus Gravior depends. Classification according to
- the different Organs in which the several Affections have their
- Seat. Hence Synochus Gravior with Cerebral Affection—Subacute—Acute:
- with Thoracic Affection: with Abdominal Affection: with Mixed
- Affection._
-
-
-It has been stated that, for the purpose of forming into distinct groups
-certain assemblages of symptoms which it is important to distinguish,
-because they bear an important relation to practice, it will be
-convenient to divide the synochus, the term by which we propose to
-designate the common fever of this country, as it presents itself in its
-mild aspect, into two sections, namely, synochus mitior and synochus
-gravior. For reasons already assigned, it will likewise be important, in
-treating of these different modifications of fever, to notice in each
-both the phenomena which form the assemblage, and the order in which
-they succeed each other.
-
-On careful examination it will be found that the first symptom which
-denotes the commencement of the ordinary fever of this country, in its
-mildest form (synochus mitior), is a loss of mental energy. This is by
-no means the first symptom which attracts attention: it is commonly
-overlooked for some time, and excites little notice until it has become
-distressing. Patients in general are incapable of analyzing their
-sensations or of determining the order of their succession; but if
-medical men, who are but too subject to be attacked with this disease,
-will take the trouble to reflect on the order of events as they occurred
-to themselves, they will probably be satisfied, after the most attentive
-consideration, that the first indication of disease they felt was a want
-of power to conduct their ordinary mental operations with ease and
-vigour. Such at least, perhaps I may be permitted to mention, was the
-fact in my own case; for, having suffered a severe attack of fever, I
-have a distinct and vivid recollection of the dulness, confusion, and
-want of mental energy which I experienced for a considerable time before
-I was conscious of any corporeal debility.
-
-This affection of the mind consists particularly in indistinctness and
-consequent confusion in the trains of ideas; in inability to attend to
-their relations; and, as a necessary result, in the loss of power to
-think clearly. The individual feels that he is not in a state to form a
-sound judgment on any subject upon which he may be called to decide.
-
-Closely connected with this mental weakness is the loss of energy in the
-muscles of voluntary motion. Lassitude is the result. The patient cannot
-move with his usual vigour, nor even sit without the feeling of
-weariness. The debility thus seizing upon both body and mind, sometimes
-occurs in each so nearly simultaneously that, it must be owned, it is
-difficult to determine in which it appears first.
-
-The next symptom in the order of succession is still more
-characteristic: it consists in an uneasy sensation which is quite
-peculiar to this state of the system. No description can convey any idea
-of it to one who has not felt it; and to him who has felt it the word
-fever recalls this uneasy feeling so instantaneously and vividly that I
-apprehend most unprofessional persons conceive it is this very feeling
-that constitutes the essence of the disease. It is much more distressing
-than pain: the mere restlessness which accompanies and which forms so
-large a part of it, any one would gladly exchange for intense pain. In
-all diseases it is this which makes the sufferer on his midnight pillow
-exclaim, “oh! that it were morning!” and in the day, “would that it were
-night!” Though it is so frequent in its occurrence, and so peculiar in
-its nature, yet I am not aware that it has received any distinct name:
-it may be called, until a better is suggested, febrile uneasiness.
-
-It is seldom that these symptoms exist long before positive pain is
-felt. With very few exceptions pain is first felt in the back or loins
-and then in the limbs. It is rare that this symptom is absent in the
-commencement of this form of fever, and it often occasions more
-uneasiness to the patient than any thing else during the first stage of
-the disease.
-
-Already a remarkable change is commonly visible in the countenance. Its
-expression is that of dejection: it is often strikingly similar to that
-of a very weak person suffering from fatigue. The colour of the face is
-pallid, and the features are somewhat shrunk; but its general aspect is
-so peculiar and characteristic that an experienced eye can distinguish
-the disease even at this early period, and without asking a single
-question.
-
-The skin partakes in a remarkable degree of the debility which so early
-shows itself in the muscles of locomotion. This is indicated in a
-striking manner by its increased sensitiveness to the physical agents by
-which it is surrounded, and by its inability to resist their influence.
-Ordinary degrees of temperature produce a sensation of cold which is
-sometimes intolerable: chilliness is felt even in a heated room, or in a
-warm bed: hence the sensation of cold, sometimes increasing to
-shivering, which has been considered one of the most constant signs of
-fever. But this feeling of chilliness by no means depends on external
-temperature: it is increased by cold, but it exists in spite of an
-elevated temperature: it arises from an internal cause, and is not to be
-counteracted by external heat.
-
-While the patient experiences the sensation of cold, there is no
-diminution of the quantity of caloric in the system. The thermometer
-applied to any part of the body commonly rises as high as in the state
-of health, and the skin, touched by the hand of another person,
-communicates not the feeling of cold, but often, on the contrary, that
-of preternatural heat. There is no positive abstraction of caloric from
-the body nor any failure in the process, whatever it be, by which animal
-heat is generated; there is only altered sensation, in consequence of
-derangement in the function of the skin. In this form of fever, the
-chilliness in many cases never amounts to shivering; in others, there is
-an attack of well-marked rigor, and in others, again, there is either no
-feeling of cold, or it is so slight that it escapes observation.
-
-The symptoms now enumerated are all clearly referrible to derangement of
-the function of the spinal cord and brain. There is as yet no affection
-of any other organ obviously or, at least, much developed. The
-circulating system, it is true, is just beginning to be affected. The
-pulse is no longer perfectly natural. It is more languid than in the
-state of health; sometimes it is also quicker: at other times it is
-slower; now and then it is scarcely changed in frequency, but its action
-is invariably weaker than in its sound state.
-
-At the same time the respiration is affected in a corresponding degree:
-it is shorter and quicker than natural; the chest does not expand so
-freely, and compensation seems to be sought in an additional number of
-respirations. Oftentimes neither the pulse nor the respiration appears
-to be much altered, if the patient remain perfectly still; but if he
-rise and walk across the room, the pulse instantly becomes rapid, and
-the respiration is quickened almost to panting.
-
-The transition from the affection of the nervous and sensorial to that
-of the circulating and the respiratory systems is thus clear and
-striking. Physiology teaches us how closely these systems are connected,
-and how mutually they are dependent one upon the other, the closest
-observers and the ablest experimentalists candidly confessing that they
-are scarcely able to determine which is the least dependent, or the
-action of which is the least necessary to the others performance of its
-functions. The nervous system being first deranged, it is thus consonant
-to what we know of the healthy function of the animal economy, that the
-circulating and the respiratory systems should be the next to suffer.
-
-How long the nervous system may continue thus deranged, before any other
-organs are involved, excepting the circulating and the respiratory, to
-the extent just stated, is uncertain. There can be no doubt that in this
-mild form of fever, the range of the duration of this isolated state of
-disorder, if we may so express it, is from a few hours to several days.
-The rapidity or the slowness with which other systems of organs become
-involved seems to depend very much upon the acuteness of the attack. In
-general, the more acute the fever, the more rapidly the individual
-phenomena succeed each other, and the entire series becomes complete.
-But this is not, and it is important to bear in mind that it is not
-invariably the case: for experience teaches us that the severity and
-danger of the disease are not diminished by the slowness of its
-approach; and that cases occur, which are slow in forming, and which do
-not for awhile excite alarm, that ultimately become truly formidable.
-
-It has been stated that the circulation languishes with the diminished
-energy in the sensorial faculties, and the loss of power in the muscles
-of locomotion. After awhile, the pulse which was feebler than natural
-becomes more full, more strong, and generally more quick than in a sound
-state; and now the skin, which was cold, becomes preternaturally hot.
-The previous cold consisted, for the most part, of altered sensation,
-there being little or no loss of caloric: but the feeling of heat, on
-the contrary, is the result of an actual increase of temperature; for
-the heat in the interior of the body, as well as on the surface, rises
-in some cases several degrees, as is ascertained by the thermometer; the
-range of increase being from the natural standard 98° to 105°, beyond
-which it is seldom found to augment in this form of fever. The heat is
-at first not uniform over the entire surface of the body: it often
-happens that some parts are cold while others are burning hot. The heat
-is oftentimes particularly intense over the forehead, or over the back
-part of the head, or over the whole scalp, while the cheeks are commonly
-flushed. All these symptoms denote a morbid condition in the action of
-the heart and arteries. Since the generation of animal heat is so
-intimately connected with the circulating and the respiratory functions,
-it is probable that the increase of temperature is the result of some
-morbid action of the capillary vessels belonging to these systems. What
-the disordered action of these vessels is, which produces increase of
-temperature, we do not know, because we do not know what their natural
-action is which produces the temperature of health: but the object of
-scientific observation is in some degree accomplished, when it is
-ascertained that one condition of these functions is invariably
-connected with a morbidly-diminished temperature; another with a
-morbidly-augmented temperature; and another with the temperature of
-health.
-
-Immediately the circulation is thus excited, the functions of secretion
-and excretion become deranged. The mouth is now dry and parched; the
-tongue begins to be covered with fur; thirst comes on; the secretion of
-the liver, probably also of the pancreas, and certainly of the mucous
-membrane lining the whole alimentary canal, is vitiated, as is proved by
-the unnatural quantity, colour, and fetor of the evacuations; the urine
-likewise is altered in appearance, and the skin is not more remarkable
-for the sense of heat, than for that of dryness and harshness which it
-communicates to the touch. With the excitement of the pulse and the
-increase of the heat, the pain in the back and limbs and the general
-febrile uneasiness are much augmented.
-
-At this period, then, the fever is fully formed; the series of morbid
-phenomena is complete: any thing more that happens is referrible to
-degree and to duration, and must be the result of one or other of these
-circumstances, or of their combined operation. And we now see that the
-organs affected, constitute precisely that system of organs which has
-been described as forming the febrile circle: that the symptoms which
-denote the fever are just the symptoms which indicate a derangement in
-the several functions performed by these organs; and that the order in
-which they become successively involved is exactly that which has been
-assigned.
-
-As soon as the preternatural heat comes on, pain begins to be felt in
-the head. Dr. Clutterbuck, in describing the general character of the
-ordinary fever of London states[23] that “the _first_ symptom almost
-invariably complained of is more or less of uneasiness of the head.” If
-by uneasiness he meant pain, there is, if there be any truth in the
-preceding observations, a long train of symptoms to intervene before
-this symptom occurs. That it does ultimately occur is certain: but
-commonly its place in the series is much later than is here assigned: it
-is disordered function of the brain, indicated by loss of mental energy,
-that appears to form the first symptom in this morbid train.
-
-The pain, when it does come, is sometimes slight at first, and
-occasionally it remains slight throughout the disease; at other times it
-is pretty severe. Cases sometimes occur, in which, instead of pain,
-there is only a sense of giddiness, and now and then the uneasy feeling
-is described as that of lightness: or, on the contrary, as that of
-heaviness or weight. But whether the feeling be pain, and that pain be
-slight or severe, or whether it be giddiness, or lightness, or
-heaviness, it indicates a similar condition of the organ, and requires a
-similar treatment.
-
-With the accession of pain of the head there is a manifest increase in
-the disturbance of the sensorial functions. The inability to think, to
-compare, to reason, to judge, great as it was at the commencement, is
-now much greater. Instead of being more dull, there are certain states
-of the mind which now become more acute and vigilant even than in
-health. Sensation itself, at this period, is invariably acuter than
-natural, as is indicated in all the organs of sense. The eye cannot well
-bear the light: there are few cases in which the full glare of day does
-not excite uneasiness, while in many the ordinary light of a room cannot
-be borne: in these cases the opening between the eye-lids is frequently
-observed to be contracted, as if from an involuntary effort to exclude a
-portion of that stimulus which in health excites no inconvenience, and
-this state of the eye-lids assists in giving to the eye its dull and
-heavy expression, so characteristic of fever. The increase of
-sensibility in the organ of hearing is equally striking. Sounds which
-were not noticed during health become acutely and even distressingly
-sensible, while accustomed noises, such as that of a crowded street, are
-always painful and often intolerable. The skin, considered as an organ
-of touch, is in a like morbid state. An impression barely sufficient in
-the state of health to produce sensation excites the feeling of
-tenderness, and alternations of temperature, which in ordinary states
-are scarcely perceptible, are painful. The senses of taste and smell, on
-the contrary, are nearly obliterated, owing to the altered condition of
-the membranes upon which the sensitive nerves are distributed.
-
-From the earliest attack of the disease the sleep is disturbed and
-unrefreshing; now scarcely any is obtained; the febrile uneasiness will
-not allow of repose; the patient cannot remain in any position long,
-incessantly shifting his place, never eluding his pain. At this stage
-the sense of uneasiness in the limbs, oftentimes the severity of the
-pain over the whole body, is peculiarly distressing.
-
-With this progressive increase in the affection of the spinal cord and
-the brain, the derangement in the circulating system is proportionally
-augmented. The pulse is invariably altered, both in frequency and
-character. Generally it rises to 90, sometimes to 100; but in this form
-of fever it seldom exceeds this number; and occasionally it never rises
-above 80. The stroke of the pulse is usually stronger and fuller than
-natural, though it commonly retains its softness, and does not impress
-the finger with that sensation of sharpness which is characteristic of
-ordinary inflammation. Occasionally, however, a degree of sharpness may
-be perceived in it, and it is not easily compressed.
-
-The thin white fur which already had begun to appear on the tongue
-progressively increases in extent and thickness. The colour of the fur
-usually changes, as the disease advances, from a dirty-white to an
-ash-colour; but in this form of the disease the tongue always remains
-moist, and never becomes brown. This state of the tongue is almost
-always accompanied with thirst, but it is never urgent. There is always
-a loss of appetite. The bowels are generally constipated, and the
-secretions of the whole alimentary canal are vitiated.
-
-Thus we perceive that the progress of the disease consists in increasing
-mental and corporeal weakness; increasing pain in the back, loins, and
-limbs; increasing heat of skin, acceleration of pulse, and general
-febrile uneasiness, together with the occurrence of pain in the head,
-and progressive derangement in the functions of secretion and excretion.
-
-The fever in this mild form is now at its height. It remains stationary,
-or at least with very little change for an indefinite period, generally
-for some days. The cerebral affection does not increase beyond what has
-been described: there are no greater indications of disease in the
-respiratory organs, and the mucous membrane of the stomach and
-intestines does not denote any progressive advancement in disease.
-
-One of the most remarkable circumstances connected with the ordinary
-fever of this country, in the present day, is the uninterrupted and
-perfect continuity of its phenomena. As long as the febrile state
-remains, nothing deserving the name of a remission is in general to be
-perceived. Occasionally, it is true, a slight increase in the symptoms
-may be observed towards evening, especially in the heat of the skin; but
-even this is not common, and it is scarcely ever great enough to deserve
-the distinction of being called an exacerbation. Much less is there any
-regularity in the accession and decline of such excitement. In the great
-majority of cases not the slightest approach to an exacerbation and a
-remission can be distinguished from the commencement to the termination
-of the disease. Yet the older writers speak of these events as if they
-were as palpable as the paroxysms of intermittent and as constant as the
-return of morning and evening. There cannot therefore be a doubt that
-the character of the ordinary fever of this metropolis is greatly
-changed from the character of that which prevailed two centuries ago;
-and the circumstances which have contributed to produce this change will
-be considered hereafter.
-
-In the great majority of patients in whom the symptoms continue thus
-moderate, the disease disappears about the end of the second week; that
-is, they are convalescent at that period; but it usually requires eight
-or ten days longer before they have regained sufficient strength to
-leave the hospital. Sometimes, although there is no greater severity in
-the symptoms, the disease is more protracted, and the recovery is not
-complete until the fourth or even the fifth week. Beyond this period it
-is very rare for this form of the disease to be protracted.
-
-Almost all who are attacked with the malady in this, its mildest form,
-recover: but now and then it happens that the symptoms go on with this
-degree of moderation until about the end of the second week. Then at the
-period when it is usual for convalescence to take place there is no
-perceptible improvement; the patients seem even to grow weaker; they lie
-more prostrate in the bed, and they are soon incapable of moving; still
-they complain of no pain or uneasiness, and it is not easy to detect any
-trace of disease in any organ; yet it is but too evident that they grow
-worse, and ultimately they sink exhausted. In these cases, on
-examination after death, it is commonly found that disease has been
-preying on some vital organs, although its presence could not be
-detected during life; and this termination of the milder type of fever
-rarely happens, excepting in aged persons, whose constitutions have been
-enfeebled by previous diseases, or worn out by the various causes which
-depress and exhaust the powers of life.
-
-With an occasional exception of this kind the disease in this form
-always terminates favourably; and the first indication of returning
-health is remarkably uniform: it is almost always marked by longer and
-more tranquil sleep. Instead of that restlessness which is so
-characteristic of fever, and which forms the most distressing part of
-it, the patient is observed to lie more still, and on waking for the
-first time from an undisturbed slumber, he often spontaneously says that
-he feels better. Better he may well feel, for his febrile uneasiness is
-gone; the load that oppressed him is shaken off; he is a new being. The
-pain of the head and of the limbs is so much diminished that often he
-cannot help expressing his thankfulness at the change. The countenance
-becomes more animated; its natural expression returns; the tongue begins
-to clean; and after this state of the system has continued for two or
-three days, the appetite returns. While these favourable changes are
-going on, the pulse usually sinks about ten beats below its highest
-point at the height of the fever; it is not uncommon, however, for it to
-remain quick during the entire period of convalescence; and for some
-considerable time it is easily excited on any movement of the body, or
-any emotion of mind. In some cases, on the contrary, when the attack has
-been very mild, it sinks considerably below the natural standard, and is
-intermittent, a sign which I have uniformly observed to be attended with
-a sure and steady convalescence. In the mean time the appetite becomes
-keener than natural; the strength gradually improves; and in a short
-time the patient is restored to his usual health and vigour.
-
-What the condition of the brain and of the organs correlatively affected
-is, in these the mildest cases, we do not positively know, because we
-have no opportunity of inspecting them, their favourable termination
-being nearly without exception. But the more all the phenomena are
-considered in their entire series, in the order of their succession, in
-the uniformity, nay, even in the exclusiveness of their seat, as well as
-in the unchanging sameness of their effects, the more clear the evidence
-will appear of the soundness of the induction, that the condition of all
-the organs in all the types of fever is the same in nature, although
-there be no two cases of any type perfectly the same either in the
-degree of the affection or in the stage of the morbid process which it
-excites. If this induction be really just, we must conceive that, in the
-synochus mitior, while the morbid affection of the organs is slight, the
-diseased process which it sets up in them stops before it produces any
-change in their structure.
-
-However this may be, and to leave for the present all matter of
-inference, and to keep strictly to the matter of fact, we do positively
-know that the mild forms of fever become severe in consequence of the
-supervention of inflammation in certain organs. Perfectly unknown as the
-nature of the primitive febrile affection at present is, yet that in the
-progress of the disease it does ultimately pass into inflammation is a
-fact, the evidence of which it is impossible to resist; although the
-same observation which teaches us this most important truth, teaches us
-also that the inflammatory action is always considerably modified by the
-febrile state. How it is so modified, and to what extent, we shall
-consider hereafter. I have spent much consideration and some labour in
-the effort to combine the symptoms which attend these severer forms of
-the disease with the ascertained conditions of the organs upon which
-such symptoms depend. But since it is of paramount importance that the
-events which actually take place should be known, and that the order in
-which they succeed each other should be stated with clearness and
-exactness; and since I have been able by no method that I could think of
-to combine the pathology with the history without breaking too much the
-continuity of the latter, I have been under the necessity of separating
-these two most intimately connected subjects, and of treating of them
-under distinct sections. In giving the history of the events, I have
-detailed them strictly, as far as I am acquainted with them, in the
-order in which they occur: and I have endeavoured to arrange the cases
-that constitute the pathology in such a manner, that they shall closely
-correspond to these events, and clearly illustrate the order of their
-succession. If I have succeeded according to my wish, the reader in
-studying the cases will be reminded, as he proceeds, of the successive
-stages of the history, and if he again revert to the history, after
-having studied the pathology, he will be reminded of the morbid
-appearances in the organs which are there described. To afford a clear
-perception of the connexion between the successive events, as indicated
-by the symptoms during life, and the progressive changes of structure in
-various organs, as demonstrated by inspection after death; and thus to
-establish a strong and indissoluble association in the mind between the
-morbid condition and its sign, are the objects at which I have aimed. If
-I have succeeded, I shall have accomplished one of the chief objects of
-my undertaking.
-
-The transition of a mild case of fever into a severe one, or the
-progress of a case severe from the commencement, is accompanied with, or
-depends upon, as will abundantly appear hereafter, certain changes that
-take place in certain organs. These changes occur with great regularity;
-the organs in which they take place are always the same; and the
-symptoms by which they are denoted are uniform. The organs affected are
-the spinal cord, the brain, the membranes of both, the mucous membrane
-of the lungs, and the mucous membrane of the intestines. For the reason
-just assigned the nature of these affections cannot be described in this
-place, but must be postponed to that part of the work which treats of
-the pathology. Since however the symptoms are nothing but the signs of
-these conditions, and the history of the succession of the former, is
-nothing but an account of the indications of the successive changes that
-take place in the latter, all the important symptoms must necessarily
-have their seat in the head, in the thorax, and in the abdomen. Mixed
-and blended as they appear in the different cases which the practitioner
-is called upon to treat, nothing can appear more complex or more
-variable: when analyzed, nothing is more remarkable than their
-simplicity and their uniformity. In order to perform that analysis with
-exactness, and to render it really instructive, these symptoms must be
-contemplated as they arise in the affected organs. These organs, as we
-have seen, are the cerebral, the thoracic, and the abdominal; the
-symptoms therefore divide themselves into cerebral, thoracic, and
-abdominal: there is, indeed, a fourth order, in which all the organs
-appear to be equally involved; in which the general affection is
-intense, and which therefore may be appropriately termed mixed. We shall
-see that cases of this kind constitute by far the most dangerous form of
-the disease.
-
-
- I. SYNOCHUS GRAVIOR WITH CEREBRAL AFFECTION,
-
-occurs under two degrees of intensity: when the cerebral affection is
-moderate, it may be termed subacute; when great, acute.
-
-1. _Synochus with Subacute Cerebral Affection_, may be attended for
-several days with no symptom which has not been already enumerated in
-the account of the mildest form of the disease. The accession is the
-same as in synochus mitior: the progress up to a certain period is also
-the same. But at the time when the pain of the head diminishes in the
-latter, it increases in the former. Still the pain is often not severe.
-He who looks for intense pain, and suspects no cerebral affection,
-unless accompanied with this symptom, will be surprised by what will
-appear to him the sudden occurrence of new symptoms, such as are
-immediately to be stated, which will at length open his eyes to the
-danger of the case, and excite his wonder, which it is not unfrequent to
-hear expressed, that an affection hitherto so mild, should, without any
-previous warning, become so formidable, and show but too manifestly that
-it is beyond control, and will certainly proceed to a fatal termination.
-The warning was given, but the sign was not understood. The descriptions
-of disease are commonly taken from its most acute form; and it was long
-the practice to derive them from this form alone, and the consequences
-were truly fatal. Even with the best care that can be taken in drawing
-up the history, these descriptions are exceedingly apt to become ideal,
-and not real entities: to consist of a collection of all the
-circumstances that exist in all cases, and not of that particular
-combination only which is found in any one case: and thus to be not the
-portrait of any individual, but a fancy picture bearing a general
-resemblance to all individuals without being the true likeness of any.
-The consequence is, that at the bed-side of the sick the original from
-which the picture is supposed to be taken is not to be seen, and the
-practitioner remains in doubt, if he do not fall into error. Error
-serious and fatal many have fallen into, and, on this very account,
-still continue to fall into, with regard to the existence of cerebral
-disease in fever. Abundant evidence will be given in the pathology, that
-it is not uncommon for the most unequivocal and extensive changes of
-structure to take place in the brain and its membranes without severe
-pain having ever been felt. Pain, however, though it be not great, is
-almost always present. It is seldom that the pain extends over the whole
-head; the patient generally points to some particular part where it is
-peculiarly felt. In the majority of cases the seat of the pain is either
-in the forehead, or at the temples, or over the eyes; but occasionally
-it is in the occiput, and extends down the neck, and in these instances
-it is often severe between the shoulders.
-
-Now and then no pain whatever is felt. Question the patient as much as
-you please, and he will tell you that he never has felt any pain. In
-this case giddiness is the substitute. Giddiness in the commencement,
-and in the early stage of fever, is as certain a sign of cerebral
-affection as pain. Striking illustrations of this are afforded by
-several cases detailed in the pathology; by consulting which, the reader
-will see that precisely the same morbid changes take place in the
-structure of the brain, although nothing but giddiness be complained of,
-as occur in those which are attended with the acutest pain. The
-practitioner will therefore fall into a fatal error who is seduced into
-security because pain is absent; and who neglects the remedies proper
-for inflammation of the brain, because the patient complains only of
-giddiness. If giddiness be combined with pain, or alternate with it,
-which is not uncommon, the giddiness being slight if the pain be severe,
-and the pain being slight if the giddiness be distressing, it indicates
-a more severe affection than if either exist alone.
-
-2. In the majority of cases, as long as the pain continues, the heat of
-the skin remains considerably above the natural standard. But often the
-heat over the general surface of the body is not great. Commonly,
-however, it is hotter than natural over the head, and it is hottest
-wherever the seat of the pain be fixed: so that the contrast is often
-striking between the temperature over the forehead or at the occiput,
-and the heat of the body in general.
-
-3. The dull and heavy expression of the eye is greater than in the
-milder form of fever. The conjunctiva generally becomes brighter and
-more glistening than natural: though instead of this the vessels are
-often more numerous and more turgid than usual, and give it the
-appearance which is termed “muddled.” The eye at the same time is
-commonly preternaturally sensible, and cannot bear a strong light,
-although sometimes no complaint is made if the curtains of the bed be
-withdrawn, or the window-blind be drawn up.
-
-4. There is usually a corresponding increase in the general sensibility;
-and what is remarkable, this is quite as much indicated by the increased
-sensibility to sound as to light. A loud noise is invariably distressing
-to the patient, and a continuance of it greatly aggravates all the
-symptoms. Exposure to a glare of light and a loud noise, would alone
-rapidly change a slight into the severest cerebral affection.
-
-The expression of the countenance is now very peculiar: it cannot be
-described, but the experienced eye can seldom fail to recognize it. It
-is indicative of suffering without the strength to bear it: it is not
-anxious; that expression does not come on until a later period. The face
-is sometimes flushed, but it is often pallid, which does but add to the
-peculiar character of its expression.
-
-5. As long as the pain of the head, the giddiness, and the increased
-sensibility continue, there is invariably a want of sleep. The degree of
-sleeplessness is not always in proportion to the head-ache or to the
-other symptoms; but while the latter are present, the former is never
-absent. That condition of the brain upon which sleep depends appears to
-be easily disturbed by a great variety of causes; but whatever be
-capable of affrighting this heavenly visitant, “tired Nature’s sweet
-restorer,” whether in the mansion, the palace, or the prison, and
-whether from the bed of healthful slumber or from the couch of sickness,
-nothing so effectually and so constantly banishes it as that febrile
-uneasiness of which we have already spoken; and which, instead of
-declining, as in the milder form of fever, now increases in strength and
-activity, and will scarcely allow the restless body to remain in one
-position for a moment. He who has felt its influence in this stage and
-degree of fever, will admit that there is nothing comparable to the
-wretchedness it produces, except it be the sweetness of the first waking
-moment after the first tranquil slumber of returning health.
-
-6. And now, sometimes closing this train of symptoms, but more
-frequently being the first harbinger of another, delirium appears.
-Delirium is usually first observed when any slight sound rouses the
-patient from that disturbed slumber which is the only substitute allowed
-for sleep. The delirium is seldom violent or long-continued, but, when
-present, is like the talking of a person during sleep in a disturbed
-dream. This symptom, however, is by no means invariably present, and
-when it does come, it often postpones its visit to a somewhat later
-period.
-
-7. The pulse, during all this time, may not be much quicker than in the
-mild form; and the state of the tongue and of the evacuations does not
-materially differ.
-
-Such is the train of symptoms when the brain becomes prominently
-affected. These symptoms continue without intermission, and with little
-change, for several days. The period of their duration, when only in
-this degree of violence, is commonly from eight to ten days: when their
-character is still milder or more subacute, or when they have been
-mitigated by appropriate remedies, it may be protracted fifteen days.
-
-About this period a remarkable change takes place; an entirely new train
-of symptoms supervenes, which is different, and which, indeed, presents
-a striking contrast, according as the patient is destined for life or
-death.
-
-If it be for life, that sleep, of the long absence of which we have
-already spoken, returns; and nothing can more truly express its
-character than its familiar name, “balmy;” and healing is its influence.
-From two or three hours of such slumber, the patient awakens a new
-being. Not that the change is at first striking to an inexperienced eye;
-but there is no fever nurse who does not recognize it in a moment, and
-it is not long before the patient tells you that he feels it. The
-febrile uneasiness is now much diminished: the headache is greatly
-relieved; and the skin is cooler and softer. The pulse may not yet be
-altered, or it may be a few beats slower than before, but there is
-almost always already an improved appearance in the tongue, which shews
-a beginning disposition to clean. These favourable changes gradually
-increase. If the sleep the next night be longer and more refreshing,
-which it generally is, on the following morning a decided improvement is
-visible in the countenance. The eye is clearer and more lively, and the
-expression of the countenance is more natural. The skin continues cooler
-and softer; the tongue is still cleaner, and the pulse, perhaps, slower
-by a beat or two; and from this period, if no untoward event happen, the
-convalescence proceeds just as has been described in the return of
-health in the milder form of fever.
-
-If, on the contrary, the case proceed unfavourably, a totally new train
-of symptoms at this period sets in.
-
-1. In the first place, the pain of the head obviously, and sometimes
-strikingly, diminishes. Often it disappears altogether, or, if any
-uneasiness remain, it is rather a sense of dullness and heaviness than
-pain. In like manner the giddiness, if that were urgent, is no longer
-perceptible: but it is remarkable that the pain in the back and loins
-not unfrequently continues for some time after the headache has
-disappeared: but, ultimately, that also ceases. The period at which this
-important change takes place depends upon the severity of the attack,
-and is materially influenced by the activity or inertness of the
-treatment. In the subacute form, it usually takes place about the tenth
-day from the commencement of the disease.
-
-2. Simultaneously with the disappearance of the head-ache, there is a
-remarkable diminution of the sensibility. The mind is duller and more
-heavy. The patient may still be roused to answer with tolerable
-coherence if spoken to; but when left to himself he is confused and
-stupid. The eyes now become injected: often suffused; and the heaviness
-and dullness of their expression is increased.
-
-3. It is at this time that delirium, if it appear at all, most commonly
-comes on. The increasing insensibility, if not attended with decided
-delirium, is almost always accompanied with moaning or incoherent
-muttering, especially during the short and interrupted slumbers which
-form the substitute for sleep.
-
-4. Striking as these changes are in the functions of the spinal cord and
-brain, those which take place in the number and character of the pulse
-are no less important. Even in cases the most decidedly subacute, it is
-seldom that it does not rise ten beats, so that if before it were 90, it
-will now be 100, and it is always weaker.
-
-5. Now, too, signs of disease in the chest and abdomen are almost always
-to be distinguished. A case purely cerebral, from the commencement to
-the termination of the disease, is rarely to be met with. If there be
-not cough, there is almost always a short and hurried respiration, and
-more or fewer of the indications of abdominal affection hereafter to be
-stated. Even in cases the most purely cerebral the tongue always becomes
-more loaded and often dry; and it is strikingly characteristic of the
-state of the nervous system, that while the tongue becomes dry, the
-thirst diminishes.
-
-Thus far it is possible that the disease may proceed towards a fatal
-termination without proving mortal. It is not often that its course is
-turned back or stayed after it has made this progress; but still such an
-event is sometimes witnessed. When it does occur, the amendment, both in
-its origin and progress, is very similar to that of the favourable
-change which has already been described. More tranquil and
-longer-continued sleep is almost always the earliest sign that, in this
-severe struggle, life has obtained the victory. If, on awaking from such
-sleep, there be less delirium, were delirium present, or greater
-tranquillity, were the restlessness urgent; and if there be _any_
-increase, although slight, in the sensibility, or any improvement in the
-expression of the countenance, hope may be entertained that that victory
-will be won; and hope may become assurance, if the tongue which had been
-loaded become clean at the edges, or the dry tongue become moist. Even
-under apparently the most desperate circumstances, if these three
-symptoms concur, a favourable prognosis may be pronounced with tolerable
-certainty. Two or three days _may_ elapse after their occurrence, before
-any remarkable change is observable in the pulse; but it is seldom that
-they continue twenty-four hours before the pulse falls at least ten
-beats. Now and then, on leaving a patient in the evening with a pulse at
-120, we are surprised and delighted to find it in the morning as low as
-100. When the pulse has thus fallen towards the natural standard, when
-the tongue has begun to clean, and when the skin has become cool and
-soft, however desperate his condition but a few days before, the patient
-may be said to be convalescent.
-
-But though this favourable change is sometimes witnessed, yet, from the
-point at which we left off the description of the progress to a fatal
-termination, the too common history is, increasing restlessness and
-sleeplessness; insensibility lapsing into coma; further acceleration of
-the pulse; greater dryness of the tongue and decreasing strength, until,
-at length, the powers of life receiving less and less supply from the
-great systems in which they have their seat, become completely
-exhausted.
-
-Those who have been placed in situations which have afforded them
-opportunities of witnessing much of the disease will, I trust,
-acknowledge that the account now given is an accurate narrative of the
-symptoms that occur, and of the order in which they succeed, in the
-great majority of cases. Upon what conditions of what organs they depend
-will be illustrated in the pathology.
-
-Sometimes to these, other trains of symptoms are added—namely, muscular
-tremor, frequent and sudden screaming; rolling of the head upon the
-pillow; constant tossing of the hands about; picking at the bed-clothes
-or other surrounding objects; partial paralysis of the upper eyelid, so
-that one or both of the eyes remain half or almost wholly closed; the
-ball of the eye unsteady or constantly rolling; the expression of the
-eye and countenance at one time wild and anxious, at another fatuous;
-squinting; the respiration now slow and laborious, now exceedingly
-rapid; the pulse either slow, full and regular, or slow and
-intermittent, or so quick that it cannot be counted, or these states
-succeeding each other or alternating with each other at short intervals;
-convulsions; involuntary and unconscious stools—all these symptoms are
-never found combined in any one case; but certain assemblages of them
-occur with some degree of constancy, and depend upon certain conditions
-of the brain and spinal cord. Since, however, the description of these
-conditions cannot be given here, the further account of the signs which
-denote them must be postponed until we treat of the pathology of the
-disease.
-
-2. _Synochus Gravior with Acute Cerebral Affection._—Such is the history
-of the synochus gravior with cerebral affection in its subacute form.
-When its attack is the most acute, the history is precisely the same,
-excepting that the symptoms are more severe, and their progress quicker.
-The head-ache is much more intense; the giddiness is more violent; the
-sensibility is excessive; the least noise is intolerable; the slightest
-motion either of the head or of the body aggravates all the symptoms;
-the eye is muddy, and very soon becomes injected, and is perfectly
-intolerant of light; the pain in the back, loins, and limbs, is nearly
-as great as it is in the head. The skin is intensely hot, and sometimes
-impresses the hand with the sense of pungency; but though every where
-thus hot and dry, its temperature is peculiarly great over the scalp, so
-that if the head be shaved, and wet clothes applied, they are quite dry
-in a minute or two. The febrile uneasiness is excessive; the patient can
-scarcely remain a moment in the same posture, and he is wholly without
-sleep. The pulse at one time is strong, full, bounding, and not easily
-compressed, but even in this acute form it is almost always soft; at
-least it is very different from the hardness characteristic of an acute
-attack of pure phrenitis; at another time it is oppressed, the stroke
-giving an impression directly opposite to that produced by the free and
-bounding pulse.
-
-But one of the most remarkable modifications of the pulse, one that is
-characteristic of an exceedingly acute attack of cerebral disease, and
-one with the import of which it is of the highest consequence to the
-life of the patient that the practitioner should be perfectly acquainted
-the moment he meets with it, is the slow and intermitting pulse.
-Whenever, in the onset of fever, a patient is found with intense
-head-ache or intense pain in the back and loins, and _a slow pulse_, the
-physician ought to be greatly alarmed at the severity of the symptoms
-that are to follow, and if he do not take the most active measures to
-break the violence of the disease at this early period, it will be
-beyond all control in a day or two, and the patient will be dead before
-the fever is well formed in milder cases. The affection of the brain is
-sometimes so violent and sudden that the pulse is not only slow, but
-intermitting, and the respiration is suspirious. Frequent and deep
-sighing is not uncommon in severe cerebral cases, and it is highly
-characteristic of intense cerebral affection; but in such a violent
-attack as that of which we are now speaking, the suspirious breathing,
-even in the very commencement of the disease, is so great that it cannot
-be overlooked. This happened in the case of my friend Dr. Dill, whom I
-saw a few hours after the commencement of an attack of one of these
-intense forms of fever. I saw him in the afternoon at a public meeting.
-I met him an hour afterwards at his own apartment. He was still going
-about engaged in his ordinary occupations; but his countenance was pale
-as death; his eye was dull and heavy; his mind was confused, and as it
-seemed to him paralysed; he had other sensations, which were new to him,
-and which were most distressing; _but he had no pain_: at that time
-there was not the slightest pain either in his head or his back or
-loins: there was only that general and undefined uneasiness which gave
-to him sufficient warning of what was coming, as the slow and labouring
-pulse, coupled with the uneasy sensations of which he complained, and
-the peculiar aspect of his countenance, afforded to me an abundant
-confirmation that his apprehensions were just. He was bled immediately
-to the extent of twenty ounces: the blood then drawn was not sizy: he
-passed a wretched night. I saw him early the following morning: he had
-now intense headache; his eye was already injected; his skin was not hot
-but burning; his respiration was suspirious; almost every breath was a
-sigh, and his pulse was _still slower_ than on the preceding evening,
-and was now _intermittent_: blood being drawn to a large extent, the
-crassamentum was now buffed and cupped; but the detail of the progress
-of this instructive case must be postponed until we speak of the
-treatment of fever, because it is still more illustrative of the effects
-produced by the vigorous application of the appropriate remedies than of
-the peculiarity of the symptoms which usher in the attack. It may
-suffice for the present to observe that this case affords not only a
-striking example of the concurrence of these peculiar symptoms, but also
-a decisive proof that pain of the head is far from being the _first_
-symptom that occurs even in the most intense cerebral attack.
-
-In these acute forms of the disease, if the proper remedies be not
-vigorously employed, the pain ceases _within the fourth day_; it rarely
-extends beyond the fifth; the pain passes into insensibility; delirium
-comes on, sometimes so violent as to require restraint, but delirium is
-by no means an invariable concomitant of the other symptoms, even when
-these are the most violent: when it is present it is almost always
-rapidly followed by muscular tremors, and these by subsultus tendinum,
-which now and then usher in general convulsions; but this last event is
-rare, and I have never yet seen convulsions unaccompanied with a
-particular condition of the brain hereafter to be described. Sometimes
-the muscular tremors succeed immediately to the transition of the pain
-into insensibility, while the insensibility rapidly increases to stupor,
-and that to profound coma. The breathing is occasionally as stertorous
-as it is in apoplexy, but this is also rare, and when it does occur, is
-probably dependent on a peculiar condition of the brain hereafter to be
-pointed out. Together with these there is a concurrence of a greater or
-a lesser number of the symptoms enumerated at page 107, but the
-particular combinations that are found most usually to accompany
-particular conditions of the brain, it will be most instructive to state
-in connexion with the pathology.
-
-In synochus with acute cerebral disease there is less indication of
-thoracic and abdominal affection than in the subacute form, because the
-intensity of the cerebral disease obscures the signs of derangement in
-the other organs; but the signs of their derangement are never absent,
-although they are less obtrusive, and they trace in indelible characters
-proofs of their activity in the ravages they commit upon their
-structures in which they have their seat.
-
-Such is the course of synochus under different degrees of violence. When
-it is combined with subacute cerebral affection, that course is usually
-terminated in from three to six weeks; when with acute cerebral
-affection, in from seven to ten days.
-
-As an illustration of each form of the disease, as it is commonly met
-with in practice, I subjoin the following cases.
-
-
- CASE I.
-
-JOHN COLEBERT, æt. 28, admitted into the Fever Hospital August 1, 1828.
-
-Attacked five days ago with chilliness, alternating with heat, pains of
-limbs, head-ache, and sense of weakness. At present complains of pain of
-head, with slight giddiness; pains of limbs, especially of back and
-lower extremities; skin moderately warm; tongue loaded with white fur;
-much thirst; three stools; respiration natural; no cough, no uneasiness
-in chest; no epigastric or abdominal tenderness on full pressure; pulse
-96, soft.
-
-6th. Skin natural; pain of head gone; pain of back and limbs continues;
-slept better; tongue more clean; three stools; pulse 102.
-
-7th. Pain of head not returned; pain of limbs better; tongue still
-cleaning; three stools; pulse 96.
-
-9th. Pain of limbs gone; tongue nearly clean; two stools; pulse 84.
-
-10th. Convalescent.
-
-13th. Dismissed cured.
-
-
- CASE II.
-
-GEORGE WALKER, aged 17. Admitted May 5th, 1828.
-
-Six days ago seized with shivering, succeeded by heat, loss of strength,
-and pain of head. At present complains especially of head-ache; ardent
-thirst; no pain of chest; no cough; no pain of abdomen, back, or
-extremities; skin cool; face natural; tongue, except at the point,
-covered with a thick dirty fur; much thirst; no appetite; sleeps badly;
-bowels costive, having had no stool for the last three days; pulse 98,
-of good strength.
-
-7th. Heat of skin nearly natural; pain of head almost gone; no pain of
-limbs; tongue still much loaded; some thirst; three stools; pulse 72;
-slept much better.
-
-8th. Tongue much less loaded; less thirst; five stools; pulse 60.
-
-11th. Convalescent.
-
-14th. Return of head-ache, and, on the day following, the tongue again
-became white; but these symptoms disappeared the succeeding day, and, on
-the 27th, he was dismissed cured.
-
-These two cases afford fair specimens of the combination of symptoms,
-and of the degree of their severity, in the synochus of London, as it
-occurs in its mildest form.
-
-
- CASE III.
-
-EMMA GLADISH. Admitted into the hospital on the 12th day of fever.
-Attack commenced with usual symptoms. The pain in the head, which had
-been severe for some time, had entirely subsided on the day of her
-admission. The mind was now quite indistinct; she could scarcely answer
-any question that was put to her; the eyes were dull and heavy; she had
-no sleep; there was great restlessness, and occasionally wandering
-delirium; there was no tenderness of abdomen; the tongue was red, furred
-and dry; the stools were passed in bed; the pulse 105, of good power.
-
-13th. Sleep rather more tranquil; less wandering; mind a little more
-distinct; stools still passed in bed; pulse 100.
-
-14th. Much noise through the night; occasionally started out of
-disturbed sleep with screaming; tongue red, glazed and dry; stools
-passed in bed; pulse 96.
-
-15th. Rather more sleep; talkative delirium; tongue somewhat cleaner;
-pulse 100.
-
-16th. Longer and more tranquil sleep; mind more distinct; expression of
-eyes still dull and heavy; tongue more clean, more moist; stools only
-partly passed in bed.
-
-17th. More sleep than on the preceding night; mind still more distinct;
-complains to-day of some tenderness of abdomen on pressure; tongue
-nearly clean; two stools no longer passed in bed; pulse fallen to 72.
-
-19th. Slept well; mind clearer; eyes more animated; expression of
-countenance brighter; other symptoms the same.
-
-26th. Continues to improve; skin cool, soft, and moist; pulse 78.
-
-27th. Convalescent; but the convalescence was slow and tedious, as it
-almost always is after so severe an attack of cerebral disease; she was
-dismissed cured on the 40th day from the commencement of the attack. The
-reports of the 15th, 16th, and 17th days illustrate very clearly and
-strikingly the changes which have already been stated to indicate
-recovery.
-
-
- CASE IV.
-
-ELIZABETH PRICE, æt. 26, servant; admitted on 11th day of disease.
-Attacked with ordinary symptoms of fever: at present complains of very
-severe head-ache; face flushed; intolerance of light; some deafness;
-mind confused during night; visions of various kinds, such as “waves of
-the sea rolling,” appear occasionally before her with great vividness;
-had been on sea four days before she became ill; skin warm; sense of
-general soreness; abdomen rather hard, but not tender; tongue furred,
-rather red; much thirst; no appetite; scarcely any sleep, and, when she
-does, dreams of a frightful nature interrupt her rest; pulse 114,
-_intermittent_, of good power, but easily compressed; bowels
-constipated. C. C. ad ℥xviij. nuchæ. Abradat. Capillitium. Lot. Gelid.
-cap. Haust. Sennæ Sal. c. m.
-
-12th. More sensible since cupping; mind still confused; occasional
-wandering; scarcely any sleep; pulse 124, sharp, yet easily compressed.
-
-14th. Quiet night, with considerable sleep; head giddy and slightly
-painful; respiration hurried, apparently cerebral; pupils active; tongue
-dry; much thirst; pulse 123. Empl. Lyttæ cap.
-
-15th. Much screaming; great restlessness during night; complains much of
-head-ache; pupils active; urine copious, but passed in bed; all the
-stools passed in bed; pulse 108, easily compressed; has visions before
-her almost constantly; head very hot. Four leeches have been applied to
-the temples this morning without relief. Affus. Frigid. cap. ℞. Hydrar.
-Submuriat. gr. ij. Pulv. Scillæ, gr. j. Pulv. Antimon. gr. iij. M. sumat
-4tâ q. h.
-
-16th. No screaming; head less painful, especially when in half-erect
-posture; mind quite sensible now, but much wandering occasionally; pulse
-120, feeble; five stools passed in bed.
-
-24th. No material change until this day; sleep now greatly improved;
-mind much more itself; tongue beginning to clean; pulse 93; ptyalism.
-
-28th. Ptyalism continues; feels greatly better; appetite returning.
-
-From this period she continued to improve, although with several
-threatenings of relapse; the convalescence was slow and precarious, but
-she ultimately left the hospital quite well, though not until the 60th
-day from the commencement of the fever.
-
-
- CASE V.
-
-MARY SULLIVAN, æt. 36. Admitted on 14th day of disease; complaint
-commenced with shivering; pains in the limbs; severe head-ache.
-Complains now of violent pain of the head; face pallid; expression
-depressed; scarcely any sleep; abdomen tender on pressure; only one
-stool for eleven days; tongue foul and dry; pulse 81, not strong;
-complains, also, of pain under right mamma, preventing inspiration and
-decubitus. V.S. ad ℥xij. Lotio Gelida cap. Abrad. Capillitium.
-
-15th. Blood with firm buff; pain of head not at all relieved; pain of
-back, sides, and abdomen severe; no delirium; no sleep; pulse 78, pretty
-strong. Hirudines viij. temporibus. Pt. Med.
-
-16th. Pain of head much relieved; slept very much better; pulse 66, full
-and strong.
-
-17th. Pain of head returned, exceedingly severe over the fore-part;
-pulse 66, full and strong. C.C. ad ℥xij. nuchæ. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s.
-Ol. Ricini c. m.
-
-18th. Pain of head gone; countenance more natural; tongue more clean and
-moist; pulse 76, more soft. Pt. Med.
-
-20th. Pain of head returned; mind confused; pulse 60, strong and full.
-C.C. ad ℥viij. nuchæ. Pt. Med.
-
-21st. Pain of head gone; mind confused; pulse 66, pretty strong.
-
-22d. Pain of head returned, but in a slighter degree; mind more confused
-and dull; scarcely any sleep; tongue more foul; pulse 72, soft. Pt.
-
-24th. No longer conscious of pain; mind quite indistinct; lies prostrate
-on the back perfectly helpless; incapable of turning on the side;
-occasional retching; some tenderness of abdomen on pressure; pulse 72,
-strong and full.
-
-25th. Much restlessness; aspect of countenance greatly depressed; stools
-passed in bed; pulse 75.
-
-26th. Perfectly senseless; almost constant moaning; extreme
-restlessness; difficult deglutition; pulse 120.
-
-27th. Not spoken since last report; lies prostrate on back; eyes half
-open and injected; pulse 102, feeble.
-
-29th. Died.
-
-If the reader can doubt of the condition of the brain in this case, he
-is requested to turn to the pathology, where the morbid appearances on
-dissection are detailed. Slowness of the pulse, with severe and
-obstinate pain in the head, attended with confusion of mind, is always a
-highly dangerous-symptom: it invariably denotes intense cerebral
-disease. Whenever there is such a struggle, as this case exhibits,
-between the physician and the disease, the disease is sure to conquer.
-For if the physician, terrified at the name or the duration of the
-malady, while he resolve to use the lancet, hesitate to employ it to the
-extent of subduing the disease by the first bleedings, the patient is
-lost. The partial relief afforded by partial measures is most delusive.
-The malady speedily recovers its lost strength: the patient never does.
-There is no practitioner who is capable of being taught by experience
-that can reflect on the history and progress of such a case as this, on
-the temporary relief afforded by such treatment, on its ultimate
-failure, and on the appearances presented on dissection, without
-regretting that more blood was not taken on the 15th and 16th days, and
-without at the same time resolving, that the aid he offers in future,
-under similar circumstances, shall be more decisive. The diminution of
-the pain of the head on the 22d, accompanied with increasing confusion
-and dullness, with a tongue growing more and more foul, and with a pulse
-only at 72, might well excite alarm; and accordingly, on the following
-day, the case was utterly without hope.
-
-
- II. SYNOCHUS GRAVIOR WITH THORACIC AFFECTION.
-
-There is probably no case of fever, however slight, in which the mucous
-membrane of the bronchi remains in a perfectly sound state. A certain
-affection of this membrane, the nature of which will be stated
-hereafter, appears to be peculiar, to fever, and there is reason to
-believe that the acutest thoracic affection which is at the same time
-truly febrile, differs from the mildest case of fever, in which there
-may be no visible sign of any thoracic disease whatever, only in the
-degree in which this organ is affected. Sometimes it happens, however,
-that this membrane is implicated in a more than ordinary degree; and
-when it is so, it gives rise to peculiar symptoms, constituting the case
-thoracic. The severity of these thoracic, is not always in proportion to
-the severity of the febrile symptoms, in like manner as there may be the
-most intense febrile symptoms, without any indication of thoracic
-disease: but whenever the thoracic symptoms are sufficiently intense to
-become prominent, and especially when they occur early or attend on the
-commencement of fever, they invariably and very considerably aggravate
-the general febrile symptoms. In these prominent thoracic affections,
-then, two things happen; first, the symptoms properly constituting the
-febrile train are modified, and, secondly, new symptoms are added to
-this train, namely, those which indicate derangement in the respiratory
-organs.
-
-The new and peculiar symptoms to which a moderately acute and an early
-thoracic affection gives rise, are the following; namely—
-
-Pain in the chest, sometimes severe, sometimes only slight; sense of
-stricture or dyspnœa; inability to expand the chest by a full
-inspiration without pain or uneasiness; cough frequently aggravating the
-pain; sometimes dry, sometimes accompanied with frothy mucous
-expectoration. Respiration sometimes slow and heavy, at other times, on
-the contrary, short and quick; never natural: perhaps the physician may
-detect thoracic disease in the more obscure, and measure its extent in
-the more obvious cases, by observing the manner in which the patient
-breathes, better than by any other single means. The altered respiration
-is very frequently accompanied with that peculiar noise in breathing
-which is termed “mucous rattle.”
-
-The pulse, in the commencement of this open and decided chest affection,
-may not be above 80 or 90; it is hardly ever sharp; it is generally
-weak; now and then it is full and of good strength; but whatever other
-character it may possess it is almost always soft. In a few days, as the
-disease advances, it uniformly rises in frequency and becomes weaker.
-Towards the end of the disease it is almost always hurried and feeble,
-although cases occasionally occur in which it is observed at this period
-to become suddenly slow and intermittent. The tongue is usually foul;
-commonly moist; but, in severe affections and in their advanced stage,
-it sometimes becomes dry. The skin is often moderately warm, but it is
-never intensely hot: it is much more common for it to be cool, and to be
-of a more dusky colour than natural.
-
-Such are the usual conditions of the respiratory and circulating systems
-and of the tongue, the great index of the state of the mucous membrane
-of the alimentary canal, when the thoracic affection increases so as to
-become prominent and acute. The manner in which it influences the
-cerebral affection is commonly by hastening the period at which the pain
-of the head lapses into confusion and stupor. Early insensibility,
-assuming the form of a muddled or exceedingly confused state of mind, is
-a very constant symptom of more than ordinary thoracic affection.
-Accordingly, the delirium which succeeds or which accompanies this state
-is always low muttering talkativeness, or incoherent wandering, rather
-than violent delirium, which last is seldom, if ever, found in
-combination with severe thoracic disease. The pathological condition of
-the lung perfectly accounts for this modification of the condition of
-the brain, as will be shewn hereafter.
-
-
- CASE VI.
-
-The following case not only shews the insidious manner in which thoracic
-disease may come on and the severe form it may ultimately assume; but
-also, the extent of disease from which it is possible that recovery may
-take place.
-
-MARY DILLON, æt. 20; destitute. Admitted on the 8th day of fever: attack
-came on with the ordinary symptoms: at present, no pain of chest; some
-cough, with copious expectoration; no pain or tenderness of abdomen;
-tongue not much loaded, but dry; much thirst; no appetite; bowels freely
-open from medicine; no pain of head; some giddiness; no sleep; skin
-warm; face flushed; pulse 102.
-
-9th. Pectoral and cerebral symptoms the same; bowels purged; pulse 96.
-
-10th. Only slight cough; pain of head; more giddiness; no sleep; eyes
-preternaturally bright and glistening; pulse 120.
-
-11th. Only slight cough; pain of head much relieved; slept better;
-tongue more clean; four stools; pulse 120, strong.
-
-12th. No pain of chest; cough much increased; now very frequent and
-accompanied with copious expectoration; pulse 136.
-
-15th. Cough more frequent; expectoration purulent and mixed with blood;
-pulse 126.
-
-17th. Expectorates a larger quantity of purulent matter, mixed with a
-larger proportion of blood; pulse 102.
-
-20th. Pectoral symptoms unchanged; strength extremely depressed;
-countenance pallid; skin cool; three stools partly passed in bed; pulse
-84; mind confused; almost constant moaning; extensive sloughing ulcers
-on sacrum and hips.
-
-21st. Pectoral symptoms the same; powers extremely depressed; three
-stools passed in bed.
-
-22d. No change in the cough or the expectoration; lies quite prostrate
-and appears to be sinking; four stools passed in bed; pulse 72, rather
-less feeble.
-
-24th. Cough rather diminished; expectoration unchanged; four stools
-passed in bed; pulse 84, extremely weak.
-
-25th. No change, excepting that the pulse (78) is rather more strong,
-and she is scarcely so prostrate.
-
-26th. Skin again hot; tongue again red and dry; no sleep; some delirium;
-pulse 84, of more strength.
-
-27th. Skin more cool; tongue less red and more moist; pulse 66; some
-return of appetite.
-
-28th. Cough much diminished; expectorates less; tongue moist, clean, and
-nearly of natural colour; pulse 72, stronger; countenance more animated.
-
-35th. Cough nearly gone; expectoration much diminished; tongue clean;
-one stool; countenance improving; strength increasing; wishes for meat;
-two ounces were allowed.
-
-40th. Sloughs on sacrum and ilium doing well; pulse 90, of more power;
-still noisy during sleep.
-
-From this period she continued slowly, although gradually, to gain
-strength, and was dismissed from the hospital on the 57th day, _cured_.
-
-
- CASE VII.
-
-ANGELICA FIDGETT, æt. 29, married. Admitted on the 16th day of fever.
-Before admission affected with cold, shivering, sense of faintness, pain
-of head, uneasiness of chest, and cough. On admission, pain of chest
-increased by deep inspiration and by cough; cough frequent; pain of the
-head already subsided: there remain only a sense of weight over the
-eyes, the expression of which is dull, heavy, and vacant; frequent
-moaning; no pain of the abdomen on full pressure; pulse 129; tongue
-foul, moist; skin hot; face flushed.
-
-17th. Respiration slow and laborious; cough; completely comatose; eyes
-suffused; pulse 120, full, soft; face flushed.
-
-18th. Respiration continues very laborious; mind exceedingly indistinct;
-much restlessness; pulse 116, still softer.
-
-21st. Examined with the stethoscope: the bronchial roll and crepitus
-were very distinctly and generally heard.
-
-22d. The respiration continues extremely laborious; frequent cough,
-without expectoration; low, rambling delirium; pulse 112, weak; tongue
-foul, moist; general powers greatly depressed.
-
-23d. All the symptoms aggravated. Died on the 24th day of fever.
-
-As thoracic affection may exist in any degree of intensity, so it may
-indicate itself at any period of the disease: but while sufficiently
-intense to destroy the structure of the organs in which it has its seat,
-yet it sometimes gives no indication of its presence, or none until the
-approach of death. In these cases, the cerebral affection is still more
-intense than the thoracic, and the manifestation of the symptoms proper
-to the lung is prevented by the predominance of disease in the brain. Of
-this, the following case affords a striking example.
-
-
- CASE VIII.
-
-JOHN POTTER, æt 21. Admitted on the 15th day of fever. Before admission
-was affected with the usual febrile symptoms, accompanied with severe
-pain of the head and giddiness. On admission, the pain of the head was
-nearly gone; there remained considerable vertigo, with some pain in the
-loins and joints; the mind was exceedingly indistinct, and there was
-little or no sleep; pulse 80, soft; no indication of pectoral affection.
-
-18th. Symptoms the same; in addition, the abdomen was now tender on full
-pressure and retracted.
-
-24th. No change observable until this day; no indication of thoracic
-affection had hitherto been apparent from the commencement of the
-disease; but, on the morning of the 24th day of fever, dyspnœa suddenly
-came on, which was attended with a great degree of restlessness; there
-was also some soreness of throat, but only a slight degree of redness
-and tumefaction were visible on inspection: with these symptoms he sunk
-rapidly, and expired in the afternoon.[24]
-
-
- III. SYNOCHUS GRAVIOR WITH ABDOMINAL AFFECTION.
-
-One of the organs always involved in disease, in a greater or less
-degree, in fever, is the mucous membrane of the stomach and intestines.
-In synochus mitior the affection of this organ appears to be slight, and
-to pass away without producing any change in its structure. But that it
-is really diseased even in the mildest case, we have sufficient evidence
-in the invariable derangement which takes place in the functions of the
-organ throughout its whole course, from the mouth to the anus; and in
-the constant vitiation of its secretions and excretions. In the severer
-forms of fever, on the other hand, in the great majority of cases, the
-affection of the abdomen becomes prominent, and whenever it does so it
-aggravates all the other febrile symptoms, and adds greatly to the
-danger of the disease.
-
-Abdominal affection exists under two forms in fever, each of which is
-attended with distinct and peculiar symptoms. It may be severe from the
-commencement, and give early and obvious indications of its existence;
-or it may come on at some subsequent stage of the disease, and then,
-although the affection be equally severe, the symptoms which denote it
-are materially different.
-
-1. If the abdominal affection be severe from the commencement, in
-addition to the ordinary symptoms of fever, there will be present
-nausea, sometimes retching, and at other times vomiting. It is usual for
-authors to enumerate these events among the ordinary occurrences of
-fever; but in a case decidedly cerebral, or in a case decidedly
-thoracic, they are seldom present. Whenever they occur in the
-commencement of fever they are the certain signs of an abdominal
-affection more severe than ordinary; and it will be of the utmost
-advantage to the patient should the practitioner be aware of this,
-because it will teach him at once where the main force of the disease is
-probably to be concentrated.
-
-2. At this early period the bowels are commonly constipated, and on
-inquiry it will be found that they have been so for some days previously
-to the attack of fever; but in a day or two after the commencement of
-this attack they fall into the opposite state and are looser than
-natural. The concurrence of nausea, retching, vomiting, and purging in
-the commencement of fever is a certain proof that severe abdominal
-affection is present, and if not actively treated and effectually
-checked at this early stage, it will soon render the case formidable, if
-not hopeless.
-
-3. When the abdominal affection is thus early and open, it is often
-attended with another symptom which seldom fails to attract attention,
-namely, pain. Pain of the abdomen, attended with purging, completes the
-train of local symptoms that occurs at this early period, in the most
-exquisitely marked cases. It is well worthy of observation, however,
-that pain is by no means an invariable attendant on the other symptoms,
-even when the latter are very severe. Whether in these cases the
-affection of the nervous system be already so great as to lessen the
-sensibility of the organ, or whatever else may be the cause of it, the
-fact is certain, and it is one of great practical importance, that pain
-of the abdomen is not to be expected even in severe abdominal affection;
-and that though pain may attend upon the affection, yet the affection is
-often present without pain.
-
-4. Pain of the abdomen upon pressure, and especially upon pressure in
-the epigastrium, is much less seldom absent than pain of which the
-patient spontaneously complains.
-
-5. Pain, though it may usher in the abdominal affection, and may even be
-severe for the first few days, diminishes after a certain time and then
-ceases altogether, so that it is extremely rare, after the tenth day of
-fever, for instance, for the patient to complain of pain of the abdomen,
-even when the abdominal affection is the most intense. Such an event may
-happen, perhaps when the cerebral affection is more than commonly
-slight, but it is an exceedingly rare occurrence, and my attention has
-been particularly drawn to this circumstance from reflecting on the
-uniformity of the answers which I have obtained from patients obviously
-labouring under abdominal affection, on my first visit to them in the
-wards of the hospital. Having commonly been ill from ten to fourteen
-days, the abdominal affection may by this time be fully developed: on
-asking them whether they feel any pain in the abdomen, the answer almost
-invariably received is, “no.” Press gently upon the abdomen, press
-especially upon the epigastrium, often even in these very cases not the
-slightest touch can be borne. After pressure has once been made, the
-patient will frequently do all he can with his hand to prevent its being
-made a second time. So acutely sensible is he of pain on the least
-pressure, though wholly unconscious of pain when left to himself. Even
-when there is not this great degree of tenderness, pain can generally be
-produced by full pressure.
-
-There is thus a remarkable coincidence between the progress of the
-symptoms in the abdomen and in the head. We have seen that however
-intense the cerebral affection, the pain of the head which accompanies
-it diminishes after a certain time, and in a day or two after it has
-begun to diminish, ceases altogether. In like manner the pain which
-ushers in an acute abdominal affection diminishes after a certain time,
-and soon wholly disappears. After this period, therefore, we should have
-no more indications of abdominal than we have of cerebral pain were the
-intestines, like the brain, enclosed in a bony case. When an organ can
-be touched, it gives us an additional and an invaluable means of
-ascertaining its morbid condition: and this is one reason why that
-condition is commonly so much more certainly known in surgical than in
-medical diseases. What the result would be, could we press the brain as
-we can the abdomen, after its sensibility is so much diminished as to
-cease to occasion pain, we do not know; but it would be a bad use indeed
-to make of the additional means afforded us of ascertaining the
-condition of the intestines, were we to allow the additional information
-we thus gain, to obscure our perception of the perfect analogy there is
-in the progress of both affections. We know that, as the disease
-advances in both, the pain ceases; but, in the one case, we have the
-means of ascertaining that there still remains preternatural tenderness
-on pressure, as in ordinary inflammation, which we are without the means
-of discovering in the other: still the important practical fact afforded
-by the history of both is the same, that disease having reached a
-certain point, the pain diminishes; and having advanced still further
-entirely disappears.
-
-6. While the pain lessens or ceases as the abdominal affection advances,
-the purging, on the other hand, continues, often it increases. Purging,
-succeeding to constipation and to pain, and remaining after the
-subsidence of the pain, affords an infallible indication of abdominal
-disease.
-
-7. Together with these decisive signs, which alone are abundantly
-sufficient to enable us to ascertain the presence of the affection, we
-have an additional and an exceedingly valuable guide in the peculiar
-state of the tongue. In these abdominal cases, the tongue is
-preternaturally red. Sometimes this increased redness is of a bright and
-vivid colour, and pervades the whole tongue; at others, it is confined
-to the edges or to the tip, and it is usually remarkably apparent in the
-latter. While thus vividly red, the body is often loaded with fur; the
-colour of the fur is often of a dirty-white or greyish colour; but,
-perhaps, while the edges and the tip are thus intensely red, the most
-usual colour observed on its body is that of a dirty yellow. In these
-cases, the papillæ appear much enlarged, and are seen prominent through
-the fur, vividly red. In this condition of the tongue it always remains
-moist for some time, and it is not attended with urgent thirst; but, as
-the intestinal disease advances, the tongue gradually becomes less
-vividly red and more dry, and as these changes go on, the lips and teeth
-often become sordid.
-
-Instead of being from the commencement of a vivid redness, the colour of
-the tongue, in other cases, is of a darker and duller tint; there is
-less fur upon the body, and that which covers it is of a dirtier and
-darker tinge; this state of the tongue is always attended with greater
-thirst: it is apt to become more and sooner dry, and, at the same time,
-the lips and teeth become more and sooner sordid.
-
-8. In the kind and degree of abdominal affection of which we are now
-treating, the abdomen is sometimes harder than natural, but it often
-remains nearly as soft as in health through the greater part of the
-disease.
-
-9. Of the conditions of the pulse in this affection it is important to
-take particular notice, on account of the total absence of any striking
-or _apparently_ distinctive character. It is neither remarkably slow nor
-very quick; neither unusually hard, nor strong, nor sharp, nor weak, nor
-intermittent, nor in any degree irregular; its common range is from 80
-to 100, beyond which it seldom rises in the acutest cases, until near
-the termination of the disease; and it is generally soft.
-
-10. Whenever, then, there is a combination of the preceding symptoms,
-with a pulse about 90, it may be inferred with great certainty, that
-disease is going on in the intestines. But, as the pain of the abdomen
-ceases at a certain period, while the purging continues, so, at a still
-more advanced stage of the disease, the purging also disappears, and the
-stools return to a more natural condition. Cessation of pain, and an
-apparent return to healthy secretion and excretion, may seem to indicate
-a highly favourable change in the disease, and, _if accompanied with
-corresponding amendment in the other symptoms_, they may, indeed, be
-hailed as signs of returning health; but if they occur _without_ a
-favourable change in the general symptoms, they do not indicate a return
-to health, but merely the transition of one diseased process into
-another. What that succession of diseased processes is will be stated
-hereafter: at present it is sufficient to observe that, without
-corresponding improvement in other organs, the cessation of purging is a
-sign not of returning health, but of advancing disease. And so common is
-the cessation of purging, _without amendment_, at an advanced stage of
-abdominal affection, that in a large proportion of the patients who are
-received into the Fever Hospital, it has ceased before their admission.
-On the examination of a patient, for the first time, who has been ill
-from a fortnight to three weeks, it will be stated that the stools are
-regular, yet if strict inquiry be made, it will often be found that at
-an earlier stage of the disease from four to five stools, sometimes from
-eight to ten, were passed in the twenty-four hours without any purgative
-medicine having been taken. With regard to the state of the evacuations
-in this affection, then, the succession of events is first constipation,
-then purging, and next the cessation of purging and the return of the
-stools to a more natural character.
-
-The preceding signs of abdominal affection are so obvious that they can
-scarcely fail to lead to the detection of the disease; but the second
-form under which it exists is attended with much less striking symptoms.
-It requires great attention and daily examination to discover its
-presence, and to trace its progress. It steals along its fatal course
-with a step as silent as it is sure; and the destruction that marks its
-track is oftentimes alike unfelt by its victim and undiscovered by his
-most watchful guardian. It does not attack until the sensibility is
-already greatly diminished in consequence of the progress of cerebral
-disease. No pain is therefore felt, and the only indication by which it
-can be detected is tenderness of the abdomen on pressure. But even the
-fullest pressure, although it generally excite some uneasiness,
-sometimes produces none whatever. There is often no purging; for when
-the affection comes on thus late, though the bowels may sometimes be
-loose, yet they are frequently even constipated. The tongue is generally
-red at the edges and the tip, loaded with dirty grey or yellow fur, and
-sometimes dry. The pulse at this advanced period is generally 120.
-Without doubt this affection greatly aggravates the severity of the
-fever, and increases the danger of the patient, although we have no
-means of measuring the extent to which it does so.
-
-On recovering from this state, for recovery does sometimes take place,
-the first indication of improvement commonly appears in the tongue,
-which shews a disposition to clean; and what is remarkable, the
-favourable sign which accompanies this improved condition of the tongue
-is _increased tenderness of the abdomen on pressure_. Not that disease
-in the intestine is increasing, but disease in the brain is lessening,
-and therefore the patient is now sensible to a stimulus which before
-produced not the slightest impression. If on the following days the
-tongue continue to clear; if it grow less red; if at the same time the
-pulse fall, the sleep return, the sensibility increase, and the
-countenance become more animated, the patient may be considered as
-convalescent.
-
-It is not very common, but it does sometimes happen, that a few hours
-before death the sensibility of the abdomen suddenly increases, and the
-tenderness on pressure becomes exquisite. This remarkable change is
-sometimes attended with vomiting, sometimes with hiccup, and is
-accompanied with extreme restlessness, and a highly excited pulse, while
-the expression of the countenance is at one time anxious and at another
-wild, and in this state the patient dies in a few hours. On what change
-in the intestines this depends will be explained in the pathology.
-
-As illustrations of these different modifications of abdominal affection
-the following cases are subjoined.
-
-
- CASE IX.
-
-ELEANOR HOUSE, æt. 18, silk-winder. Before admission attacked with
-nausea, vomiting, together with the ordinary symptoms of fever. On
-admission, being the 8th day of the disease, severe pain of abdomen,
-which is greatly increased on pressure: tongue very red at the point,
-loaded with fur, through which the papillæ are prominent, moist; urgent
-thirst; no appetite; bowels said to be natural; some uneasiness of
-chest; respiration hurried; cannot lie with ease on either side; voice
-hoarse and feeble; no soreness of throat; no head-ache; no sleep; skin
-warm; face flushed; pulse 100, of some power, but easily compressed.
-V.S. ad ℥xvj. Ol. Ricini, ʒiij.
-
-Hora 3tia, p. m. Blood with thick and firm buff; symptoms both of
-abdominal and thoracic disease diminished. Vespere versus vel eras mane,
-rep. V.S. ad ℥xvj. si opus sit. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. haustus Sennæ
-Sal. c. m.
-
-9th. Bled last evening with much relief; proportion of coagulum of blood
-last drawn great, and covered with firm buff. Much pain in the
-epigastrium and over the whole abdomen independently of pressure, but
-greatly aggravated by slight pressure; tongue less loaded, less red,
-moist; much thirst; pulse 108, sharp, small, easily compressed: Rep.
-V.S. ad ℥xvj.
-
-10th. “Feels greatly better;” pain of epigastrium gone; none of abdomen
-when not pressed; full pressure much more easily borne; tongue
-unchanged; thirst; vomiting; four stools; pulse 108, of the same
-character.
-
-12th. Pain not diminished on pressure; nausea, vomiting, rejection of a
-large quantity of green fluid; pulse 118.
-
-16th. Says she is quite free from pain of the abdomen; bears pressure
-without flinching; no vomiting since last report; four stools; tongue
-clean and moist; pulse 99; sleeps better, but the mind is dull and
-confused: wandering delirium through the night; some muscular tremor;
-skin cool; face flushed.
-
-18th. Pain of abdomen returned; mind confused; delirium.
-
-23d. Says she is without pain, but feels oppressed; pulse 96; slept
-better; no delirium; face more animated; skin warm; no flushing.
-
-27th. Had been steadily improving until this day, when the pain of the
-abdomen returned, which is again tender on pressure; tongue clean; one
-stool; pulse 110.
-
-29th. Pain much relieved since the application of six leeches to the
-abdomen, followed by a large poultice.
-
-30th. Pain gone: only slight tenderness: pulse 96.
-
-32d. Pain and tenderness again returned; tongue more red; pulse 108.
-
-33d. Six leeches were applied last evening without the slightest relief
-of the pain or tenderness; tongue red: pulse 96, more weak and soft.
-
-34th. Tenderness considerably diminished; tongue less red; countenance
-again improved.
-
-35th. Still less tenderness than yesterday; bears pressure much better;
-tongue nearly natural; two stools.
-
-39th. Improving every day; no pain of abdomen; no tenderness on fullest
-pressure; bowels quite soft; tongue natural; four stools; pulse 72;
-appetite good: strength increasing.
-
-44th. No return of uneasiness; continues to gain strength.
-
-57th. Since last report has been daily improving, and is now quite well.
-Dismissed cured.
-
-
- CASE X.
-
-SARAH RAVEN, æt. 17. Admitted on the 22d day of fever; no pain of the
-abdomen appears to have been complained of from the commencement of the
-attack; at present no tenderness on the fullest pressure; some
-distention; tongue covered with yellow fur, moist; bowels loose; pulse
-110, sharp; only slight pain in the head; more pain in the limbs; mind
-dull, confused; deaf.
-
-24th. No pain of abdomen on fullest pressure; tongue the same; only two
-stools; pulse 124; voice hoarse, feeble; respiration hurried; skin dark,
-almost livid; mind much more confused; delirium.
-
-25th. No material change.
-
-27th. Insensibility increased to coma; features shrunk; one stool passed
-in bed; pulse 128; skin livid, cold.
-
-28th. Moribund; died the following day.
-
-On examination after death (see pathology) extensive disease was found
-in the intestines, although, if the purging on the day of admission be
-excepted, not the slightest indication of it was given during life.
-
-
- CASE XI.
-
-GEORGE ENGLISH, æt. 25, carpenter. Admitted on the 29th day of fever,
-with a great degree of tenderness of the abdomen, extending especially
-over the hypogastric region; bowels said to be regular; pulse 90, of
-good strength; yet complains much of sense of debility.
-
-30th. Pain of the abdomen continues, especially over the region of the
-bladder; urine passed in good quantity and freely; three stools; pulse
-84.
-
-32d. Tumour has appeared over the region of the bladder, unattended with
-pain; three stools; pulse 76.
-
-33d. Hypogastrium still tumid, but without pain; other symptoms the
-same.
-
-43d. No material change until this day, when he was suddenly seized with
-exceedingly acute pain in the region of the bladder; extreme tenderness
-on pressure; great restlessness, and great anxiety; vomiting of a
-yellow-coloured fluid; two stools; pulse 84, extremely feeble.
-
-44th. Died.
-
-These acute symptoms mark the very hour when the event occurred which
-caused them.—See Pathology.
-
-
- IV. SYNOCHUS GRAVIOR WITH MIXED AFFECTION.
-
-Since it has been repeatedly stated in the preceding pages that, in
-every case of fever, the brain, the lungs, and the abdomen are diseased,
-it may appear objectionable to call any particular class of cases mixed,
-because, according to the very nature of fever, all must be of this
-character. But for the same reason that we have designated one class of
-cases cerebral, another thoracic, and a third abdominal, namely, to mark
-prominence and intensity of affection, it is right to distinguish a
-fourth, in which all the three systems of organs are simultaneously
-affected with an equal, or nearly an equal degree of intensity. The term
-mixed is therefore by no means employed to intimate that the cases not
-comprehended under it are unmixed, but merely to point out a fact of
-great practical importance, that cases do occur which are neither in an
-exquisite degree cerebral, nor thoracic, nor abdominal, but which, at
-one and the same time, afford the most exquisite specimens of all the
-three.
-
-From this account of the sense in which the term is employed, it must be
-obvious that it will include the severest cases that can occur. If a
-patient be affected with intense cerebral disease he may be in great
-danger; but if he be affected with an equally intense thoracic disease
-his danger must be doubled: and if to this be added an equally intense
-abdominal disease it must be trebled. And accordingly these are just the
-cases which bid defiance to the most skilful and vigorous measures which
-the medical art can employ to control them; which seize upon their
-victim with a force which no human agency can resist nor counteract;
-which in malignant epidemics destroy life in a few hours or in a single
-hour, and in ordinary seasons in a few days.
-
-Whenever a severe case occurs without exhibiting any striking prominence
-of affection in any organ, and when on examining the organs there are
-found indications of severe affection in all of them, that case is sure
-to become formidable, and the patient and his physician have reason to
-congratulate each other if it do not prove fatal. When prominence of
-affection in any one organ is absent, because all the organs are
-intensely affected, it constitutes the most formidable case that can
-occur. And though this kind of case be but too common, yet after all it
-does not appear to happen as often as it really takes place. Examination
-after death discloses what was unknown during life. The brain, the
-lungs, the abdomen are often found to be most extensively diseased,
-while the indications of disease were confined, perhaps, to the brain
-and the abdomen, or to the brain and the lungs. Without doubt, the
-spinal cord and the brain are the grand and original seats of disease;
-the others are subsequent and consequent, and the principal masks the
-subordinate. It is when a great number of cases are brought together,
-and placed in juxta position, that we are impressed, and it is only then
-that we are duly impressed, with the great proportion of those in which
-the course of disease is as noiseless as it is destructive; in which its
-stroke destroys, without its being possible to tell where it falls; in
-which the physician sees that his patient must die, but in which the
-anatomist, after the event has happened, can alone pronounce why it was
-so.
-
-Whatever be the number of organs simultaneously affected, the nature of
-the affection in each is always the same, and is not in the slightest
-degree changed by the complication. Disease in the brain is the same,
-whether the brain alone be prominently affected, or the brain and the
-intestines, or the brain, the intestines and the lungs. Each organ is
-liable to its own specific disease, and that disease goes on with the
-utmost regularity, whether it be the sole organ so far diseased as to
-suffer a change in its structure, or whether many be simultaneously
-affected in the same manner.
-
-In like manner the symptoms, when any symptoms are present, are
-essentially the same, whether the disease exist alone, or whether it be
-complicated with several others. The symptoms of inflammation of the
-brain are the same, whether cerebral inflammation alone be present, or
-whether it be complicated with inflammation and ulceration of the mucous
-membrane of the intestines. And the symptoms of inflammation and
-ulceration of the mucous membrane of the intestines are the same, when
-any symptoms are present, whether these affections exist alone, or
-whether they are complicated with cerebral inflammation. The occasional
-absence of symptoms in the subordinate organs, overwhelmed by the
-preponderance of affection in the principal, is a proof that they are
-subordinate. It would, therefore, be useless to detail the symptoms
-which occur in the mixed cases, since they must only be a repetition of
-those which have been already enumerated. Their concurrence in
-individual complications, and the modifications they undergo from such
-particular combinations, will be best understood from the study of the
-cases.
-
-An examination of large averages clearly shews, what would scarcely have
-been expected, and what is by no means generally understood, that these
-mixed cases, instead of being rare, are even frequent. It seems to me to
-be impossible to study the pathology of those which will now be laid
-before the reader, without perceiving that the opinion that the seat of
-fever is invariably fixed in some _one_ organ, is founded in partial,
-and, therefore, imperfect views; and I earnestly solicit the attention
-of those who have hitherto contended for the strict locality of that
-seat, to these very interesting and instructive cases. It was by slow
-degrees, and after the study of the symptoms as they occur in all
-varieties, and, if I may so speak, shades of type, _in connexion with
-the morbid changes apparent after death_, that I was able to make out,
-what I have so often stated to be, the true circle of organs upon which
-this disease always seizes and always preys, and which it often
-irreparably destroys. In some of these mixed cases, we see marks of
-irreparable destruction in this entire series of organs; and in every
-one we see extensive disease in all of them. Coupling, then, as we ought
-always to couple, these ascertainable and ascertained conditions of the
-organs in the fatal cases, with the symptoms of derangement manifested
-by these organs in _all_ cases, whether fatal or not, a body of evidence
-presents itself, which appears to me to be irresistible, to justify the
-conclusion that the local seat of fever is at least coextensive with
-these organs. A repetition of my own conviction cannot, I know, produce
-conviction in others; I, therefore, again entreat attention to the facts
-which have produced conviction in me. And in order that the cases to
-which I am so anxious to direct the attention of the pathological
-student, may afford him all the information they are capable of
-communicating, at the least expense of labour to him, they have been
-arranged in succession, according as dissection shews that, while all
-the organs are deeply involved, the ravages of disease are most
-extensive in the organs of the head, or of the thorax, or of the
-abdomen. The simplest and mildest affections are placed first; the more
-complicated and severe, as nearly as possible, in the order of their
-complication and severity; while, in the rapid sketch that is drawn of
-the symptoms, those which relate to the organ most severely diseased are
-placed first; and the succession is detailed in order, according as they
-appear to be antecedents or sequents; or as they are observed to combine
-to form a train or series. Since cases abundantly illustrating, in this
-manner, every variety of complication, are given in the pathology, it is
-unnecessary to add any here.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- _Of Typhus: Division into Mitior and Gravior, and into Cerebral,
- Thoracic, and Abdominal. Typhus Mitior, with Subacute Cerebral
- Affection; with Acute Cerebral Affection; with Thoracic Affection;
- with Abdominal Affection. Typhus Gravior: in what it really
- consists: dangerous Nature of the Error that it consists in
- Debility._
-
-
-The appearance of a person labouring under typhus is so different from
-that of a person affected with synochus, that no one ignorant of the
-disease, who saw these two patients for the first time, would believe
-that both were afflicted with one and the same malady. And yet
-dissection after death demonstrates, that the physical condition of the
-organs is precisely the same in both; and careful examination of the
-symptoms during life, shews that they are really identical, both in
-their nature and their succession, however, at first view, they may
-appear to differ. The difference between these two diseases arises
-entirely from a difference in intensity: still this difference produces
-a very important modification in the character of the disease;
-important, because it materially affects both the safety of the patient,
-and the nature of the remedies that are best adapted to rescue him from
-his danger.
-
-Typhus, like synochus, presents itself under two degrees of intensity,
-which, like those of the latter, may be conveniently designated by the
-terms mitior and gravior. All the important symptoms which belong to
-both are found in the same cavities, and relate to the same organs, as
-in synochus, and, therefore, must in like manner be divided into
-cerebral, thoracic, and abdominal.
-
-
- I. TYPHUS MITIOR, WITH CEREBRAL AFFECTION.
-
-Cerebral affection in typhus, as in synochus, presents itself under two
-degrees of intensity, which may be distinguished by the same terms as in
-the latter, the subacute and the acute.
-
-
- 1. _Typhus Mitior with Subacute Cerebral Affection._
-
-The symptoms which denote this affection in typhus, are perfectly
-similar to those which have been stated to characterise it in synochus,
-but they undergo certain modifications, the true nature of which appears
-to me to have been greatly mistaken, and, after the most careful
-attention which I have been able to give the subject, the mistake seems
-to me to be of so much magnitude, that I think whosoever shall
-effectually correct it, will do the greatest possible service to
-medicine, and, through it, to his fellow men.
-
-1. There can be no question that, from the very first commencement of
-the attack, as well as through the whole course of the disease, the
-prostration of strength, both physical and mental, is greater in typhus
-than it is in synochus. This greater loss of energy is indicated by
-every sign that can be conceived to denote it. The loss of power in the
-muscles which support and move the body is oftentimes so complete, as to
-be most alarming to the patient and his friends; while the contrast
-between the vigor and the torpor of the mind, in the course only of a
-few hours, is most striking. From the full and active exercise of its
-faculties, it becomes, in that short space of time, quite incapable of
-performing any intellectual operation. It is confused and stupid, always
-in a greater degree than in synochus, and sometimes to such a degree,
-even on the very first day of the attack, as to excite the utmost
-apprehension in every one around the patient who takes any interest in
-his fate.
-
-2. The chilliness is, upon the whole, greater and longer-continued than
-in synochus: yet there is less constantly shivering, and the heat, when
-it succeeds this state of chilliness, is seldom as great as in the
-latter; while there are cases in which the heat never exceeds the
-natural standard.
-
-3. The febrile uneasiness is greater; the restlessness is incessant; the
-face is pallid; the features are shrunk; the expression of the
-countenance is most peculiar; it is strikingly indicative of weakness
-and suffering; the experienced eye can tell at a single glance, even at
-this early period, to which of the two types that countenance belongs.
-The pulse is always weaker and more rapid than in the corresponding
-stage in synochus.
-
-4. There are cases in which the pain of the head is equally severe as in
-synochus: but this may be justly considered as rare. In general it is
-less acute. Dullness, confusion, stupor, giddiness, are more common than
-severe pain, and are often the substitutes for it. Though some degree of
-pain be generally present, yet it is by no means uncommon for one or
-more of these sensations to occupy its place completely. Question the
-patient as much as you please, and he will tell you that he has no pain;
-but it is evident, from his aspect and his manner, that he has little
-sensation of any kind. The eye is dull, heavy, stupid, without lustre:
-the old English word “lac-lustre” expresses its character truly and
-strikingly. But it is remarkable, that while the pain in the head is
-only slight, the pains in the back, loins, and extremities, and, as the
-patient himself says, in the bones, are severe.
-
-5. When pain is present it diminishes sooner and disappears more
-completely than in synochus: when it is not present, the advancement of
-the disease is indicated by increasing insensibility, and by the rapid
-transition of dullness or confusion into a state of stupor approaching
-to coma. The eye is already muddy, and it soon becomes injected and
-suffused. The skin over the body is generally warm, sometimes hot: over
-the head it is often hot. The face is usually pallid, but the pallidness
-frequently alternates with flushing. The change of dullness into
-insensibility more or less profound sometimes takes place as early as
-the second or the third day: it is seldom that it is as late as the
-seventh or the eighth: it is postponed, when not prevented, by active
-and appropriate treatment.
-
-6. There is little or no sleep; the restlessness is great; there may be
-no violence; but there is abundance of inquietude.
-
-7. Delirium is more constantly present than in synochus; and when it
-comes it comes earlier: its presence is not unusual as early as the
-sixth or the seventh day; and it may appear still sooner, but that is
-rare. It consists of low muttering incoherence rather than of loud and
-violent talkativeness; and is expressed in moaning rather than in
-screaming.
-
-8. The connexion between delirium and muscular tremor, between muscular
-tremor and subsultus tendinum, and between both, and the passing of the
-stools and the urine unconsciously, has already been pointed out. Like
-delirium, muscular tremor is much more constantly present in typhus than
-in synochus; and its relation to delirium is so close that it is
-sometimes observed to supervene on the very same day; frequently on the
-day following; and, if it appear at all, it is seldom longer absent than
-the third. Its degree likewise is commonly in proportion to the violence
-of the delirium; and though early and great delirium may appear without
-it, yet it very rarely appears without delirium; and in general all
-these symptoms form one series or train; pain disappearing, confusion of
-mind increasing, muttering incoherence supervening, and muscular tremor
-and involuntary and unconscious stools rapidly succeeding.
-
-9. In the commencement of typhus the pulse is sometimes of good
-strength, and it may not exceed 90 in frequency; but as the disease
-advances it uniformly becomes weaker, smaller and quicker; so that death
-rarely takes place before it has reached 120. In the severer cases it is
-weak, quick, and easily compressed at a very early period.
-
-10. The respiration is often not very obviously affected, but if it be
-attentively observed it will usually be found to be shorter and quicker
-than natural.
-
-11. The tongue is always foul on the first or second day; it seldom
-continues moist longer than three or four days; it is often quite dry as
-early as the fourth, especially on the body and at the root; the apex
-and the edges sometimes remain moist a day or two longer; but in a short
-time the whole tongue becomes perfectly dry and of a brown colour; as
-the disease advances the colour often changes to a darker and darker hue
-until it becomes quite black; it is then frequently fissured into deep
-chaps, while the lips and teeth soon become covered with a black sordes.
-Were the sensibility not greatly altered, such a condition of the mouth
-and tongue must be attended with insatiable thirst; yet thirst is often
-not felt, although at other times it is considerable.
-
-12. In the early stage of typhus the skin is frequently hot; as the
-disease advances the heat lessens: through the greater portion of the
-disease it is moderately warm; towards its termination it becomes cool,
-and some days before death it falls below the natural standard. It is
-always of a darker colour than in synochus: the whole surface is of a
-dull and dusky tinge. Sometimes it is covered with dun coloured
-petechiæ, at others with petechiæ of a florid colour.
-
-13. During its progress, erysipelas, first appearing on the face, then
-extending over the scalp, and often down the shoulders and back, is very
-apt to occur. Excoriation on the back and hips often form sloughing
-sores of great malignity and extent, while enlargement, inflammation and
-suppuration of glands situated in different parts of the body frequently
-appear.
-
-14. Typhus terminates much earlier, whether favourably or unfavourably,
-than synochus; if it terminate unfavourably death frequently takes place
-as early as the 10th or the 14th day, although if early and appropriate
-treatment be employed, the force of the disease is sometimes so much
-lessened that it is as protracted as synochus.
-
-Towards the termination of the disease more or fewer of the symptoms
-which it has been stated occasionally to occur in synochus,[25]
-supervene; but, as these depend upon particular conditions of the brain,
-they will be detailed under the pathology.
-
-
- 2. _Typhus Mitior, with Acute Cerebral Affection._
-
-In typhus with acute cerebral affection the pain of the head is often
-not more severe than it is in the subacute; but there is a greater
-degree of heaviness, or weight, or stupor, or giddiness; the eyes are
-more and sooner injected and more suffused; the insensibility comes on
-sooner and is deeper; the delirium appears earlier and is more violent,
-frequently requiring restraint, and the whole train of symptoms already
-enumerated, and which it is needless to repeat, are more intense in
-degree, and succeed each other with greater rapidity.
-
-
- CASE XII.
-
-JAMES SOLDEN, æt. 44, plaisterer. Admitted on the 7th day of fever:
-attack came on with chilliness; great debility; some pain of head; sense
-of giddiness and weight; together with symptoms of thoracic disease. At
-present pain of head entirely gone; it has passed into insensibility;
-mind quite delirious; almost constant moaning; pulse 96, weak; tongue
-brown and dry; stools passed in bed; respiration short and hurried;
-cough without expectoration; tenderness of abdomen on full pressure.
-
-8th. Insensibility more profound; restlessness and delirium increased;
-respiration more hurried; cough the same; stools passed in bed: pulse
-92.
-
-9th. No change.
-
-10th. Died.
-
-
- CASE XIII.
-
-JOHN CLARK, æt. 17. Admitted on the 4th day of fever: attack commenced
-with ordinary symptoms, and was attended with severe pain of the head,
-which continues at present, and which is attended with a sense of
-weight; eyes injected and suffused; expression of countenance extremely
-dejected; sleeps none; skin pungently hot, especially over the scalp;
-pulse 108, of good power; tongue already brown and quite dry; some
-thirst; respiration hurried; some uneasiness of chest on coughing;
-considerable tenderness of abdomen.
-
-5th. Eight ounces of blood which were drawn not sizy; crassamentum
-loose; pain of head not at all relieved; sense of weight distressing; no
-sleep; much restlessness; heat over the scalp pungent; pulse 104; tongue
-more dry; tenderness of abdomen the same; six stools.
-
-6th. Pain of head still severe; mind more confused; passed a more
-restless night; pulse 116.
-
-10th. Pain of head undiminished; eyes more suffused; extremely restless
-night, during which delirium came on; this morning muscular tremor has
-appeared; pulse 124.
-
-12th. Pain of head entirely gone; scarcely at all sensible; constant
-muttering delirium; muscular tremor with subsultus tendinum; two stools
-passed in bed; pulse 124; abdomen still painful on firm pressure, and
-has become swollen and tense.
-
-13th. Insensibility and delirium increased; constant incoherent
-muttering; extreme prostration; erysipelas has appeared on the forehead,
-and is spreading to the scalp: pulse 128; two stools passed in bed.
-
-14th. Died.
-
-
- II. TYPHUS MITIOR, WITH THORACIC AFFECTION.
-
-Prominent thoracic affection, as we have seen, is not infrequent in
-synochus; in typhus it is more constant; and the signs which denote its
-existence are more obvious, but they are not precisely the same. The
-pain in the chest is less severe; it is more often absent altogether;
-while the sense of stricture and the dyspnœa are more urgent. The cough
-is more constantly attended with mucous rattle; the respiration is
-shorter and more hurried. The skin in general is cooler, and it is
-always more dusky. The dark colour of the skin, in severe cases,
-becoming quite livid, is one of the most characteristic marks of intense
-thoracic affection. The colour of the cheek is at first of a deep and
-vivid red; as the disease advances it becomes of a purple tinge, and at
-length it is quite livid. In these cases it is not uncommon for the
-respiration to be from forty to fifty in a minute. The pulse is
-invariably rapid and weak. The cerebral affection is equally peculiar
-and characteristic; it never consists of intense excitement; it is never
-accompanied with violent delirium; it is indicated by confusion and
-stupor passing rapidly into coma; and is attended with low muttering
-incoherence or disjointed rambling, the trains of ideas that pass
-through the mind being extremely faint, and linked together by no
-distinguishable affinity. We know that one of the most essential
-conditions to the due exercise of the sensorial faculties is the due
-supply of the brain with arterial blood; but in this state of the system
-arterial blood does not and cannot circulate through the brain, because
-it is not formed in the lung: the patient is in a state approaching to
-asphyxia, and in very severe cases he remains for several days in as
-perfect a state of asphyxia as seems to be compatible with life. Why
-debility should, in these cases, be carried to the utmost possible
-extent; why such cases should form the most exquisite specimens of the
-adynamic state, need not be pointed out: the disease is concentrated in
-the very organ which elaborates the pabulum of life, and that stream
-which should convey its vivifying and animating influence to every nook
-and point of the system is corrupted at its source.
-
-It is in these cases, too, that the tongue becomes dryer than in any
-other; in its advanced stage it is sometimes quite black and even hard,
-and is altogether incapable of being protruded. Sometimes it is covered
-with a thick, black and hard crust; at other times it is cut into deep
-fissures, so as to give it a cracked appearance. These states of the
-tongue without doubt arise in part from the excessive dryness,
-occasioned by the mouth being kept always open, on account of the
-difficulty of respiring.
-
-Such are the most characteristic marks of thoracic affection in typhus;
-as an illustration of which, as it occurs, perhaps, in the severest form
-ever witnessed in this country, the following case may be cited.
-
-
- CASE XIV.
-
-ALEXANDER CROMBIE, æt. 19, seaman.
-
-The mate of his vessel states that, notwithstanding some previous
-indisposition, three days ago he was on duty; that while on watch, about
-eleven o’clock at night, he became too ill to remain at his post, and
-that, since that time, he has scarcely spoken a word. At present he is
-incapable of giving any account of himself. He is dull, stupid, and,
-when roused, is scarcely able to answer coherently; he does not speak,
-but he is constantly picking at the bed-clothes; there is extreme
-restlessness; the countenance is heavy and inexpressive; the features in
-general are swollen, the lips especially, which are also extremely
-parched. The entire skin is dusky, but the cheeks are of a deep red
-colour, approaching to a purple hue; the integuments of the eye are
-dark; the conjunctiva injected; the tongue brown and quite dry; the lips
-and teeth sordid; respiration oppressed; occasional cough; pulse from
-130 to 140; small and thrilling; skin, especially over the scalp, hot;
-tenderness of abdomen on full pressure.
-
-4th. Cerebral symptoms the same; cough frequent, difficult; respiration
-short and hurried; pupils dilated, not contracting on exposure to light;
-conjunctiva injected; pulse small, hurried, irregular; all the stools
-passed in bed; pressure over the abdomen induces cough and apparently
-excites pain. Died in the evening. See pathology.
-
-
- III. TYPHUS MITIOR, WITH ABDOMINAL AFFECTION.
-
-To the account of abdominal affection in typhus, it is necessary to add
-nothing to that already given of abdominal affection in synochus,
-excepting that, in the former, pain in the abdomen is scarcely ever
-felt; tenderness on pressure is less acute, and it is more common for
-both to be absent. On the other hand, the abdomen is more often swollen,
-hard, tense and tympanitic, while the stools are more early and more
-constantly passed involuntarily. It is in this type of fever, also, that
-hæmorrhage from the bowels most frequently takes, place—an event not
-very uncommon in the severest and the most protracted examples of the
-disease. The tongue, also, is less constantly red than in the abdominal
-affection of synochus; but it is more uniformly dry, black and cracked.
-
-Since the full exposition of pathology requires that many examples of
-this affection should be detailed under that head, and since, however
-numerous and striking such examples may be, they can illustrate no
-characteristic symptom beyond what has been already stated, it is
-unnecessary to cite any cases of it here.
-
-
- IV. TYPHUS MITIOR, WITH MIXED AFFECTION.
-
-Whenever the brain, the lungs, and the intestines become simultaneously
-and prominently affected in typhus, the case no longer assumes the mild,
-but lapses into the severer form. We shall, therefore, speak of this
-complication under—
-
-
- II. TYPHUS GRAVIOR.
-
-The typhus gravior of authors is extinct; at least I have seen no
-example of it in London. I have witnessed nothing bearing a tolerable
-resemblance to this disease, even as it is depicted by Cullen, much less
-as it is portrayed in the darkly vivid, yet apparently but too faithful
-colouring of Huxham. This malady seems to have disappeared with the
-epidemic intermittents and the epidemic dysenteries of the good old
-times. Whatever there may have been in the condition of our ancestors to
-excite our envy, there is certainly nothing to provoke it in their
-diseases.
-
-All the examples of fever which approach in likeness to the descriptions
-on record of typhus gravior which I have seen, have consisted of the
-mixed cases of typhus. They have been cases in which the brain, the
-lungs, and the intestines were all simultaneously and intensely
-affected. The symptoms may not always denote an _equal_ degree of
-affection in all these organs; but I have never seen a case in which
-there were not the most unequivocal signs of intense affection in all of
-them. For the reason already assigned, such cases must necessarily be
-the severest that can occur, because the patient may be said to have
-three diseases instead of one to contend with, each of which alone is
-sufficient to destroy life, and each of which alone frequently does
-destroy it.
-
-All the examples of this form of fever which I have observed are
-referrible to two classes; one in which the arterial action is
-excessive; the other in which it is oppressed, or rather overwhelmed.
-
-1. In the first, the patient lies insensible, with delirium, perhaps so
-violent that he cannot be kept in bed without restraint; with extreme
-restlessness and constant watchfulness; with rapid and panting
-respiration; with a tender abdomen, perhaps with frequent and
-involuntary stools, a dry, black, and hard tongue, a quick, yet weak
-pulse, and the skin universally and pungently hot.
-
-2. In the second he lies insensible, with a cold and dusky skin; with a
-swollen and livid countenance; with a heavy and oppressed respiration;
-with a pulse perhaps not to be felt, or, if distinguishable, either so
-rapid that it cannot be counted, so small that it is like a thread
-beneath the finger, and so weak that it is lost by the slightest
-pressure, or else slow, irregular, and intermittent. In this state, the
-patient is almost as completely paralyzed as in apoplexy, and the attack
-is almost as rapidly fatal as apoplexy. It constitutes what has been
-called congestive fever.
-
-Fortunately, these intense forms of the disease are of rare occurrence:
-they are witnessed only in solitary instances, and they arise either
-from exposure to a highly-concentrated poison, or from some condition of
-the constitution, by which that power to resist the influence of noxious
-agents, which is characteristic of life, is more than commonly
-diminished or exhausted. They have been conceived to form exquisite
-specimens of diseases of debility. But where is the debility? Not in the
-disease, for that is of giant strength; not in the patient, for remove,
-if you can but remove, a part of the load that oppresses him, and
-instantly an intensity of action will be set up in the whole system,
-perhaps as great as it is capable of exerting, and certainly greater
-than it is capable of sustaining without the most imminent danger. The
-brain is overwhelmed by the intensity of its affection; the energy that
-should animate the system, and of which it is the great source, is
-withheld: but that energy is suspended, not destroyed; and the debility
-which seems to be the result is not real, but apparent, not direct, but
-indirect. The giant that lies prostrate on the earth, mastered by
-superior power, has still a giant’s strength, though he does not at that
-moment put it forth: give him but the chance of throwing off the load
-that keeps him down, and he will soon shew you that he is not weak. I
-have always been struck with the extraordinary clearness and decision
-with which the acuteness of Sydenham enabled him to make this important
-distinction, perhaps in the very first case that occurred to him, in
-which the discrimination was required. Having described, in his own
-powerful manner, an excellent specimen of congestive fever to which he
-was called, he states that he ordered the patient to be bled: that the
-bye-standers regarded the suggestion with horror: that the man seemed at
-the point of death; that to them it appeared that the abstraction of
-blood must inevitably extinguish the last remaining spark of life; while
-to him it was manifest that the patient was in this alarming condition,
-because he was oppressed by an overwhelming load, and if that could only
-be lessened, his condition would be the very reverse of what it now
-seemed: that accordingly, on the removal of some ounces of blood, the
-state of oppression ceased at once, and fever arose of a true
-inflammatory nature, for the subdual of which repeated bleedings were
-required.
-
-It is remarkable, and it is highly characteristic of these intense forms
-of disease, that their pathology exhibits a striking contrast to that of
-the less severe affections. No morbid appearances are visible in the
-organs which seem capable of accounting for death. There are signs of
-vascularity; the vessels are turgid with blood, and consequently the
-organs on which they are spent are in a state of congestion. But they
-seldom if ever exhibit any real appearance of inflammation, and still
-less do they contain any true inflammatory product. Why? Not on account
-of debility; but because the force of the disease is so great as to
-overwhelm the powers of life at the first onset, allowing even of no
-reaction, and much less of that continued excitement which is part and
-parcel of the inflammatory state, and which is indispensable to an
-inflammatory product. Reduce the intensity of the disease a little,
-bring it just within the limit that is compatible with the continuance
-of life for a given time, and then the products of inflammation at once
-appear in the greatest possible purity, variety, and extent.
-
-And this is precisely the fact, as is demonstrated by the condition of
-the organs, in those ordinary types of fever, the essence of which has
-been supposed to consist in debility, and which have recently assumed
-the dignified name of adynamic. That men who are capable of looking only
-at the most obvious appearances of things, who, satisfied with what they
-find at the surface, give themselves no concern to discover its source,
-should continue to mistake the effect for the cause, and to consider as
-in its own primary and essential nature, that to be debility which is
-the last result of long-continued and most destructive energy of action,
-is highly probable; but, on that very account, the fallacy is the more
-deeply to be deplored; because to these men must sometimes be committed
-the care of human beings who will fall certain victims to the error. It
-is easy to disregard the voice of reason when opposed to specious,
-however fallacious appearances; but it is difficult to withstand the
-evidence of sense. In justification of the strength of the language I
-use, I therefore appeal to the pathology I adduce. The notion of
-debility in the intense forms of fever I look upon to be an error no
-less palpable in its nature than destructive in its consequences; and if
-the havoc it produces do not confer upon it a pre-eminence as bad as
-that of the very disease of which it is supposed to constitute the
-essence, it at least entitles it, in comparison with every other error
-in medicine, to the distinction recognized in society, between the hero
-and the murderer: the one destroys a single human being now and then;
-but the other numbers its victims by thousands. It may be difficult to
-eradicate this mischievous opinion where it was first engendered, and
-where it still continues to be fostered, in the study of the falsely
-reasoning theorist; but it is easy to confute it at the table of the
-pathological anatomist; and it must ultimately fall, if not by the pen,
-by the scalpel.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- _Of Scarlatina. Characters by which it is distinguished from Continued
- Fever, without an Eruption. Division into Scarlatina Synochodes and
- Typhodes. Events which occasionally occur in Fever, but which form
- no essential Part of it._
-
-
-The only kind of continued fever attended with an eruption, which it
-falls within the compass of the present work to notice, is that of
-scarlatina, and, even in relation to this, after the full account which
-has been given of the other forms of fever, it will be necessary to
-state only the peculiarities by which it is distinguished.
-
-1. The depression of the nervous system so characteristic of synochus
-and typhus, is much less in degree in scarlatina. Neither the physical
-nor the mental debility is as great. In the whole attitude and manner of
-the patient, as well as in his own sensations, there is less
-prostration. The disease is more nearly allied to a pure inflammatory
-affection than either of the preceding forms of fever.
-
-2. Accordingly, the circulation is not only more rapid, but it is also
-more strong. It is not uncommon for the pulse to be 140 in a minute; in
-severe cases it is seldom below 120. Without being hard, it is more full
-and strong and less easily compressed than in the other forms of fever.
-
-3. Corresponding with the activity and energy of the circulation is the
-increase of the temperature; the heat over the whole surface of the body
-is often intense and pungent. In this fever, the temperature, as
-indicated by the thermometer, rises several degrees higher than in any
-other.
-
-4. The capillary vessels of the external skin, as is shewn by the bright
-and vivid colour of its characteristic eruption, are filled with blood.
-Often from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot, the external
-covering of the body is in a state of inflammation, and this
-inflammation constantly terminates in the death of the cuticle, whence
-it is thrown off by the process of desquamation. It is not improbable
-that the large quantity of blood which is thus spent upon the surface of
-the body, and which is thereby diverted from the internal organs, is one
-reason why the latter are not so much oppressed as in the other forms of
-fever.
-
-5. Much as the external skin is loaded with blood, the capillary vessels
-of the internal skin appear to be equally turgid with it. This is
-indicated by the bright and vivid redness of the mucous membrane
-covering the mouth, the tongue, the fauces and the throat. That this
-redness extends beyond these external parts into the internal organs
-there is abundant evidence, because, although we cannot follow it with
-the eye, we can trace it by the signs of disordered function which
-arise.
-
-6. Certain parts of the internal skin, as it covers particular organs,
-is peculiarly apt to pass into inflammation, and to terminate, like
-ordinary inflammation, in ulceration. The principal seats of
-inflammation are the throat and the larynx; but that, on the one hand,
-the inflammation extends from the throat into the stomach, is evident
-from the peculiar tenderness of the epigastrium, which is almost
-constant in scarlatina, and which is more acute than in ordinary fever;
-and that, on the other hand, it extends from the larynx into the bronchi
-and their ramifications, is evident from the symptoms of thoracic
-affection, which are at once more prominent and more constant than in
-the other forms of fever. The larynx, the cartilages of which are apt to
-be destroyed by ulceration, in the severe and mortal cases, is now and
-then attacked with a peculiar kind of laryngitis, to be further noticed
-in the pathology, which is almost uniformly and most rapidly fatal.
-
-7. From the preceding observations, the new symptoms which are added to
-the febrile train in scarlatina, and which arise out of the modification
-of the fever by its complication with an inflammatory condition of the
-external and internal skin, are easily understood. They are the
-following: namely,
-
-Scarlet eruption on the skin; vivid and peculiar redness of the mouth,
-tongue, fauces and throat: the presence of the disease may usually be
-discovered by this peculiar and specific redness of the tongue and
-throat alone, although every other characteristic symptom were absent:
-pain in the throat, difficult deglutition, huskiness and hoarseness of
-the voice. To these must be added other symptoms, which, though they are
-sometimes present in ordinary fever, are both more constant and more
-severe in scarlatina than in the latter, namely, pain in the chest,
-cough, difficult and hurried respiration, duskiness, in severe cases
-lividness of the cheek, often, especially in the commencement of the
-attack, nausea and vomiting.
-
-Such are the chief peculiarities by which scarlet fever is
-distinguished: in all other respects the condition of the organs, and
-the symptoms which denote their disordered state are the same as in
-continued fever without an eruption.
-
-Scarlatina occurs under two forms.—1st, With the symptoms common to
-synochus, (scarlatina synochodes) a form which, however severe the
-symptoms, if properly treated, rarely proves fatal. In general, it is a
-trifling malady, and, when severe, its chief danger consists in its
-tendency to pass into the second form, if it be neglected, or if it be
-badly treated. Under the most formidable aspect it ever presents, if the
-active treatment, which, when the symptoms are severe, ought always to
-be employed, be resorted to with promptness and decision, in more than
-ninety cases out of a hundred, those symptoms are certainly and
-effectually subdued, and the disease, although it may not be cut short
-at once, is at once rendered mild and safe.
-
-2. The second form of the disease (scarlatina typhodes) presents a
-striking contrast to the first: it is one of the most highly dangerous
-diseases which the practitioner in this country is ever called to
-witness. It is invariably attended with the symptoms which have been
-described as proper to typhus gravior. And these symptoms may consist
-either of those which belong to the first form of typhus gravior, and
-which have been already described,[26] or they may be those which
-characterize the second, or the congestive form.[27] The former is the
-most frequent, but the latter is not uncommon. The most exquisite
-specimens of congestive fever which it has happened to me to witness,
-have been those afforded by scarlatina: and there is no disease incident
-to this climate which is more alarming, more beyond the reach of
-remedies, or more rapidly fatal. Though fortunately several years may
-sometimes elapse without the occurrence of a single case of it, yet
-occasionally seasons return in which many cases happen. I have witnessed
-two such seasons in London, and all the persons I remember to have seen
-affected with it were near the age of puberty and not beyond that of
-thirty. For examples of it the reader is referred to the pathology.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before bringing to a close this account of the general phenomena of
-fever, it is necessary briefly to notice some events which, because they
-occasionally occur in the progress of the disease, but are not constant,
-may be considered as accidental.
-
-1. It is not very common, but there sometimes takes place an extreme
-degree of tenderness over the entire surface of the body. The
-sensibility is so much increased that the patient cannot bear, without
-pain, the slightest pressure. Several cases have occurred in which the
-entire skin was as tender to the touch as the abdomen in some of the
-abdominal cases. Whenever this preternatural sensibility occurs, it is
-always in connexion with an exceedingly severe form of the disease.
-
-2. One of the most common occurrences in severe and protracted cases is
-excoriation of the skin, and the subsequent formation of a sloughing
-sore. In bad and long-continued cases of fever the powers of life are so
-much exhausted, and the sources of nourishment are so completely
-vitiated, that the skin and the subjacent parts have not vitality
-sufficient to bear even the pressure occasioned by the weight of the
-body. The most common seats of these sores are the back, the sacrum, and
-the hips. They often spread far and eat deep; they are additional
-sources of irritation and exhaustion to a frame already reduced to the
-last extremity of feebleness, and the scale which seemed to be equally
-balanced between life and death, they often turn on the side of death.
-
-3. In severe and protracted cases, and often coming to destroy the hope
-that was beginning to spring up in favour of the patient, erysipelas is
-no unusual visitant. It is the outward and visible sign of inward and
-always most formidable disease. Many and many are the persons it
-destroys who, but for it, would ultimately gain the victory over a
-malady with which they have carried on a doubtful contest, perhaps for
-fourteen or for one and twenty days.
-
-4. Pain, swelling, hardness and suppuration of the glands in different
-parts of the body are not uncommon. The gland which most commonly
-suffers is the parotid, although the submaxillary, the axillary, and
-even the inguinal, are occasionally involved. These glandular affections
-never take place but in formidable cases, and their occurrence sometimes
-changes at once the entire character of the disease, and destroys the
-slightest hope of recovery.
-
-5. Now and then there take place severe pain in the joints, together
-with tumefaction and excessive tenderness on pressure. These events
-usually come on towards the close of exceedingly bad cases, and they are
-often attended with very acute suffering. Neither the occurrence of the
-events nor the appearances presented on examination after death, have
-hitherto been noticed, as far as I am aware, by any author. Every case
-attended with this peculiar affection that I have seen, has proved
-rapidly fatal. The condition of the joints, as ascertained by
-dissection, will be stated in the pathology.
-
-Purulent discharge from the ears, deafness, spasmodic contraction of the
-extremities, convulsions, all depend upon certain states of the brain,
-and will be noticed when these states are spoken of. Numerous maladies
-arising from various degrees and complications of disease in the lungs,
-heart, pleura, viscera of the abdomen and investing membrane, not
-belonging to fever, but adding to its evils, are found on examination
-after death, which often fully account for anomalous symptoms that
-aggravated the case during life. Of these mention will be made in the
-proper place.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- OF THE PATHOLOGY OF FEVER.
-
- _Importance of connecting the Symptoms with the States of the Organs:
- Pathology of Fever comprehends the Morbid Changes that take place in
- the Solids and Fluids of the Body. 1. General Pathology of the
- Solids, exhibiting a collective View of the Morbid Appearances in
- the Head, Thorax, and Abdomen. Cases illustrating such Morbid
- Appearances in each of these Cavities. 2. Pathology of the Fluids._
-
-
-The preceding history of the symptoms of fever can be of no real use
-unless it be possible to connect it with the events of which those
-symptoms are the signs. The events consist of certain morbid changes
-which take place in the series of organs already enumerated. We arrive
-at the knowledge of these events first by noting the symptoms which
-occur during life, and their order of succession: and, secondly, by
-examining the condition of the organs after death in the fatal cases: a
-comparison of the symptoms, as previously observed, with the state of
-the organs as subsequently ascertained, teaches us what the symptoms
-indicate. By carefully observing the symptoms in a large number of
-cases, we at length become acquainted with all the important symptoms
-that arise: by carefully examining the organs after death in a large
-number of cases, we gradually learn all the important changes in
-structure which they undergo: and by comparing, in all cases, the morbid
-symptoms with the altered states, we acquire in the end the power of
-ascertaining, with a high degree of probability, the presence of an
-event which we cannot see, by the presence of its sign which we can see.
-
-In proportion as our knowledge becomes perfect, we are thus enabled,
-during life, and at the bed-side of the patient, to see what is going on
-within his brain, within his lungs, and within his intestines, with as
-much distinctness and certainty as we could were the cases in which
-these organs are enclosed, and the organs themselves transparent. The
-highly interesting and important fact demonstrated by the examination,
-in the manner of which we have just spoken, of large numbers of fever
-patients is, that the changes which take place in the organs are
-uniform; that the symptoms by which these changes are denoted are
-likewise uniform, and therefore, that it is possible to arrive at a
-perfect knowledge of the phenomena of fever.
-
-The present state of our knowledge, it must be confessed, is far from
-being perfect. To a certain extent, however, it is even already
-sufficiently perfect to afford the physician an invaluable guide in the
-conduct of his practice; and the steps that are wanting to complete the
-knowledge we possess (as far as human knowledge can be complete) future
-labour and perseverance will assuredly supply.
-
-The pathology of fever comprehends the morbid changes that take place in
-the solids and the fluids of the body. It is probable that the changes
-in the fluids are wholly dependent upon those which take place in the
-solids, although the vitiation of the former must necessarily react
-upon, and increase the derangement of the latter. If it be true, as is
-highly probable, that the changes in the solids are beyond all
-comparison of the greatest importance, as not only antecedents, but
-_invariable_ antecedents, or causes, it may be considered fortunate that
-our knowledge of their diseases is so much more advanced than our
-knowledge of the diseases of the humours. The morbid changes of the
-solids are ascertained with a great degree of exactness, it may almost
-be said with a great degree of perfection; while those which occur in
-the fluids are almost wholly unknown. Until very recently physicians
-satisfied themselves with framing conjectures about their corruption;
-and knowing with certainty no one vice that they possess, they
-attributed to them a thousand. Attention is now awakened to the subject:
-investigation is going on: and before long we shall probably know, with
-some degree of precision, whether any changes really take place, and
-what they are: but the researches which have hitherto been made are so
-few and so imperfect, that it can hardly be said that a single point is
-satisfactorily made out and firmly established.
-
-In laying before the reader the pathology of the solids, as far as it is
-yet ascertained, it is my most anxious wish to enable him constantly to
-make for himself, as he proceeds, the association between the morbid
-appearances that are found after death, and the symptoms that were
-present during life. For this reason every case that is adduced to
-illustrate any morbid change is preceded by a brief account of the
-symptoms that were observed, day by day, at the bed-side of the patient.
-For the sake of brevity however, no less than for that of clearness,
-none but the essential are noticed. The daily reports, of which all the
-cases cited, are exceedingly condensed forms, are full, and contain, as
-they necessarily must contain, many repetitions with which it would be
-worse than useless to burthen this account of them. Even the statement
-of the remedies that were adopted (excepting in as far as they obviously
-influenced the symptoms) is omitted, from the conviction that the mind
-cannot attend without distraction, at one and the same time, to the
-pathology and the treatment.
-
-Predominance of affection is the principle according to which the cases
-are arranged, those in which the brain was most affected being classed
-together under one section—the cerebral; those in which the lungs were
-most affected under a second—the thoracic; and those in which the
-intestines were most affected under a third—the abdominal. In like
-manner, the individual cases under each section are so placed as to
-succeed each other, as nearly as possible, in the order of their
-severity.
-
-Before entering into particular details, it may be useful to exhibit a
-brief outline of the general pathology of fever, shewing, at one view,
-the general results which are derived from an examination of the
-collective cases. In this outline the organs in each cavity are noticed
-in the order of the frequency and extent in which they are found
-diseased.
-
-
- I. PATHOLOGY OF THE SOLIDS IN FEVER.
-
-
- 1. _External Appearances of the Body after Death._
-
-The skin is always of a more dusky colour than natural; it is sometimes
-studded with petechiæ, which in bad cases are large and of a deep purple
-tint, giving to the body a spotted or speckled appearance.
-
-Externally the body always appears emaciated, and on removing the skin,
-the greater portion of the adipose substance is found to be absorbed;
-what remains of it is of an unhealthy yellow colour. The muscular fibre
-is remarkably dark, and this dark colour extends, as we shall see
-immediately, to the internal viscera.
-
-
- 2. _Morbid Appearances in the Head._
-
-Of the membranes of the brain, the arachnoid is the most constantly
-diseased. It is seldom or never in a healthy condition. It is always
-either more vascular than natural, or when in this respect unchanged, it
-is altered in structure, being thickened, opake and milky: when in this
-latter state, a gelatinous fluid is usually effused beneath it. Not
-uncommonly, it is united at several points to the membranes above and
-below it. To the dura mater it very often adheres, particularly at the
-angles of the hemispheres, or along the course of the longitudinal
-sinus; and, in these cases, the adhesion is always peculiarly firm at
-the vertex. The dura mater itself is less constantly changed in
-appearance, although this membrane also is sometimes more vascular than
-natural, and frequently it either adheres with preternatural firmness to
-the skull-cap, or, on the contrary, it is quite detached from it, in
-consequence of effusion between it and the bones of the cranium. To the
-pia mater, the arachnoid is also very often adherent at several points:
-it is seldom that the pia mater is changed in structure, but it is
-generally preternaturally vascular. In like manner, the theca which
-encloses the spinal cord is frequently highly vascular, and contains a
-larger quantity of fluid than natural.
-
-The brain itself is seldom or never in a healthy condition; the morbid
-changes to be distinguished in it differ greatly in degree in different
-cases, but still, in almost every case, some morbid change is to be
-discerned. These changes consist of an altered state of its substance,
-or of its cavities, or of both. The most usual change apparent in its
-substance is a higher degree of vascularity than natural. This increased
-vascularity is sometimes confined to the surface; sometimes it is more
-manifest deep in its substance; and, while common to both, it may
-exhibit different degrees of intensity in either. When on the surface,
-this preternatural vascularity is denoted by a greater fullness of the
-vessels, and, apparently by an increase in their number; when within the
-substance, by a greater number of bloody points, which are rendered
-visible by an incision with the scalpel. And in both situations it may
-exist in all degrees, from a faint blush to a deep and vivid redness.
-The substance itself is sometimes softer, sometimes firmer than natural.
-The softening differs in degree and in extent. Sometimes the entire
-cerebrum is manifestly and considerably softer than natural; at other
-times, only particular portions of it are found in this softened state.
-Now and then, but very rarely, abscess is discovered within its
-substance. It is remarkable that the cerebellum is always considerably
-softer than the cerebrum: whence these two portions of the organ are
-often observed to be in opposite states, the cerebrum being frequently
-preternaturally firm, and the cerebellum being almost always softer than
-natural. The pituitary gland also is very constantly softened, and often
-in a state of suppuration. When the cerebrum is preternaturally firm,
-the firmness is usually general.
-
-The morbid change observable in the cavities of the brain consists in
-their containing an excess of secretion. This increase of secreted fluid
-is usually accumulated in the lateral ventricles: the quantity varies
-from a drachm to several ounces; when thus great, the lateral ventricles
-themselves are enlarged, the third and fourth ventricles are likewise
-distended with fluid, and the passages connecting them are
-proportionally full.
-
-Common as it is to find a preternatural quantity of fluid in the
-ventricles, it is still more common to find it in excess between the
-membranes; often between the dura mater and the arachnoid, almost always
-between the arachnoid and the pia mater. It has been already stated,
-that the fluid effused between the arachnoid is of a gelatinous
-appearance and aspect; every where else it possesses the physical
-properties of serum, being thin, transparent, and of a straw colour: now
-and then it is thicker in consistence, opake, and even bloody, and
-sometimes that beneath the membranes contains flakes of lymph, or is
-mixed with pus.
-
-It is observable that the two morbid conditions now described, that of
-excessive vascularity and that of increased secretion, are never
-co-existent. If the vessels of the brain and its membranes are loaded
-with blood, there is little or no fluid within the former or between the
-latter: if, on the contrary, the effusion be great, there is little or
-no appearance of vascularity. Effusion is the effect and the termination
-of vascularity; it is the ultimate result of vascular action, and the
-effect having ensued, the cause ceases to be apparent.
-
-The substance of the spinal cord is seldom changed, either in
-vascularity or in consistence: the morbid changes which this organ
-undergoes have hitherto been observed only in the membrane that invests
-it, which, as has been just stated, is not only highly vascular, but
-likewise contains a much larger quantity of fluid than natural.
-
-
- 3. _Morbid Appearances in the Thorax._
-
-Of all the thoracic viscera, that which is most frequently diseased is
-the mucous membrane of the bronchi. The disease which takes place in
-this organ is not only the most constant, whatever be the type or the
-degree of fever, but it is also the most characteristic of the febrile
-state. Its disease is specific and uniform. It consists of preternatural
-redness. The character of this redness distinguishes it from that which
-is observed in ordinary inflammation. It is uniformly and strikingly
-darker, the difference in colour being precisely that which subsists
-between venous and arterial blood. This darkness of colour apparent in
-the bronchial lining, increases in degree as the tubes of the bronchi
-diminish in size: while it may be only just discernible in the large
-trunks, the colour may be nearly black in the minute branches. This
-change in the natural colour of the membrane is indicative, not only of
-an increase in its vascularity, but of alteration in its structure. It
-is almost always attended with a preternatural thickening of its
-substance, as is demonstrated by cutting through the tube and reflecting
-the membrane. The tubes themselves contain more or less fluid, which
-consists of mucus, mixed with pus. Analogous to what has been stated
-with regard to the vascularity of the brain and to its secretions, when
-the quantity of secretion contained in the bronchial tubes is great, the
-degree of vascularity apparent in the membrane is lessened.
-
-In scarlet fever, the morbid changes are somewhat different. The mucous
-membrane covering the trachea, the larynx with its cartilages, the
-amygdalæ and the soft palate is inflamed; the redness is of a brighter
-and more vivid colour than that which has been stated to be
-characteristic of continued fever without an eruption: it is similar to
-the characteristic colour of the scarlatina tongue. But what is very
-remarkable, and what appears to justify the view we have taken of
-scarlatina and the division we have suggested of its types, when the
-cases are severe, the colour of the mucous membrane becomes much darker,
-the deepness of the tinge increasing with the severity of the affection,
-until, at length, the colour closely resembles that which is peculiar to
-ordinary fever.
-
-As in continued fever without an eruption, so in scarlatina, the
-increased vascularity of the mucous membrane is accompanied with a
-preternatural thickening of its substance. In scarlet fever, that
-portion of it which covers the epiglottis, the rima glottidis, and the
-arytænoid cartilages, is especially found in this diseased condition.
-When this inflammation and thickening passes into the state of
-ulceration, which it often does, the arytænoid cartilages are the
-special seat of this process, although the ulceration often extends to
-the amygdalæ, and sometimes to the root of the tongue.
-
-When in every other respect healthy, the substance of the lungs in fever
-is so constantly found either engorged with blood or infiltrated with
-serum, that these changes would seem to form essential parts of the
-morbid phenomena.
-
-In examining those who die of fever, a great variety and complication of
-thoracic diseases, in addition to the morbid changes just described, are
-found. The pleuræ exhibit every degree of vascularity, from the faintest
-blush of redness to that which is characteristic of the most intense
-inflammation, and every extent of adhesion, from that of the smallest
-point to the complete obliteration of the cavity. The usual products of
-inflammation, namely, the effusion of serum and lymph, and the formation
-of pus and of adventitious membrane are likewise found equally varying
-in degree. The parenchyma of the lungs, besides the engorgement and
-infiltration just adverted to, presents hepatization and tubercular
-disease in every variety and degree; ulceration and abscess in every
-extent, and hæmorrhagic and calcareous depositions, together with
-enlargement and melanosis of the bronchial glands. But, since none of
-these diseases form any part of the changes of structure which are
-peculiar to the febrile state, it is sufficient in this place merely to
-advert to them.
-
-
- 4. _Morbid Appearances in the Abdomen._
-
-On opening the cavity of the abdomen all the viscera contained in it
-appear, in general, more vascular than natural, and invariably of a
-darker colour than in the state of health. Several of the organs are
-affected in a uniform and peculiar manner, but that which is by far the
-most constantly diseased is the mucous membrane of the small intestines;
-and especially that portion of it which lines the ileum and the cæcum.
-
-The varieties of disease exhibited by this membrane may be comprehended
-under three, namely, vascularity, thickening and ulceration.
-
-In all cases increased vascularity is the first stage of disease: in a
-great proportion of cases this increased vascularity is confined to the
-inferior extremity of the small intestines, which is often distinctly
-inflamed when not the slightest deviation from healthy structure is
-traceable in any other part of the canal.
-
-The second stage of disease consists in thickening of the membrane, or
-in deposition of matter beneath it, or in both. Preternatural thickening
-of the membrane is often of very considerable extent: deposition of
-matter beneath it appears to be confined to the situations of the mucous
-glands. These glands are found in all states and stages of disease from
-the least to the greatest enlargement, and from the mere abrasion of
-their surface to the entire ulceration of their substance. Perhaps one
-of the glandulæ solitariæ enlarged and covered with inflamed mucous
-membrane may constitute the only morbid appearance discernible in the
-intestine; or this deposition may take place in so many of these glands
-as to present a most extensive surface of disease.
-
-The third stage is that of ulceration, which may supervene when the
-membrane is affected in either of the modes just described; but the
-ulcer will not be the same in both cases: in each it will have a
-different and a distinctive character. If ulceration take place while
-the mucous coat is in a state of simple vascularity, the ulcer will in
-general be extensive but superficial; its surface will present a smooth
-appearance, and its margin will be regular and defined: if, on the
-contrary, it occur after thickening of the membrane or enlargement of
-its glands, its characters will be just the reverse: it will be less
-extensive, but more deep, because it must penetrate a mass of
-adventitious matter before it can reach the other coats; and, for the
-same reason, its margin will be more elevated and its surface more
-ragged. It is in this form of ulcer that perforation of the intestine
-generally occurs; in which case the mucous and muscular coats alone are
-ulcerated: the peritoneal gives way from gangrene.
-
-Whenever the mucous membrane is ulcerated, whatever be the form of the
-ulcer, the corresponding portion of the peritoneal coat is more vascular
-than natural; and perforation must be attended with inevitable death, on
-account of the extensive and intense peritonitis excited by the escape
-of fæces into the peritoneal cavity.
-
-Frequent as ulceration of the mucous membrane is in fever, and
-characteristic as this lesion is of the febrile state, yet it sometimes
-appears to be present when it does not really exist. From the quantity
-of adventitious matter deposited beneath the mucous coat, its surface
-sometimes becomes irregularly elevated, its valvulæ conniventes
-obliterated and its aspect smooth and glistening: in this state it may
-be easily mistaken, on a superficial examination, for ulceration, while
-more careful observation will shew that the membrane itself remains
-entire.
-
-Proportioned to the extent and degree of these changes in the intestine
-are, inflammation, enlargement, induration and suppuration of the
-mesenteric glands; and invariably those glands which are embedded in
-that portion of the mesentery attached to the affected intestine, are
-the most diseased.
-
-It is quite remarkable with what uniformity the spleen is diseased in
-fever. In almost every case of genuine fever hitherto examined, it has
-been found altered in appearance and deranged in structure. Its natural
-purple colour is changed to a deeper and darker tint, and, on the
-removal of the peritoneum that invests it, its substance, on being
-slightly touched with the finger, breaks down into an almost fluid mass.
-
-The pancreas, the structure of which is so seldom changed in any other
-disease, is very constantly deranged in fever. Its morbid condition is
-invariably the same, and, what is singular, it is exactly the reverse of
-that produced in the spleen. It is always more firm than natural; often
-it is exceedingly indurated, and that portion of it which is attached to
-the duodenum is sometimes nearly cartilaginous.
-
-Each organ having been described in the order of the frequency and
-extent of the disease it exhibits, we have hitherto said nothing of the
-mucous membrane of the stomach. This viscus having been regarded in
-France as the great source and seat of fever, particular attention has
-been paid to the appearances it exhibits after death. The uniform result
-of the most careful examination of fatal cases in London is, that the
-mucous membrane of this organ is less frequently, less severely, and
-less extensively diseased than any other portion of the same membrane.
-Occasionally it is more vascular than natural; this vascularity is
-seldom general; it is almost always confined to its pyloric half; in the
-few cases in which it has been very great, the membrane has been
-observed to be thickened and sometimes softened: but no instance has
-occurred in which it has been the seat of a single ulcer.
-
-Of all the abdominal viscera, the liver is the least frequently deranged
-in structure, and when it exhibits any morbid change it is both less
-extensive and less characteristic. The blood contained in it is
-peculiarly dark and always fluid; its parenchyma is sometimes softer
-than natural; the gall-bladder contains a large quantity of bile, which
-is seldom healthy, being almost always in one of two states of disease,
-either paler and more fluid than natural, or extremely dark and very
-much inspissated.
-
-The preceding comprehend all the morbid conditions of the abdominal
-viscera which are peculiar to fever: but the organs of this cavity
-exhibit other and great varieties of disease, to which, since they form
-no part of the febrile changes, it is sufficient merely to advert. Such
-are inflammation of the peritoneum; effusion of lymph upon its surface
-or of serum into its cavity; agglutination of the intestines;
-inflammation of the mesentery; false adhesions between the liver,
-spleen, and mesentery; tubercles in the liver; induration of its
-substance; tubercles and abscess of the spleen; thickening of the coats
-of the bladder and inflammation of its mucous membrane: in the female,
-vascularity and enlargement of the ovaria, to which hydatids are
-sometimes attached; vascularity of the external surface of the uterus,
-and inflammation of the os tincæ and of its internal membrane: it is
-rare to find any appearance of disease in the kidney in either sex.
-
-Such is the circle of organs which are observed to be specifically
-diseased in fever, and with the most remarkable constancy. We go on to
-give individual cases in illustration of these morbid changes and of the
-symptoms with which they are accompanied.
-
-
-II. CASES IN ILLUSTRATION OF THE MORBID CHANGES WHICH TAKE PLACE WITHIN
- THE HEAD: OR CEREBRAL CASES.
-
-
-1. _Vascularity of Brain, Spinal Cord and Membranes, with Gelatinous or
- slight Serous Effusion._
-
-
- CASE XV.
-
-SARAH AGENBAR, æt. 21, married.
-
-After some previous indisposition, attacked, eight days ago, with the
-ordinary symptoms of fever. At present, unable to give any account of
-her illness, or to answer any question: delirium came on four days ago,
-which still continues; mind quite fatuous; extreme restlessness; no
-sleep: eyes wild and rolling; tongue not to be protruded; pulse 130,
-weak and indistinct.
-
-9th. No sleep; delirium the same; pulse 126.
-
-10th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of the brain highly vascular; no
-effusion. _Thorax._ Viscera exhibited only slight indications of
-disease. _Abdomen._ Viscera nearly healthy.
-
-
- CASE XVI.
-
-MARY WELSH, æt. 55, admitted on the 15th day of fever. Attack came on
-with ordinary symptoms. Pain of head now gone; some sleep; tongue
-loaded, moist; pulse 80; skin cool.
-
-21st. No pain; much prostration; tongue dry; pulse 104.
-
-22d. Stupor; mind incoherent; scarcely any sleep; tongue brown and dry;
-pulse 108; skin hot.
-
-27th. Coma; erysipelas on face; pulse 110.
-
-28th. Coma increased; tongue deeply crusted; erysipelas extending.
-
-29th. Delirium; tongue black; stools passed in bed; erysipelas
-extending.
-
-30th. Muscular tremor.
-
-35th. Increasing coma and prostration. Died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid opake; slight serous effusion; substance of brain and
-spinal cord vascular. _Thorax._ [28][Ten or twelve ounces of serum in
-bag of pleuræ; pericardium contained twelve ounces of sero-purulent
-fluid; that part of it which is reflected over the heart highly inflamed
-and covered with flakes of coagulable lymph.] _Abdomen._ Viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE XVII.
-
-MARGARET GIBBS, æt. 63, widow, admitted on the 43rd day of fever. Pain
-of head still considerable; sleeps badly; pain of chest on right side;
-much cough, with purulent expectoration; abdomen tender; tongue loaded,
-dry; pulse 105.
-
-45th. Pain gone; drowsiness, approaching to coma; no delirium; pulse
-100.
-
-48th. Insensibility continues; cough, with bloody sputa; pulse 108.
-
-55th. Prostration; pulse 135, extremely weak; skin cold and clammy.
-
-57th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid opake, with gelatinous effusion beneath it; adherent
-to the dura mater along the longitudinal sinus; substance of brain
-vascular. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ adherent; slight effusion in left side;
-substance of lower lobes partly gorged, partly hepatized; melanotic
-deposits in the parenchyma. _Abdomen._ Both ovaria dropsical; partly
-converted into cartilage; scirrhous tumour in walls of uterus.]
-
-
- CASE XVIII.
-
-ELIZABETH RALPH, æt. 65, widow, admitted on the 8th day of fever. From
-commencement, severe pain of head and abdomen; both continue; mind
-confused; scarcely any sleep; tongue foul and dry; much thirst; bowels
-purged; pulse 105.
-
-9th. Pain of head diminished; that of abdomen unrelieved; 8 stools;
-pulse 108.
-
-10th. Pain of head gone; that of abdomen undiminished; 4 stools.
-
-11th. Pain of head not returned; tenderness of abdomen undiminished; 7
-stools; pulse 124.
-
-12th. Tenderness of abdomen unabated; now swollen, hard, and rounded at
-umbilicus; 7 stools; pulse 125.
-
-14th. Tenderness and purging continue. Died.
-
-_Head._ [Falciform process of dura mater ossified;] substance of brain
-vascular; more fluid than natural in the ventricles. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ
-adherent; serous effusion into parenchyma of lungs. _Abdomen._
-Peritoneal sac contained several ounces of pus and serum; peritoneum
-covering the liver coated with coagulable lymph; peritoneal coat of the
-intestines highly inflamed; colon adherent to the omentum all around;]
-all its coats so softened as to be easily torn; mucous membrane in
-general healthy.
-
-
- CASE XIX.
-
-ELIZABETH GASSET, æt. 32, married, admitted on the 8th day of fever.
-Attack commenced, in addition to the common symptoms, with violent pain
-of the bowels. Epigastre still extremely tender; tongue red, clean,
-moist; no stool for six days; no pain of head or chest; pulse 99.
-
-9th. Tenderness of epigastrium continues; tongue red and dry; no stool;
-pulse 84; no cerebral nor pectoral symptoms.
-
-10th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of the brain highly vascular; no
-effusion. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy. _Abdomen._ [Eight inches of the
-jejunum intussuscepted within a portion of the same intestine of equal
-length; the farthest extremity of the intussuscepted part mortified; the
-mucous membrane of the containing portion highly vascular and in a state
-of ecchymosis; the intestinal canal, between the constricted portion and
-the stomach, contracted, and its valvulæ conniventes enlarged and
-œdematous; the size of the tube beyond the disease much diminished, and
-the colon, especially, contracted into a mere cord.]
-
-
- CASE XX.
-
-JOSEPH DANBURY, æt. 20, stone-cutter. Admitted on the 15th day of fever;
-pain of head, which has never been great, is now very slight; much
-vertigo; eyes sallow; no uneasiness in chest; some cough; abdomen
-tender; tongue brown; teeth sordid; much thirst; pulse 108.
-
-26th. Since last report, pain of head never entirely absent; vertigo
-constant and distressing; pain in the right side of the head much
-increased to-day, while the vertigo is now gone; delirium; eyes
-suffused; tongue dry; pulse 120.
-
-36th. The pain of the head and the giddiness have continued to
-alternate; both are now quite gone; mind confused and dull; expression
-of countenance wild; muscular tremor; respiration hurried.
-
-37th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Pia mater vascular; substance of brain vascular; slight effusion
-between the membranes and into the ventricles. _Thorax._ No prominent
-disease. _Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular; other
-viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXI.
-
-EDWARD FORRESTER, æt. 46, cabinet-maker. Admitted on 6th day of fever.
-Complaint commenced with severe pain of back, loins, and epigastrium,
-with sense of ardent heat. At present, pain of head slight; that of
-epigastrium continues; tongue white, moist; no uneasiness of chest;
-pulse 90.
-
-7th. Pain of head, limbs and epigastrium; tongue white, dry; pulse 96,
-full and strong. V.S. ad ℥xij.
-
-8th. Pain of head gone; that of epigastrium diminished; pulse 110; blood
-not sizy.
-
-10th. Pain of head returned; that of epigastrium diminished; no sleep;
-delirium; pulse 126.
-
-12th. Pain of head again gone; delirium continues; pulse 110.
-
-13th. No sleep; mind confused; delirium; subsultus tendinum.
-
-15th. Cerebral symptoms undiminished; tongue dry and quite black; lips
-and teeth covered with black sordes.
-
-19th. Severity of symptoms had diminished; lips, teeth, and tongue had
-begun to clean; pulse fallen to 96; but the parotid gland to-day
-painful, enlarged and indurated.
-
-20th. Tumour of parotid increased; all the symptoms greatly aggravated;
-tongue not to be protruded.
-
-22d. Insensibility amounting to coma.
-
-27th. Insensibility and prostration gradually increased. Died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid white and opake; firmly adherent along the vertex to
-the dura mater. Surface and substance of brain highly vascular;
-gelatinous effusion between the membranes. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of
-bronchi vascular; [pleuræ adherent; lower lobe of left lung partly
-hepatized, and partly consisting of a mass of suppurating tubercles.]
-_Abdomen._ Small intestines of extremely dark colour; mucous membrane
-vascular.
-
-
- CASE XXII.
-
-MARY SINGLETON, æt. 28, married. Admitted on the 8th day of fever: pain
-of head slight, confined chiefly to the occiput; pain of left side, with
-inability to lie on it; no cough; tenderness of abdomen; pulse 111.
-
-9th. After venesection to twelve ounces pain in head, side, and abdomen
-relieved; blood buffy.
-
-11th. Slight pain of occiput; much pain and tenderness of abdomen; pulse
-120.
-
-13th. Cerebral and abdominal symptoms unchanged; tongue brown and dry;
-eyes yellow.
-
-19th. Pain of head never entirely disappeared, but though always present
-it was always slight; now respiration hurried; tongue extremely brown
-and dry; pulse 120; eyes yellow.
-
-20th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes of brain vascular with gelatinous effusion beneath
-them; and slight serous effusion into ventricles: substance both of
-cerebrum and cerebellum highly vascular; pituitary gland softened and
-suppurating. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular; substance of
-both lungs gorged with blood; [pleuræ universally adherent.] _Abdomen._
-Mucous membrane of intestines not vascular; but the mesentery highly
-injected: [liver adherent to diaphragm.]
-
-
- CASE XXIII.
-
-MARY ANN LAMBERTH, æt. 16, servant. Admitted on 22d day of fever. Pain
-of head, which has been very severe, is now gone; no tenderness of
-abdomen on fullest pressure; tongue red, smooth, and chapped; lips and
-teeth sordid; bowels purged; pulse 108.
-
-30th. Cough with slight expectoration; cheek dusky; no tenderness of
-abdomen; bowels purged; pulse 120.
-
-35th. Mind confused; much restlessness; no sleep; stools passed in bed;
-pulse 124, weak. A diffused swelling has appeared about the left wrist,
-attended with great pain.
-
-36th. Mind more confused; countenance sunk; swelling of wrist increased;
-pulse not to be counted.
-
-37th. Died.
-
-N.B. Probable that the swelling of the wrist arose from the peculiar
-affection hereafter to be described.[29]
-
-_Head._ Some effusion beneath the membranes, and at the base of the
-skull; substance of brain natural; anterior and middle lobes firmly
-adherent. _Thorax._ Healthy. _Abdomen._ The ilium contained one large
-and spreading ulcer, the glands around which were darkened and inflamed.
-
-
- CASE XXIV.
-
-MARY CROUCH, æt. 30. Admitted on the 7th day of fever. At present pain
-of head gone; some pain of back continues; no sleep; great restlessness;
-almost constant moaning; no uneasiness of chest; no cough; respiration
-hurried; pulse 108.
-
-8th. Sleeplessness, hurried respiration, tenderness of abdomen continue;
-tongue red and glazed.
-
-9th. Delirium; respiration hurried and noisy; lips and teeth sordid.
-
-10th. Subsultus tendinum.
-
-11th. Face livid; dark, bloody-coloured fluid issuing from the mouth;
-convulsive twitchings of muscles of face and hands. Died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid opake; dura mater vascular; substance of brain
-vascular; some effusion between membranes and into ventricles. _Thorax._
-Nearly healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium vascular; liver
-soft.
-
-
- CASE XXV.
-
-MARY GOODMAN, æt. 50, nurse. Admitted on 4th day of disease: has been in
-a state of constant intoxication for several days past; has had much
-pain of head, which is now nearly gone; mind confused; eyes injected;
-abdomen tender; bowels purged; tongue brown and dry in middle; white at
-edges; tremulous; pulse 120; skin hot. Died next morning.
-
-_Head._ Sinuses of dura mater turgid with blood; vessels of pia mater
-greatly congested; an ounce and a half of serum at the base of the
-skull. Theca vertebralis highly vascular; great congestion of vertebral
-veins; some effusion of serum at cauda equina. _Thorax._ Healthy.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines vascular; [liver greatly
-enlarged.]
-
-
- CASE XXVI.
-
-JOHN EYLES, æt. 25, servant. Admitted on the 10th day of scarlet fever.
-Throat sore; deglutition painful; eruption fading; no pain of head,
-chest, or abdomen; tongue red and glazed; lips and teeth sordid; bowels
-purged; pulse 129.
-
-11th. Voice hoarse; pulse 120; not the slightest pain of head.
-
-14th. Numerous ash-coloured crusts scattered over the internal fauces;
-countenance anxious; respiration hurried; pulse 108. Died next morning.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid thick, opake, and unusually firm, with slight effusion
-beneath it; substance both of cerebrum and cerebellum highly vascular;
-pituitary gland enlarged and beginning to suppurate. _Thorax._ Larynx
-inflamed, covered with superficial circular ulcers; tongue aphthous;
-mouths of ducts on the surface of the amygdalæ ulcerated. _Abdomen._
-Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum highly vascular, not ulcerated;
-vessels of all the organs exceedingly turgid with blood.
-
-
- 2. _Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &c. with Effusion of Coagulable
- Lymph and Formation of Pus._
-
-
- CASE XXVII.
-
-JAMES MOULDEN, æt. 17, servant. Admitted on the 5th day of fever; left
-the hospital three months ago cured of a similar attack. Present relapse
-came on besides the ordinary symptoms, with severe pain of the head;
-pain still continues, but it is now only slight; expression of
-countenance dull and heavy; pulse 92, soft; no thoracic symptoms; no
-tenderness of abdomen; tongue loaded in middle with yellow fur, red
-around the edges, moist.
-
-6th. Pain of head continues with sense of weight and intolerance of
-light; scarcely any sleep; pulse 102.
-
-9th. Pain of head and intolerance of light increased; adnatæ glistening;
-pulse 94.
-
-10th. Pain of head quite gone; sense of weight and intolerance of light
-continue; face flushed; pulse 84.
-
-11th. Pain of head returned; no sleep; delirium; pulse 96; tongue brown
-and dry.
-
-13th. Pain of head and dullness and heaviness of eyes increased; pulse
-84; abdomen tender.
-
-14th. Nearly insensible; pulse 90; abdomen tender, swollen, and hard.
-
-15th. Last evening coma increased; respiration became hurried and
-laborious; great prostration; expired this morning.
-
-_Head._ Membranes highly vascular; a large quantity of coagulable lymph
-effused at base of the brain. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi
-highly vascular; substance of lungs gorged with blood. _Abdomen._ On
-mucous membrane of stomach several patches of a dark red colour; mucous
-membrane of intestines pretty natural. [Spleen studded with soft
-tubercles of various sizes, some of which contained a cheesy matter;
-others a puriform fluid; the liver contained a few tubercles of the same
-nature but smaller.]
-
-
- CASE XXVIII.
-
-CHARLOTTE CLARKE, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on 3d day of scarlet fever;
-throat sore; deglutition painful; no pain of chest; some cough; pain of
-head severe; much pain of limbs; mind distinct; tolerable sleep; no
-tenderness of abdomen; skin warm, covered with scarlet eruption; tongue
-characteristic; much thirst; no stool for three days; pulse 126, of good
-power; V. S. ad ℥xvj.
-
-4th. Blood inflamed; throat continues sore; pain of head gone; pulse
-130. Hirud. xij. gutt.
-
-5th. Throat unrelieved; deglutition very painful; no pain of head; pulse
-110. Rep. Hirud. x.
-
-6th. Throat nearly well; pulse 116.
-
-16th. Had become convalescent; yesterday evening felt scarcely so well;
-during the night extremely restless, with much noisy delirium; at
-present quite prostrate; pulse 117, not weak; respiration hurried;
-abdomen tender; tongue quite dry; four stools of green colour, all
-passed in bed; erysipelas on right temple.
-
-17th. Lies quite prostrate; insensible; constant delirium with unceasing
-moaning; muscular tremor; all the stools passed in bed; pulse 126. Died
-following morning.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular; some spots of ecchymosis between its
-laminæ; arachnoid vascular, with effusion of viscid serum between it and
-pia mater. Between the arachnoid and the pia mater covering the superior
-part of the right hemisphere a layer of coagulable lymph of a yellow
-colour, on the removal of which the pia mater beneath it appeared
-entire. Shreds of coagulable lymph were also found at the base of the
-brain where there was more serum than natural as well as in the
-ventricles. Substance of the brain highly vascular. Viscera of thorax
-and abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXIX.
-
-ISAAC COOMBES, æt. 60, weaver. Admitted on 9th day of fever: at present
-no pain of head; some sleep; face pallid; great prostration; no thoracic
-or abdominal symptoms.
-
-15th. Convalescent.
-
-21st. Attacked suddenly with shivering, heat, vomiting; no pain of head
-or of any organ; pulse 96.
-
-22d. Continues quite free from pain, but no sleep; extreme restlessness;
-great prostration; skin warm and dry; pulse 84. Died following morning.
-
-_Head._ Between the pia mater and the arachnoid a large quantity of
-coagulable lymph of a yellow colour, with which indeed the arachnoid
-appeared to be universally lined, and which in some places was very
-thick. Substance of the brain highly vascular, being exceedingly full of
-bloody points, and in some places stained; three or four ounces of serum
-in the ventricles, at the bottom of each of which lay about a drachm of
-pus. The spinal sheath contained the same kind of substance, while the
-cord itself presented a healthy appearance. _Thorax._ Right lung gorged
-with blood and partly hepatized. _Abdomen._ Spleen soft; other viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXX.
-
-SUSANAH STAMMERS, æt. 9, destitute. Admitted on the 8th day of fever.
-Attack commenced with severe pain of the head which continues with
-almost equal violence; little or no sleep; eyes dull and heavy; face
-flushed; pulse 126; slight uneasiness of chest on full inspiration; no
-cough; no tenderness of abdomen; tongue loaded with white fur; red at
-point; bowels purged.
-
-9th. Pain of head quite gone; less sensible; countenance more dull and
-heavy; pulse 120; abdomen tender.
-
-11th. Delirium, with much talkativeness; pulse 112.
-
-14th. Coma; bowels continue purged.
-
-15th. Abdomen tender, swollen, rounded at navel.
-
-19th. More sensible; more tranquil sleep; delirium gone; pulse 110.
-
-27th. No coma nor delirium; tranquil sleep; tongue moist, cleaning;
-pulse 108 feeble.
-
-45th. Appeared upon the whole to be convalescing, but in an exceedingly
-slow and imperfect manner; there was a remarkable vacancy in her
-countenance, almost amounting to a fatuous expression; and her mind was
-peevish and childish. On this day she was seized suddenly with
-convulsions of extreme violence, and died within twenty-four hours after
-the attack.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid thickened and opake; effusion of gelatinous fluid
-beneath it; substance of brain highly vascular; in the inferior cornu of
-left ventricle a pint of purulent matter, somewhat resembling broken
-down cortical substance; it lay loose within the cavity. _Thorax._
-Superior lobe of right lung gorged and partly hepatized. [Pleuræ of
-right side adherent;] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of cæcum and
-commencement of colon vascular.
-
-
- CASE XXXI.
-
-HENRY BREWER, æt. 59, labourer. Admitted on the 10th day of fever:
-states that he has no pain in the head, and that he is quite free from
-pain every where excepting in the right side, where he has some
-uneasiness, which is attended with slight cough; tongue brown and dry;
-bowels natural; pulse 96.
-
-12th. No pain of head; that of chest gone; sleeps well; pulse 108.
-
-16th. About an hour after yesterday’s visit became suddenly insensible;
-it has been impossible to rouse him from this coma which still continues
-profound; respiration stertorous. Died in the course of the day.
-
-_Head_: Dura mater thickened but not vascular; arachnoid thickened and
-opake; beneath it gelatinous effusion; upon its external surface a large
-quantity of well-formed pus; a quantity of purulent matter at the base
-of the brain surrounding the corpora quadrigemina: walls of the fourth
-ventricle ragged; two ounces of serous fluid in lateral ventricles and
-at base. _Thorax._ [Pluræ adherent; lower and middle lobes of right lung
-hepatized.] _Abdomen._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
-3. _Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &c. with copious Serous Effusion._
-
-
- CASE XXXII.
-
-GEORGE BLACKBEARD, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on the 22nd day of fever:
-complaint commenced with violent head-ache attended with frequent fits
-of epistaxis; pain of the head still continues, chiefly confined to the
-occiput; little sleep; eyes injected and suffused; pulse 102, tongue
-loaded, dry.
-
-23d. Scarcely any pain in the head.
-
-25th. Pain of the head entirely gone; epistaxis.
-
-26th. Delirium: muscular tremor.
-
-28th. Delirium and muscular tremor increased; pulse 112; tongue more
-dry; lips and teeth sordid.
-
-31st. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; ventricles distended
-with serum; no characteristic disease in thorax or abdomen.
-
-
- CASE XXXIII.
-
-ANN HIGGINS, æt. 30, servant. Admitted on the 22d day of fever: pain of
-head from the commencement very severe; chiefly confined to the right
-side; still continues, together with severe pain in the limbs; some pain
-in the right side of chest; cough; abdomen not tender; tongue dry in
-middle; red and moist around edges and at point; pulse 105, feeble; much
-prostration; entire surface of the body preternaturally sensible.
-
-23rd. The sensibility which from the commencement has been felt over the
-whole surface of the body is now particularly acute in the joints; in
-all of which there is severe pain; pulse 112.
-
-25th. Pain of head gone; mind indistinct; tongue dry: stools passed in
-bed; pulse 105. Pains in the joints; swelling and redness of left
-fore-arm.
-
-27th. Mind more and more indistinct; pressure on any part of the body
-produces extreme pain; joints the same; died next day. At this period
-attention had not been awakened to the peculiar disease of the joints
-hereafter to be described; they were not therefore examined; but without
-doubt the affection was of the same nature.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular, and adhered with preternatural firmness to
-the skull; pia mater vascular; substance of brain natural; pituitary
-gland suppurating; the lateral and the third ventricles full of serous
-fluid; one ounce at base. _Thorax._ [Lungs emphysematous; several points
-of tubercular suppuration in left.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small
-intestines inflamed without ulceration.
-
-
- CASE XXXIV.
-
-JAMES DENNIE, æt. 28, labourer. Admitted on the 8th day of fever, which
-attacked with usual symptoms: at present pain of head; little sleep;
-eyes dull and heavy; some cough; respiration hurried; abdomen not
-tender; tongue white; pulse 112, weak; prostration.
-
-9th. Pain of head increased; delirium; eyes suffused; cough and hurried
-respiration continue.
-
-10th. Pain of head gone; constant and violent delirium; no sleep; pulse
-108.
-
-11th. Delirium gone; profound coma; muscular tremor; respiration
-hurried; pulse 108.
-
-12th. Coma deeper; extreme restlessness; respiration more hurried;
-stools and urine passed in bed. Died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid vascular; substance both of cerebrum and cerebellum
-vascular; all the ventricles full of serum; viscera of thorax and
-abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXXV.
-
-CHARLOTTE WATTS, æt. 9. Previous history of disease unknown: at present
-scarcely at all sensible; almost constant crying; frequent rolling of
-the head on the pillow; countenance anxious; pulse not to be counted
-from her extreme restlessness; respiration hurried; abdomen not tender;
-lips and teeth sordid. 2d day after admission constant noisy delirium;
-pulse 120.
-
-17th. Almost imperceptible, but still gradual improvement since last
-report; more sensible; no delirium; but mind throughout extremely
-peevish and fretful; stools have constantly been and still are passed in
-bed; pulse 116.
-
-19th. Large sloughing sores on loins and hips; erysipelas of surrounding
-integuments; pulse 112, weak.
-
-27th. Sloughs have extended between the shoulders, along the back, and
-over both hips; great emaciation; extreme prostration; mind continues
-very fretful; pulse 110, very weak.
-
-37th. Gradually grew weaker and weaker until this day, when she died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid vascular; substance of brain and especially medulla
-oblongata highly vascular; between the arachnoid and the dura mater much
-limpid serum; all the ventricles distended with a similar fluid.
-_Thorax._ [Pleuræ adherent. Both lungs contained numerous tubercles in a
-state of suppuration. A large proportion of right lung hepatized.]
-_Abdomen._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXXVI.
-
-MARY SULLIVAN, æt. 26, married. Admitted on the 14th day of disease;
-pain of head severe from the beginning; continues unabated and even
-violent; no sleep; face pallid; expression depressed; pulse 81; abdomen
-tender; tongue foul and dry. V. S. ad ℥xij.
-
-18th. Pain of head gone; delirium; pulse 70, soft; tongue more dry.
-
-24th. Pain of head, which had returned slightly on some of the preceding
-days, was, from this period, finally lost in insensibility; no longer
-conscious; prostration; great restlessness; almost constant moaning;
-occasional retching; pulse 72.
-
-26th. Continues perfectly insensible; all the stools passed in bed;
-pulse suddenly rose to 120, on the following day fell to 102; eyes half
-open and injected: no material change till 29th, died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of brain appeared pretty healthy; all
-the ventricles enlarged, and contained about three ounces of limpid
-serum; a considerable quantity, also, at base; some coagulable lymph
-effused on that part of the arachnoid which covers the tuber annulare.
-_Thorax._ [Pleuræ adherent; substance of lungs full of tubercles, in
-different stages of disease.] _Abdomen._ [Liver hard;] other viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE XXXVII.
-
-ANN BOON, æt. 14, admitted on 10th day of fever. Attacked in the
-beginning with severe head-ache, which still continues; abdomen tender;
-lips and teeth sordid; tongue brown and dry; pulse 120.
-
-11th. Pain of head undiminished; eyes heavy and suffused; delirium;
-tongue red, dry, and glazed; pulse 108.
-
-13th. Pain of head quite gone; delirium; pulse 118.
-
-19th. Much noise through the night; peevishness during the day; pulse
-108.
-
-20th. More insensible; can give no answer to any question; pulse 118.
-
-22d. Constant rolling of the head; pupils dilated; all the stools passed
-in bed; pulse 108.
-
-29th. Eyes vacant and staring; pupils contracted; head sunk in bed; legs
-drawn up; stools passed in bed; urine abundant; pulse 117, regular and
-of good power.
-
-30th. Skin covered in several places with vesicles, which discharge a
-thin ichor. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; upwards of three
-ounces of serum in the ventricles and at base; much similar fluid in
-theca vertebralis. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy. _Abdomen._ Mesenteric
-glands greatly enlarged; some of them suppurating.
-
-
- CASE XXXVIII.
-
-RICHARD MACIFF, æt. 30, admitted on the 22d day of fever. No account can
-be obtained of its previous history: at present he lies quite prostrate
-and perfectly insensible; eyes wild and rolling; pupils dilated and
-insensible to light; constantly picking at the objects around him; pulse
-not to be counted, on account of his extreme restlessness, but it feels
-like a soft cotton cord, and nearly without pulsation.
-
-23d. Profound coma; senseless muttering; constant muscular tremor;
-squinting; neither stool nor urine has been passed since admission;
-pulse 96, soft, not intermittent.
-
-24th. Coma undiminished; one stool passed in bed; urine drawn off by the
-catheter; pulse 100, extremely feeble.
-
-25th. No change.
-
-26th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular; arachnoid highly vascular; that portion of
-it covering the tuber annulare distended into a bag of considerable
-size, filled with serum; all the ventricles enlarged and distended with
-serum. _Thorax._ [Right lung contained tubercles in various stages of
-disease.] _Abdomen._ [Liver of unusually deep red colour; in right and
-left lobes two small sacs, filled with calcareous matter; on surface of
-spleen a sac, containing matter similar to that in the liver.]
-
-
- CASE XXXIX.
-
-WILLIAM TENNANT, æt. 18, tailor. Admitted on the 8th day of fever; at
-present much pain of head back, and extremities; no sleep; face flushed;
-epigastrium tender: tongue red round margin, coated in middle; much
-thirst; pulse 99. V.S. ad ℥x.
-
-9th. Pain of head continues; scarcely any sleep; pulse 96. C.C. ad ℥x.
-nuchæ.
-
-10th. Pain of head unrelieved, particularly severe over the forehead;
-face flushed; tongue brown and dry; pulse 92.
-
-11th. Pain of head quite gone; no longer conscious of any uneasiness in
-the limbs; much drowsiness; delirium; pulse 104.
-
-12th. Rather more sensible; delirium; tongue unchanged; stools and urine
-passed in bed; pulse 112.
-
-13th. Delirium increased; eyes glistening; pulse 120.
-
-14th. Mind more distinct this morning; much delirium through the night;
-respiration hurried; pulse 130. Died next morning.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance healthy; on the under surface of right
-hemisphere, corresponding with the middle lobe, a remarkably deep and
-extensive depression, the deepest part corresponding to the centre of
-the brain; this depression was lined with the arachnoid, which being
-reflected formed a sac, that contained 12 ounces of serous fluid, and
-completely filled the cavity. The cerebral substance beneath and around
-was perfectly sound and entire. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy. _Abdomen._
-Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum extensively and greatly ulcerated.
-
-
- 4. _Vascularity &c. with preternatural Firmness of Brain._
-
-
- CASE XL.
-
-THOMAS CONOLLY, æt. 58, labourer. Admitted on 7th day of fever: severe
-pain of head early in the attack which has continued without
-intermission, accompanied with vertigo; scarcely any sleep; face
-flushed; no uneasiness of chest; abdomen not tender; no stool for four
-days; tongue loaded and dry; pulse 96, weak.
-
-8th. Less pain of head; no improvement in other symptoms; pulse 92.
-
-9th. Scarcely any pain of head; no sleep; delirium; muscular tremor;
-tongue brown and dry; pulse 111.
-
-10th. Pain quite gone; more insensible; constant talkative delirium;
-colour of cheek dusky, almost livid; respiration hurried; stools and
-urine in bed; pulse 112, feeble.
-
-11th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; arachnoid thickened and opake; substance of
-brain highly vascular and preternaturally firm; some fluid beneath
-membranes and in ventricles. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ adherent;] lungs gorged
-with blood. _Abdomen._ Liver and spleen exceedingly softened, readily
-breaking down beneath the finger.
-
-
- CASE XLI.
-
-MARY TIFFIN, æt. 25, servant. Perfectly insensible: no account can be
-obtained of history or duration of disease: abdomen tender; tongue
-loaded, moist; pulse 99.
-
-2d day after admission scarcely any sleep; delirium; muscular tremor.
-
-3d. Insensibility continues; constant delirium; has passed neither stool
-nor urine; latter drawn off by catheter; pulse 124, feeble and
-fluttering. Died next morning.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater and arachnoid natural; pia mater vascular; substance
-of brain highly vascular and unusually firm; cerebellum soft; effusion
-beneath arachnoid and at base. _Thorax._ [Substance of both lungs filled
-with miliary tubercles.] _Abdomen._ [Liver studded with tubercles,
-similar to those of the lungs; spleen full of the same kind of
-tubercles, excepting that they were larger, and some of them were
-suppurating;] pancreas extremely firm.
-
-
- CASE XLII.
-
-MARY POULSTON, æt. 50. No account to be obtained of duration of disease:
-lies quite insensible and prostrate; frequent jactitation of the arms;
-face flushed; respiration stertorous; cheeks alternately expanding and
-collapsing during inspiration and expiration; tongue not to be
-protruded; stools and urine in bed; pulse 138, weak, and easily
-compressed.
-
-2d. Died.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular; arachnoid thickened and opake; substance of
-brain highly vascular and firm. _Thorax._ All the viscera perfectly
-healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of intestines vascular, without
-ulceration; mesentery inflamed; [contained a calcareous deposit of an
-oval shape included in a cyst.]
-
-
- CASE XLIII.
-
-WILLIAM ASHLEY, æt. 65, messenger. Admitted on 4th day of fever: slight
-occasional head-ache; mind distinct; scarcely any sleep; face flushed;
-no uneasiness of chest or abdomen; slight cough; pulse 81.
-
-5th. Slight head-ache; little sleep; pulse 82.
-
-6th. Pain of head gone; pulse 90.
-
-8th. No pain; mind confused; delirium; stools in bed; pulse 108.
-
-10th. Prostration; pulse 111.
-
-11th. Perfectly insensible; great prostration; deglutition difficult;
-hiccup; pulse 116, extremely feeble.
-
-12th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substances of brain intensely vascular; perhaps as
-much so as in pure phrenitis; substance exceedingly firm; viscera of
-thorax and abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE XLIV.
-
-FRANCIS HODGKINSON, æt. 15, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of fever:
-pain of head and vertigo, which ushered in the attack already gone; mind
-confused; scarcely any sleep; slight pain of chest on full inspiration;
-slight cough; abdomen not tender; tongue red at margin, centre covered
-with yellow fur; pulse 117, easily compressed.
-
-9th. No pain; much confusion; much restlessness; respiration oppressed;
-tongue still moist; lips and teeth sordid; stools in bed; pulse 112.
-
-13th. Petechiæ; tongue dry; pulse 110.
-
-15th. No material change in symptoms. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; substance exceedingly vascular and firm;
-some fluid in ventricles and at base. _Thorax._ Lower lobe of left lung
-of dark red colour and inflamed. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small
-intestines vascular, and of dark red colour.
-
-
- CASE XLV.
-
-WILLIAM WHITE, æt. 17, labourer. Admitted on 6th day of fever: pain of
-head; especially over forehead; mind distinct; some sleep; face flushed;
-no thoracic or abdominal uneasiness; tongue white and dry; no stool for
-a week; pulse 126.
-
-7th. Pain of head very severe; pulse 117; V. S. ad ℥xij.
-
-8th. Died this morning most suddenly and unexpectedly, after having
-complained of violent pain of the head.
-
-_Head_, not examined till three days after death, yet the substance of
-the brain was exceedingly firm, and seemed to distend and protrude its
-membranes, so that there seemed something like hypertrophy of its
-substance; viscera of thorax and abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE XLVI.
-
-JOHN MULLINS, æt. 28, servant. Stated to be a relapse after a fever of
-three weeks duration: at present, lies perfectly senseless; noisy
-delirium; extreme restlessness; pulse 70.
-
-2nd day after admission, continues perfectly insensible; respiration
-slow and stertorous; tongue not to be protruded; stools passed in bed;
-pulse 60.
-
-6th. Remained nearly in the same state until this morning. Died.
-
-_Head._ Dura and pia mater highly injected; surface of brain quite dry
-and hard; substance throughout exceedingly firm, and thickly crowded
-with bloody points; cerebellum soft; pituitary gland soft; all the
-ventricles, especially the third, exceedingly enlarged and quite full of
-limpid serum; communicating passages greatly distended; an ounce of
-serum at base. _Thorax._ [Left pleuræ completely adherent; both lungs
-full of tubercles, many of which in the left lung were softened and
-others were in a state of suppuration.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of
-small intestines inflamed and thickened; no ulceration. [Sigmoid flexure
-of colon contracted into the form of a small white cord of very narrow
-calibre, the superior extremity of which was blocked up by a large
-scybala; and beyond it there was a great accumulation of fæces; spleen
-very small; right kidney weighed only six drachms; left seven ounces and
-a half; liver extremely small weighing only two pounds, six drachms; it
-lay across the epigastrium and adhered by a preternatural membrane to
-the diaphragm on the left side; mesentery wasted.]
-
-
- 5. _Vascularity, &c. with Softening of the Brain._
-
-
- CASE XLVII.
-
-SARAH HAMPDEN, æt. 50. No account to be obtained of history of disease,
-but it is stated that this is the 22d day of her fever: at present mind
-quite fatuous; some uneasiness of chest; cough; abdomen not tender;
-tongue red and dry; pulse 99.
-
-24th. Subsultus; urine in bed; no stool.
-
-26th. Mind rather more distinct and more firm; less subsultus;
-submaxillary gland enlarged and painful; pulse 108.
-
-28th. Much prostration; no other change.
-
-30th. Increasing prostration; pulse 120, feeble.
-
-32d. Died.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular and thickened; arachnoid white and opake;
-substance of brain slightly vascular, but very soft; pituitary gland
-suppurating; all the ventricles distended with serum. _Thorax._
-[Universal adhesion of the pleuræ; lungs studded with tubercles.]
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines inflamed; no ulceration;
-pancreas very hard; liver much softened.
-
-
- CASE XLVIII.
-
-VIRGINA M’MAHON, æt. 8, admitted on 14th day of scarlet fever. No
-account can be obtained of previous history; mind quite confused;
-extreme restlessness; abdomen tender; tongue very red and sore; tarsi
-red and irritable.
-
-15th. Delirium; moaning; no sleep; more sensible to-day; abdomen less
-tender; pulse extremely quick and weak.
-
-18th. Without any material change, died.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid opake; effusion between it and the pia mater;
-substance of brain exceedingly soft; two ounces of serum in the
-ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of trachea and bronchi vascular;
-bronchial tubes filled with mucus. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small
-intestines vascular; mesenteric glands enlarged.
-
-
- CASE XLIX.
-
-DORCAS WINGROVE, æt. 23, servant, admitted on the 6th day of fever.
-Attack commenced with violent pain in the head, preceded by no other
-symptom that was observed; this pain still continues exceedingly severe,
-and is confined chiefly to the right eye; mind distinct; no sleep; much
-restlessness during the night; countenance pallid; no uneasiness of
-chest; abdomen tender; bowels constipated; tongue pale, clean and moist;
-pulse 93, weak.
-
-7th. Pain of head undiminished; delirium; three stools in bed; tongue
-brown and quite dry; pulse 100, firm, strong, and sharp. C.C. ad ℥xij.
-nuchæ.
-
-8th. Pain of head gone; no sleep; noisy delirium; stools in bed; pulse
-120, weak.
-
-9th. Slight, but very transient amendment.
-
-11th. Comatose; lies quite prostrate; stools in bed; pulse 130, feeble.
-
-12th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; arachnoid opake; corpus striatum in part
-highly inflamed, in part softening to suppuration; viscera of thorax and
-abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE L.
-
-THOMAS PROCTOR, æt. 45. Date and progress of disease unknown: at present
-perfectly insensible; extreme restlessness; eyes dull and vacant; tongue
-dry; pulse scarcely to be distinguished.
-
-2d day after admission. Insensibility the same; almost constant moaning;
-features sunk; expression of countenance anxious; pulse 118. Next
-morning died.
-
-_Head._ [In falciform process of dura mater an ossification, two inches
-and a half in length and half an inch in breadth, with several similar
-ossifications along the course of the longitudinal sinus;] the arachnoid
-and pia mater consolidated into one thick, opake and yellow membrane;
-substance of brain highly vascular and very soft; cerebellum quite
-disorganized, being broken down into a yellow, puriform mass of matter,
-a considerable portion of which lay loose on the floor of the cranium;
-all the ventricles full of serum, in which floated numerous flakes of
-lymph; base immersed in similar fluid. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of jejunum and ilium much inflamed, neither
-thickened nor ulcerated; [liver greatly enlarged; walls of bladder half
-an inch thick.]
-
-The following is placed at the end of the cerebral cases, not because it
-illustrates any new circumstance in the condition of the brain, but
-because, while the symptoms and the pathology are prominently cerebral,
-it affords one of the most complete examples of the peculiar affection
-of the joints already referred to.
-
-
- CASE LI.
-
-GEORGE CARTER, æt. 28. Admitted on the 4th day of scarlet fever: throat
-sore; deglutition painful; cough; no pain of chest or abdomen; nausea;
-tendency to vomiting; no pain of head; mind distinct; pulse 108, weak.
-
-5th. No pain; eyes suffused; pulse 120, firmer.
-
-6th. Mind confused; eruption partial, interspersed with papulæ; tongue
-of strawberry appearance, and rough from prominence of papillæ; pulse
-124.
-
-7th. Delirium, so violent as to require restraint; no sleep; pulse 120.
-
-8th. Eruption changed to copper-colour; tongue dry; pulse 112.
-
-10th. Inflammation of parotid gland.
-
-18th. Tumour of left parotid exceedingly hard and slowly suppurating;
-slight difficulty in swallowing; pulse 96.
-
-21st. Tumour opened last night and discharged two ounces of bloody pus;
-pulse 108.
-
-28th. Alternately mended a little and then fell back to his former state
-until last night, when swelling of right wrist and left knee came on,
-attended with excruciating pain and great heat without any
-discoloration: 12 leeches have been applied with considerable relief:
-mind confused; no sleep; countenance anxious; face flushed; rigors;
-pulse 135.
-
-24th. Other wrist and knee have begun to swell and are excessively
-painful; left wrist and knee which had been more easy, again extremely
-painful; vomiting; respiration hurried; pulse 116, weak. Died.
-
-_Head._ Much serum both in ventricles and at base. _Thorax._ Viscera
-healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of the ilium ulcerated and extremely
-dark.
-
-All the large joints swollen and red: on opening the knee joints they
-were found to contain several ounces of serum mixed with pus; the
-cellular tissue in the neighbourhood was partly inflamed, and partly
-mortified and sloughing: both wrists were in a similar condition.
-
-
- CASE XII.
-
-JAMES SOLDEN, æt. 44, plasterer. For symptoms see page 155.
-
-_Head._ Membranes of brain vascular; substance highly vascular; some
-effusion beneath the arachnoid. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy. _Abdomen._
-Mucous membrane of ilium vascular; no ulceration; mesenteric glands
-enlarged.
-
-
- CASE XIII.
-
-JOHN CLARK, æt. 17. For symptoms see page 156.
-
-_Head._ Corresponding portions of the pericranium and dura mater
-detached from the occipital bone to the extent of four inches in length
-by three in width; coagulated blood effused between the dura mater and
-the cranium; vessels of the membranes turgid with blood; substance of
-brain vascular; effusion between the membranes; a little at base.
-_Thorax._ Viscera healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium greatly
-inflamed; cæcum ulcerated.
-
-From the study of these cases we see that the process of disease is as
-uniform as that of health, or of any other process of nature; that
-certain phenomena constantly take place; that they follow a determinate
-order; that the events seldom or never vary; that their relations to
-each other never change; that in these cerebral cases of fever a
-preternatural fulness and apparently increase in the number of the
-blood-vessels of the brain and spinal cord, or of their membranes is
-always present; or that if a case do now and then occur in which even
-_no_ preternatural vascularity can be discovered such an event is
-exceedingly rare; that this fulness and increase of the blood-vessels is
-either identical with, or passes into the state of inflammation; that
-the state of inflammation, after a certain period, produces results
-which are known to be effects of inflammatory action in other parts of
-the body; that these products of inflammation consist of a given number;
-that the whole of that number never concurs in any one case, but that
-two or more are frequently found in combination; that the laws by which
-any one of these is formed rather than any other are at present wholly
-unknown; while instances do occasionally occur, although they are
-extremely rare, in which the state of mere vascularity alone subsists
-without the formation of any inflammatory product that can be
-discovered.
-
-From the study of the history of these same cases we further see that
-the indications of this inflammatory state of the brain and spinal cord
-or of their membranes are as uniform as the existence of the state
-itself; that certain symptoms invariably accompany it; that these
-symptoms not only declare with absolute certainty that this process is
-going on, but likewise, in general, clearly mark its progress; and that
-this series of symptoms and the place in which each stands in the series
-is as follows: namely,
-
-Pain in the head, or giddiness, or some other uneasy sensation in this
-organ, attended with a loss of sleep and with a derangement in all the
-sensorial faculties,—these are the signs of the presence of the disease
-in the brain or its membranes. Pain in the back, loins, or limbs, or
-diminution of the power of voluntary motion—these are the signs which
-mark the existence of the disease in the spinal cord or its membranes.
-These symptoms having been present a certain time, and at length
-succeeded by—diminution of the pain or uneasiness _without a
-corresponding diminution in the other febrile symptoms_, but with an
-_increase_ in _some_ of them; for instance, with an increase of the
-sleeplessness and restlessness: at last, total cessation of all pain or
-uneasiness, together with a diminution of the sensibility—these are the
-signs which mark the progress of the disease, and which, in general,
-denote a transition from the state of mere inflammation to the formation
-of some inflammatory product. Thus far the change of state is certain
-and the signs which denote it invariable; to the latter other symptoms
-are added which occur in the great majority of cases, but not in all;
-namely, delirium, muscular tremor, involuntary and unconscious stools,
-acceleration, and in general, increased and increasing weakness of the
-pulse. Other accessory symptoms still frequently occur and with
-considerable regularity, but as these are more variable the student is
-referred to the cases themselves, the study of which can alone teach
-when they may be expected.
-
-Since the diseased states of the brain and spinal cord or of their
-membranes, which the preceding pathology discloses, exist, as is there
-shown, in all degrees of intensity, so the signs by which these states
-are denoted may vary from a prominence which it is impossible to
-overlook to an unobtrusiveness which it requires careful attention to
-discover. And from causes which we do not yet understand, the prominence
-of the sign is not always in accordance with the intensity of the state;
-but the important truth here maintained is, (and the more the
-practitioner observes, the more satisfied he will become that it is a
-truth,) that whenever these states exist in sufficient intensity to
-produce death, their presence may be discovered during life. It is not
-affirmed that these states can be distinguished one from another; but it
-is contended that the existence of some one or more of them may be
-ascertained with absolute certainty. As we sometimes see death occur,
-preceded by the ordinary symptoms of cerebral inflammation, when, on
-examination after death, nothing can be discerned but preternatural
-vascularity of the membranes or substance of the brain, without the
-presence of any inflammatory product that can be distinguished; and as,
-moreover, when _some_ inflammatory product is generated, we are in total
-ignorance of the laws by which, in one case, the blood-vessels pour out
-serum, in another secrete pus, in a third soften, and in a fourth
-indurate the cerebral substance; so the signs which indicate that these
-events have taken place are to us, at present, uncertain. There can be
-no question that the laws, according to which each of these events is
-produced, are fixed and invariable in their operation; and each may
-possibly be attended with its specific and therefore diagnostic sign;
-but it is certain that we have not yet discovered the one nor observed
-the other. And the preceding cases have been detailed under the heads
-assigned them, rather with the view of making the pathology clear, than
-in the hope from this arrangement of affording any guide to practice. In
-the mean time, what we may know, and ought to know, is when inflammation
-exists: what we may, in general, further know is, when some product of
-inflammation has been poured out still more to oppress the brain: to the
-thoughtful and discerning practitioner it would be without doubt a high
-satisfaction to be able to carry his diagnosis still further, and to
-ascertain _what_ that product is: the desire to arrive at such precise
-and perfect knowledge appears to me to be in the highest degree
-meritorious: the constant and unwearied endeavour to acquire it may not
-always succeed with reference to the particular object immediately
-pursued, but it cannot fail to increase his power and to strengthen his
-habit of observation; and the sure reward of a devotion thus truly
-honourable and faithful to the duties of his profession, if it should
-not be, as it may not invariably be, the confidence and the gratitude of
-his patient, will at least be the proud consciousness that he has
-deserved both.
-
-Were it possible to ascertain with absolute certainty and with perfect
-exactness in which of its various modes inflammation of the brain and
-its membranes terminates, it would be a subject of interest, as far as
-we can at present perceive, rather to the physiologist and pathologist
-than to the practical physician. To the latter the great fact which it
-is of paramount importance that he should know is, that inflammation is
-going on in the brain of his patient, and that if he cannot put a stop
-to it in the course of a day or two, it will in that short space of time
-terminate in some irreparable change of structure, of which death will
-be the inevitable consequence. This, it is again repeated, it is always
-in his power to know; and as there is no one fact which can or which
-ought to have so much influence upon his practice, so there is no
-diagnosis which it is of so much importance that he should acquire the
-habit of forming.
-
-
-II. CASES IN ILLUSTRATION OF THE MORBID CHANGES WHICH TAKE PLACE WITHIN
- THE CHEST; OR THORACIC CASES.
-
-
- CASE VII.
-
-ANGELICA FIDGETT.
-
-For symptoms see page 125.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all their ramifications,
-exceedingly inflamed; bronchial tubes full of mucus; [substance of left
-lung extremely inflamed; left pleuræ adherent; right pleuræ and lung
-much less severely affected.] _Head._ Substance of brain vascular.
-_Abdomen._ All the viscera healthy except the uterus and its appendages,
-which were slightly inflamed.
-
-
- CASE VIII.
-
-JOHN POTTER, æt. 21.
-
-For symptoms see page 127.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all their ramifications, of
-dark red colour; bronchial glands much enlarged; [pleuræ of right side
-generally adherent; substance of lungs consolidated; pericardium
-contained four ounces of serum;] heart natural. _Abdominal_ and
-_cerebral_ organs healthy.
-
-
- CASE XIV.
-
-ALEXANDER CROMBIE, æt. 19, seaman.
-
-For symptoms see page 159.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all their ramifications, highly
-vascular; bronchial tubes full of mucus, mixed with pus. _Head._ Dura
-mater adherent with preternatural firmness to cranium; substance of
-brain unusually firm; posterior lobes crisp, and cut almost like
-cartilage; anterior lobes, when cut into, abound with bloody points;
-cerebellum exceedingly firm. _Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of small
-intestines in general vascular; eight or ten portions of the jejunum and
-ilium, to the extent of three or four inches each, intussuscepted;
-mucous membrane of these parts extensively ulcerated, some of the ulcers
-circular, the greater number oblong, and at least two inches in length;
-mucous membrane in general highly vascular, but that surrounding the
-ulcers less so than the other parts; mesenteric glands corresponding to
-ulcerated portions of intestine enlarged and vascular; crimson spots on
-convex surface of liver; gall-bladder distended with a yellowish watery
-fluid; spleen enlarged, and so soft as to be easily broken down under
-the finger.
-
-
- CASE LII.
-
-THOMAS LEWIS, æt. 51, taylor, admitted on the 8th day of fever.
-Complaint commenced with general pains, nausea and vomiting, together
-with cough and dyspnœa. At present there is no pain of chest except on
-coughing, which produces some uneasiness; cough frequent, with copious
-sputa; pain of epigastrium; tongue exceedingly parched and dry; much
-thirst; bowels purged; some pain of head, chiefly in forehead; mind
-distinct; scarcely any sleep; face pallid; pulse 126, weak. Early next
-morning died.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed; [pleuræ of right lung
-covered with coagulable lymph; substance of right lung universally
-consolidated, and infiltrated with tubercular matter;] left lung gorged.
-_Abdomen._ [Liver indurated; crisping under the knife; kidneys
-indurated.] _Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular.
-
-
- CASE LIII.
-
-MARY SULLIVAN, æt. 40, married, admitted on the 15th day of fever. Some
-pain of chest; severe cough; much pain of head, with sense of noise;
-mind dull; scarcely any sleep; face flushed; skin warm; tongue foul and
-dry; pulse 98.
-
-16th. Frequent short cough, without expectoration; mind confused, yet
-sensible when spoken to; pulse 90.
-
-17th. Thoracic and cerebral symptoms unchanged; pulse 111, indistinct.
-
-26th. Cough diminished; sensibility increased; she appeared in all
-respects better until this day, when the cough became more frequent and
-the expectoration purulent; pulse 60.
-
-27th. Cough frequent; expectoration the same; respiration short and
-hurried; pulse 60, intermittent.
-
-30th. Respiration became more and more hurried, and the strength rapidly
-sunk. Died.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed; bronchial tubes full of
-mucus, mixed with pus; [pleuræ adherent; patches of left lung
-hepatized.] _Abdomen._ Liver and spleen extremely softened, breaking
-down under the fingers into a mass like coagulated blood. _Head._
-Membranes and substance of brain pretty healthy.
-
-
- CASE LIV.
-
-SARAH PEACH, æt. 23, married, admitted on the 17th day of fever.
-Thoracic symptoms came on with the very commencement of the disease: at
-present there is no pain of the chest, but much cough; respiration short
-and hurried; colour of the face quite dusky; some pain of head; mind
-confused; pulse 100; abdomen not tender; tongue of beefsteak character;
-bowels regular.
-
-18th. Cough and hurried respiration continue; dusky colour of face has
-become livid; delirium; low muttering talkativeness; pulse 116; teeth
-sordid; stools in bed.
-
-19th. Severity of bronchial symptoms much increased; respiration
-panting; colour of skin in general, but especially of face, livid;
-deglutition difficult; pulse 124, weak. Died following morning.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed; bronchial tubes filled
-with mucus, mixed with pus; mucous membrane of trachea vascular; [both
-lungs studded with miliary tubercles.] _Head._ Dura mater and arachnoid
-highly vascular; theca of spinal cord highly vascular; substance of
-brain vascular. _Abdomen._ [Spleen contained a small mass of cheesy
-tubercles near its surface;] patches of mucous membrane of small
-intestines inflamed, but without ulceration.
-
-
- CASE LV.
-
-ISABELLA LORA, æt. 12. Admitted on the 3rd day of scarlet fever; throat
-sore; deglutition painful; slight cough; skin covered with
-copper-coloured eruption; tongue loaded in middle with white fur; red
-around edges and at tip; some pain of head; pulse 120.
-
-4th. Much improved; less pain of throat and head; pulse 96.
-
-14th. Convalescent and gradually gaining strength up to this day; early
-this morning seized suddenly with rigors attended with vomiting: abdomen
-tender; three stools; pulse scarcely to be felt; mind distinct.
-
-15th. Left parotid painful, hard and swollen; throat again inflamed;
-pulse 124.
-
-16th. Early this morning seized with symptoms of severe laryngitis, for
-which leeches have been applied with partial relief; tonsils and uvula
-much swollen; respiration exceedingly laborious; pulse 140, sharp. Died
-same day.
-
-_Thorax._ Tonsils much enlarged; mucous follicles full of purulent fluid
-mixed with blood; some of them exceedingly enlarged, and communicating
-so as to form cavities; membrane covering the upper part of larynx
-highly vascular and much thickened, especially that about the epiglottis
-and the arytænoid cartilages; mucous membrane below the rima glottidis
-healthy; both the parotids, the sublingual, and the maxillary glands
-enlarged. _Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of the intestines inflamed and
-thickened. _Head._ Membranes and substance of brain tolerably healthy.
-
-
- CASE LVI.
-
-MARY ANNE LAWRENCE, æt. 22, servant, admitted on the 5th day of scarlet
-fever. Throat sore; deglutition painful; slight uneasiness and sense of
-tightness in chest; frequent cough, with copious expectoration; abdomen
-not tender; tongue characteristic; skin warm, covered with scarlet
-eruption; slight pain of head; pulse 126, strong. V.S. ad ℥xvj.
-
-6th. Felt much relief after venesection; dyspnœa returned in the
-evening, and she was again bled to the extent of sixteen ounces: blood
-first drawn with firm buff, that of the second bleeding with coagulum
-firm but not buffy; at present cough severe, short, dry; dyspnœa; pulse
-148.
-
-7th. Tightness of chest continues; cough better; pulse 144, tremulous.
-Died next day.
-
-_Thorax._ Uvula and surrounding parts much inflamed, but not ulcerated;
-mucous membrane of trachea inflamed; bronchial tubes inflamed, and
-filled with frothy mucus; [pleuræ of both lungs adherent; lungs
-contained a few tubercles; thyroid gland enlarged, and so hard as to be
-cut with difficulty.] Abdominal and cerebral organs tolerably healthy.
-
-
- CASE LVII.
-
-ANN WORMINGTON, æt. 24, servant.
-
-After some previous indisposition, seized, the day before admission,
-with shivering, attended with pain of bowels, nausea and vomiting;
-throat sore; deglutition painful; scarlet eruption on skin; no
-uneasiness of chest; no cough; abdomen tender; tongue covered with
-yellow fur; bowels purged; mind confused; eyes injected and heavy; pulse
-not to be counted. Died four hours after admission.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of trachea of dark red colour; epiglottis
-quite blackened; arytænoid cartilages ulcerated; substance of lungs much
-gorged. _Abdomen._ Viscera healthy. _Head._ Membranes vascular;
-substance of brain preternaturally firm.
-
-
- CASE LVIII.
-
-MARGARET SCANDLING, æt. 26, admitted on the 8th day of fever. No
-uneasiness of chest; no cough; pain in head; severe pain in limbs and
-bones; scarcely any sleep; threatening erysipelas on face; abdomen
-tender; tongue white and dry; no stool for seven days; pulse 88, weak.
-
-10th. No uneasiness of chest; pain of head diminished; pulse 72.
-
-16th. Erysipelas of cheek, spreading to scalp, and attended with
-considerable pain; tongue dry; pulse 96.
-
-19th. Erysipelas extending; this morning attacked with severe dyspnœa,
-attended with husky noise in inspiration; deglutition extremely
-difficult. Hirud. x. gutturi. C.C. ad ℥xij. nuchæ. Capiat Hydrar.
-Submuriat. gr. ij., c. Pulv. Opii, gr. ss. 6ta q. h.
-
-20th. Respiration and deglutition unrelieved; erysipelas of face very
-painful; mouth sore; mercurial fetor; pulse 120, soft.
-
-21st. Respiration unchanged; deglutition more painful; erysipelas
-increased, passing into suppuration; delirium; pulse 90.
-
-22d. Difficulty of deglutition undiminished; respiration rather more
-easy; pulse 98; much pain of head.
-
-23d. No change in the respiration, deglutition, or erysipelas; much
-discharge from both ears; left elbow attacked with swelling; heat and
-excessive pain.
-
-25th. Died.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of larynx inflamed; epiglottis much thickened;
-both arytænoid cartilages in a state of suppuration, right nearly
-destroyed; cellular substance about the right parotid in a state of
-suppuration; [pleuræ of right side adherent; substance of both lungs
-infiltrated.] _Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; serum
-in lateral ventricles. _Abdomen._ [Mucous membrane of small intestines
-in several points raised in the form of vesicles, containing air;]
-spleen soft.
-
-N.B. In this case, the erysipelas evidently extended from the external
-skin to the mucous membrane of the throat and larynx, an event which is
-not very common in fever, but which does occasionally happen. The
-affection of the elbow-joint was clearly of the same nature as that
-described in case 51.
-
-
- CASE LIX.
-
-CHARLES TYLER, æt. 54, chocolate maker, admitted on the 7th day of
-fever. No pain of chest; slight cough; abdomen tender; tongue loaded and
-dry; thirst; bowels loose; no pain of head; much pain of loins; some
-vertigo; mind distinct; no sleep; pulse 90, full and firm. V.S. ad ℥xx.
-
-8th. Pain of head and abdomen gone; pulse 102, full and sharp; blood
-with very firm buff. Repr. V.S. ad ℥xij.
-
-11th. No return of pain in any organ; mind confused; no sleep; great
-restlessness; delirium; muscular tremor; respiration short and hurried,
-with mucous rattle; tongue white and dry; pulse too indistinct to be
-counted.
-
-12th. Delirium became exceedingly violent soon after yesterday’s visit;
-there was neither pain nor cough, but he passed by the mouth a
-considerable quantity of fluid blood; respiration became more and more
-hurried and he died in the evening.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of the trachea and bronchi inflamed; [the
-substance of the left lung studded with nodules, consisting of
-coagulated blood, forming the apoplexia pulmonalis of the French
-writers:] viscera of the head and abdomen healthy.
-
-
- CASE LX.
-
-JOHN WOTTON, æt. 46, plaisterer. Admitted on the 7th day of fever:
-attack commenced with chilliness, succeeded by cough and severe pain in
-the region of the heart; has had two similar attacks of pain which he
-soon recovered; at present he has so much pain in the side that he
-cannot take a full inspiration; frequent cough exciting pain;
-respiration short and painful; abdomen not tender; tongue white and
-moist; pain of head; little sleep; pulse 120, full and hard; skin hot.
-
-8th. Pain of chest diminished; can take full inspiration with less
-uneasiness; cough less frequent; respiration little changed; pulse 102,
-intermittent.
-
-9th. Respiration much more easy; cough less frequent, with copious
-mucous expectoration; pulse 108, intermittent.
-
-10th. Says he is quite free from pain everywhere; cough again increased;
-respirations 50; pulse 110, not intermittent; delirium.
-
-11th. Respirations 60; no sleep; great restlessness; pulse 108,
-intermittent.
-
-14th. Perfectly insensible; scarcely to be retained in bed; respiration
-extremely quick; pulse not to be counted. Died.
-
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi highly vascular; [left lung
-adherent to parieties of chest by a layer of coagulable lymph nearly an
-inch in thickness; substance of lung completely hepatized; pericardium
-exceedingly thickened throughout, and universally adherent to the heart;
-heart itself soft and flabby; inner coat of aorta of reddish brown
-colour.] _Head._ Vessels of pia mater exceedingly turgid; effusion
-beneath it and the arachnoid; substance of brain very much softened.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium vascular.
-
-
-III. CASES IN ILLUSTRATION OF THE MORBID CHANGES WHICH TAKE PLACE WITHIN
- THE ABDOMEN; OR ABDOMINAL CASES.
-
-
- CASE LXI.
-
-THOMAS HINDMARSH, æt. 26. Admitted on the 10th day of fever: too
-indistinct to give any account of previous symptoms; at present abdomen
-tender; tongue loaded and dry; bowels purged; mind confused; very deaf;
-eyes red and suffused; pulse 108, firm.
-
-11th. Abdomen less tender; five stools; insensibility increased; pulse
-104.
-
-12th. Abdomen a little tender; tongue quite dry; three stools in bed;
-noisy delirium; eyes wild and staring; pulse 108.
-
-13th. Tongue no longer to be protruded; no stool; scarcely at all
-sensible; eye-lids half closed; pulse 96, firm.
-
-21st. Abdominal and cerebral symptoms little changed; sensible of some
-pain in chest; cough; dyspnœa; pulse 108.
-
-23d. Abdomen still tender, and now become tympanitic; four stools in
-bed; perfectly insensible; constant muttering delirium; muscular tremor;
-large slough on sacrum; pulse 116.
-
-25th. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of intestines in general vascular; mucous
-coat of small intestines highly vascular, and indicated approaching
-ulceration. _Head._ Not examined. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ of both sides
-adherent throughout; substance of both lungs healthy; slight effusion of
-serum into pericardium.]
-
-
- CASE LXII.
-
-ISAAC GREY, æt. 30. Admitted on 22d day of fever; no account to be
-obtained of the previous symptoms; at present the abdomen in general is
-exceedingly tender on pressure, but especially the epigastrium; tongue
-brown, dry in centre, moist at edges; very tremulous; scarcely at all
-sensible, yet seems very apprehensive, almost constantly muttering and
-crying; face flushed; eyes wild; skin speckled with petechiæ; pulse 112.
-
-23d. Abdomen still very tender; says he is without pain; four stools;
-delirium; muscular tremor; pulse 100, feeble.
-
-24th. In the early part of last evening became violently delirious, and
-was extremely restless, constantly tossing his arms about, and throwing
-off the bed-clothes. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ All the coats of the stomach appeared much attenuated; mucous
-membrane of cardiac extremity so soft as to lacerate under examination;
-that of pyloric end exhibited numerous minute spots of a deep red
-colour, as if touched with a paint-brush; peritoneal coat of ilium of
-dark red colour; other viscera healthy. _Head._ Arachnoid thickened and
-opake; considerable effusion between it and the dura mater; substance of
-brain vascular; half an ounce of serum in each ventricle. _Thorax._
-[Right pleural cavity contained one ounce and a half of bloody fluid,
-left eight ounces; substance of both lungs much condensed, and on their
-surface an appearance as if blood had exuded and coagulated. Pericardium
-contained two ounces of serum: heart healthy.]
-
-
- CASE LXIII.
-
-HANNAH SWIFT, æt. 20, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of fever:
-abdomen, especially the epigastric region, tender; tongue clean, red,
-chapped; lips parched and cracked; some pain of head, back, and limbs;
-mind rather confused; pulse 120, soft, and feeble.
-
-9th. The abdomen, which continues tender, has become swollen and tense;
-two stools.
-
-15th. Abdomen still very tender, swollen, and hard; tongue dry; two
-stools; vomiting of much green coloured fluid; pain of head gone, but
-sense of weight in it.
-
-17th. Tenderness of abdomen and vomiting continue; delirium; pulse 100,
-small and feeble.
-
-19th. Tenderness of abdomen increased; no vomiting; tongue the same;
-pain of head returned; delirium; erysipelas of face; pulse 109, feeble.
-
-21st. Erysipelas extending to arm; tongue brown, dry, and cracked; much
-delirium.
-
-22d. Cheeks livid; extremities cold and livid; pulse imperceptible.
-Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium highly inflamed, and ulcers just
-forming; other viscera healthy. _Head._ Dura mater vascular; arachnoid
-opake; substance of brain vascular; some fluid in ventricles. _Thorax._
-Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed: tubes filled with mucus mixed with
-pus: [pleuræ in part adherent; some serous fluid in both cavities;
-substance of lungs natural.]
-
-
- CASE LXIV.
-
-THOMAS SEXTON, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on 3d day of scarlet fever;
-complaint came on with nausea, vomiting, and pain of the limbs; at
-present throat sore; deglutition easy; chest free from pain; no cough;
-abdomen tender, especially in the region of the epigastrium; tongue
-white in middle, red around margin; no stool for several days, because,
-as he supposes, he has vomited all his medicine; pain of head; vertigo;
-face flushed; frequent attacks of epistaxis during his vomiting, always
-relieving the head-ache; pulse 102; skin warm; no eruption.
-
-4th. Pain of head gone; vertigo continues; eyes dull and heavy; face
-flushed; no vomiting; pulse 96.
-
-5th. Sense of vertigo lessened; tongue brown and dry; four stools; pulse
-84.
-
-7th. Abdomen tender; tongue brown and dry; six stools; pain of head
-returned; much pain of back; no sleep; delirium.
-
-11th. Less sensible: drowsy; delirium; three stools.
-
-12th. Insensibility increased; drowsiness approaching to coma; cheeks
-dusky; tongue with dark brown crust, dry; stools in bed; pulse 102,
-weak.
-
-16th. Abdomen tender; tongue not to be protruded; three stools all in
-bed; pulse 130, extremely weak; great prostration.
-
-17th. Countenance sunk; respiration short and hurried; four stools; more
-prostrate.
-
-18th. No change excepting that the prostration is still greater. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum extremely vascular, and
-contained several small ulcers, some of which were merely the abraded
-points of enlarged mucous glands; other glands in the neighbourhood much
-enlarged but not ulcerated; mesenteric glands very much enlarged; liver
-mottled; spleen larger than natural; pancreas indurated. _Head._
-Arachnoid highly vascular; substance of brain natural; gelatinous
-effusion between the arachnoid and pia mater; half an ounce of serum at
-base. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXV.
-
-JAMES GANNICOTT, æt. 8. Duration and progress of disease unknown;
-abdomen tender; lips and tongue sordid; bowels purged; comatose; pupils
-dilated, but sensible to light; expression of eyes dull and vacant;
-pulse 125.
-
-2d day after admission. Abdomen no longer tender; three stools;
-insensibility continues; frequent screaming; pulse 116.
-
-3d. Perfectly insensible; all nourishment refused; stools and urine in
-bed; pulse 120. Died next morning.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of ilium vascular; its mucous coat contained
-numerous ulcers which varied much in size; but all of them were raised
-above the surface and defined and regular in their margins; mucous
-glands throughout the entire intestine diseased, and many of them in
-different stages of disease; some were only enlarged; others enlarged
-and inflamed; others ulcerated at the apex; others ulcerated throughout;
-so that the largest ulcers appeared to be diseased glands in the last
-stage of ulceration; mesenteric glands prodigiously enlarged and hung
-over the abdominal vessels like a bunch of grapes of the largest size;
-rest of the intestines healthy excepting that they were much contracted
-and intussuscepted in several parts. _Head._ Dura mater adherent with
-preternatural firmness to the skull; vascular; pia mater highly
-vascular; substance of brain vascular and firm; slight effusion between
-the membranes. _Thorax._ [Pluræ of right side adherent;] substance of
-both lungs healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXVI.
-
-HENRY TODD, æt. 18. Duration and progress of disease unknown; abdomen
-tender on pressure; tongue coated with dirty yellow crust, red at tip;
-perfectly insensible; delirium; eyes, glistening; pulse 120, feeble.
-
-2d day after admission. Little change excepting that the coma is more
-deep; abdomen less tender; two stools; pulse 124.
-
-3d. Coma undiminished; respiration short, hurried, rattling; stools in
-bed; pulse 132; great prostration.
-
-4th. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium inflamed throughout; lower part of
-it ulcerated; other viscera healthy. _Head._ Membranes and substance of
-brain vascular. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed; bronchial
-tubes filled with mucus mixed with pus.
-
-
- CASE LXVII.
-
-FREDERICK KILHAM, æt. 12. Admitted on the 15th day of fever; abdomen
-tender; tongue not to be seen on account of its being covered with
-grumous blood from a large ulcer on the right side of the lower jaw;
-bowels bound; some pain of head; no uneasiness of chest; pulse 114; much
-emaciation.
-
-16th. Lips and teeth sordid; mind confused; prostration.
-
-20th. Violent delirium; pulse 92.
-
-21st. The ulcer along the lower jaw in the inside of the mouth sloughing
-and extending; delirium; pulse 96, weak. Died next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium vascular, and contained some ulcers;
-other viscera healthy. _Head._ More fluid than natural between the
-membranes. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
-Two ulcers in the substance of the cheeks; that on left cheek extended
-from the angle of the mouth to the last molares, and contained a large
-black slough a quarter of an inch thick; this ulcer had extended to both
-gums, denuding the alveolar processes and loosening the teeth; that on
-the right cheek precisely similar, but less extensive.
-
-
- CASE LXVIII.
-
-ANN MOUNT, æt. 28, servant. Admitted on 15th day of disease; epigastrium
-tender; tongue brown and dry; bowels purged; slight pain of head; much
-vertigo; some cough; pulse 111, very intermittent in the right wrist;
-less so in the left.
-
-16th. Early this morning attacked with severe pain of the chest and
-dyspnœa, attended with much headache, for which she has been bled with
-the removal of the symptoms; pain now quite gone; tongue white; four
-stools; pulse 120, soft; blood buffy and cupped.
-
-17th. Seized last evening with violent delirium which required
-restraint; occasional sleep with paroxysms of delirium; face flushed;
-abdomen not tender; pulse 120, firm. V. S. ad ℥xvi.
-
-18th. No pain of head; no delirium; slept better; tongue brown and dry;
-five stools; pulse 132, firm; blood sizy and deeply cupped. V. S. ad
-℥xij.
-
-19th. Complains of “stupid pain of head;” no vertigo; delirium, but less
-violent; scarcely any sleep; countenance still heavy, but rather more
-animated than yesterday; abdomen not tender; three stools in bed; pulse
-132, firm but soft. C. C. ad ℥xij. nuchæ.
-
-20th. Pain gone; more insensible; countenance more dull and heavy;
-scarcely any sleep; almost constant moaning; tenderness of abdomen quite
-gone; tongue brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid; four stools in bed;
-pulse 144, weak. Vini Albi, ℥ii. Mist. Camph. Fort. 6ta. q. h.
-
-Slept rather better; less moaning; countenance scarcely as collapsed as
-yesterday; pulse 132, firmer; stools in bed. Augeat. Vinum ad ℥vi.
-
-22d. Scarcely any sleep; almost constant moaning; face flushed; skin
-covered with cold perspiration; tongue scarcely to be protruded;
-deglutition difficult; subsultus tendinum; pulse 132.
-
-24th. No change except that the prostration continued to increase. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of jejunum, ilium and cæcum highly vascular;
-that of ilium contained three or four large oval ulcers; other viscera
-healthy. _Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; more serum
-than natural in the ventricles. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXIX.
-
-ANN MARTIN, æt. 37, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of fever; complaint
-came on with ordinary symptoms, attended with nausea and vomiting; at
-present abdomen not tender; tongue red, cracked and dry; bowels regular;
-no uneasiness of chest; slight cough with scanty expectoration; pulse
-92, very intermittent, beating thrice regularly, then intermitting for a
-space equal to that of the three pulsations; pain of head gone; some
-vertigo remains.
-
-9th. Cough with difficult expectoration; respiration hurried; five
-stools; pulse 104, more regular.
-
-10th. Tongue more fissured; five stools; respiration less hurried and
-difficult; pulse 112. Two grains of tartar emetic in solution every two
-hours.
-
-11th. No material change; pulse 116; has taken ten draughts with the
-tartar emetic, the last four vomited. The draughts to be continued every
-three hours.
-
-12th. Bronchial affection very much relieved; last four draughts not
-vomited. Pt. Haustus 4ta. q. h.
-
-13th. Respiration nearly natural; much less cough; pulse 96; tongue
-moist; four stools, last tinged with blood; abdomen not tender. Tartar
-emetic omitted on account of appearance of blood in the stools.
-
-17th. Bronchial affection appears to be quite gone; yet the tongue has
-again become dry; the pulse has risen to 112; there is scarcely any
-sleep; and slight muscular tremor is perceptible. Capiat. Vin. Alb. ℥iv.
-Jus. Bov. i lb.
-
-20th. Respiration again short and hurried; face quite dusky; tongue
-furred, dry and cracked; pulse 110.
-
-23d. Respiration laborious; cough returned with very copious
-muco-purulent expectoration, amounting to a pint in the twenty-four
-hours; pulse 116.
-
-26th. No change; a grain of tartar emetic resumed every four hours. Wine
-and beef tea to be continued.
-
-28th. Neither vomiting nor purging; respiration more easy; cough
-diminished; tongue more moist; pulse 116.
-
-29th. Respiration much more natural; cough greatly diminished; tongue
-clean and moist; pulse 112.
-
-36th. From the period of last report she steadily and progressively
-improved and became convalescent; on the morning of this day while
-speaking to the nurse in her usual manner she suddenly fell back and
-expired.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of intestines in general inflamed, especially
-that of ilium and cæcum, which contained some ulcers; peritoneal
-covering of posterior surface of spleen cartilaginous; other viscera
-healthy. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi highly inflamed; bronchial
-tubes full of purulent fluid; substance of lungs healthy. _Head._
-Unfortunately, from some accident, the head was not examined.
-
-
- CASE LXX.
-
-STEPHEN WINTER, æt. 78. Duration and previous symptoms of disease
-unknown; at present abdomen tender; tongue brown and dry; stools
-natural; respiration wheezing with some cough; slight pain of head; mind
-composed; muscular tremor; pulse 100, irregular.
-
-2nd day after admission. Abdominal and thoracic symptoms the same; mind
-more confused; more muscular tremor; pulse 108.
-
-5th. Respiration laborious; mind quite unconscious; constant incoherent
-talking; pulse 108.
-
-6th. Respiration hurried and laborious; pulse not to be counted;
-perfectly insensible. Died next morning.
-
-_Abdomen._ All the coats of the stomach appeared much attenuated; colon
-contracted into the form of a white cord; its coats in several places
-thickened, and its mucous membrane ulcerated; liver soft; [gall bladder
-much thickened, and its cavity so diminished, that it would scarcely
-admit the end of the finger, filled with two small gall-stones. About
-five inches of the recti muscles black and infiltrated with blood.]
-_Head._ Arachnoid thickened and opake; considerable effusion between it
-and the dura mater; substance of brain firm; ventricles distended with
-serum. _Thorax._ All the viscera healthy, [excepting that the coronary
-arteries were ossified.]
-
-
- CASE LXXI.
-
-RICHARD HARVEY, æt. 19, butcher. Admitted on the 8th day of disease; no
-account to be obtained of previous symptoms; at present abdomen tender;
-bowels purged; tongue brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid; pain of head
-gone; mind confused; delirium requiring restraint; subsultus; pulse 116,
-weak.
-
-9th. Tenderness of abdomen continues; stools in bed; no sleep; much
-delirium; scarcely conscious when spoken to; pulse 108, more firm.
-
-10th. Slept better; rather more sensible this morning; pulse again 116.
-
-14th. All nourishment refused; stools and urine in bed; delirium;
-muscular tremor; pulse 128, weak; extremities cold.
-
-15th. Passed a better night; more sensible; pulse 116.
-
-17th. Extensive slough on sacrum; slough also on right elbow-joint, with
-erysipelas of surrounding integuments; pulse 108.
-
-21st. Skin covered with petechiæ; slough extending; great prostration.
-
-35th. No change, excepting that the sloughs were improved in appearance
-by the chlorate of lime, but the emaciation increased, the strength
-diminished, and all nourishment was refused excepting wine. Died
-following day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Both small and large intestines vascular throughout; mucous
-membrane of ilium contained several ulcers of considerable magnitude;
-gall-bladder contained an ounce and half of serous fluid; spleen
-indurated; other viscera healthy. _Head._ Substance of brain vascular;
-effusion between the membranes; more fluid than natural in the
-ventricles and at base. _Thorax._ Bronchi natural; substance of right
-lung gorged with blood and infiltrated with serum; that of left healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXII.
-
-ELIZABETH GORE, æt. 24, servant. Admitted on 22d day of fever: attack
-commenced with ordinary symptoms, accompanied with sense of nausea and
-some vomiting. At present abdomen not tender; tongue red, moist; lips
-and teeth sordid; bowels bound; pain of head gone; that of loins
-remains; deafness; no uneasiness of chest; much cough; skin dusky; pulse
-120, weak and intermittent.
-
-23d. Abdomen tender; four stools, dark; some pain of head; delirium;
-pulse the same.
-
-26th. Stools in bed; no sleep; delirium; respiration hurried and noisy;
-cheek dusky; extremities cold.
-
-27th. Deglutition difficult; pulse 128. Died next morning.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium ulcerated; mesenteric gland
-excessively enlarged. _Head._ Membrane and substance of the brain
-natural; much effusion into the ventricles, and at the base of the
-skull. _Thorax._ Viscera of the thorax in other respects perfectly
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXIII.
-
-ANN KENSIT, æt. 20, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of relapse:
-perfectly insensible; cannot be roused; no sensation on firmest pressure
-over the abdomen; pupils natural; tongue brown and dry; bowels loose;
-pulse 124.
-
-9th. Some uneasiness induced by firm pressure over the abdomen, which
-has become swollen, tense, and tympanitic; tongue not to be protruded;
-lips and teeth sordid; stools in bed; respiration slow and laborious;
-face cadaverous; extremities blue.
-
-11th. No change; has never spoken nor shown any degree of sensibility
-since admission.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of intestines in general vascular, that of
-small intestines particularly so; numerous patches of the mucous
-membrane of the ilium raised by matter deposited beneath it, and
-extensively ulcerated; mesenteric glands much enlarged. _Head._
-Membranes of brain vascular. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ of both sides adherent;
-that of right side vascular; right cavity contained some serous fluid
-mixed with flakes of lymph.]
-
-
- CASE LXXIV.
-
-SARAH HASSELL, æt. 40. Admitted on 8th day of fever; complaint commenced
-with usual symptoms, accompanied with much nausea. Abdomen not tender;
-tongue furred at root, red and clean at tip and around edges; bowels
-purged from the very commencement of the attack; no uneasiness of chest;
-cough; pain of head gone; that of back remains; vertigo; pulse 108,
-feeble.
-
-9th. No tenderness of abdomen on firmest pressure; tongue brown and dry;
-four stools; pulse 108.
-
-12th. Still no tenderness of abdomen; six stools; tongue quite dry;
-pulse 120.
-
-16th. Abdominal symptoms unchanged, excepting that the tongue has been
-exceeding dry; nearly insensible; delirium; almost constant moaning;
-pulse 120, very weak.
-
-25th. Abdominal and cerebral symptoms continue with little change; cough
-more frequent with muco-purulent expectoration; pulse 130, very weak.
-
-29th. Quite helpless; pulse scarcely to be distinguished; copious
-expectoration of purulent matter.
-
-31st. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Ilium contained several large ulcers, especially at its
-termination in cæcum; liver enlarged and softened; other viscera
-healthy: _Head._ Membranes vascular; arachnoid opake and thickened;
-substance of brain vascular; effusion between the membranes; more fluid
-than natural in ventricles. _Thorax._ Lungs gorged; mucous membrane of
-bronchi vascular; bronchial tubes full of mucus mixed with pus.
-
-
- CASE LXXV.
-
-EDWARD HAMMOND, æt. 24, servant. Admitted on the 22d day of fever:
-attack commenced with usual symptoms, accompanied with loss of appetite
-and sense of nausea; at present no tenderness of abdomen; tongue red,
-glazed and cracked; bowels purged; no uneasiness in chest; cough with
-mucous expectoration; pain of head entirely gone; sensation in general
-diminished; mind composed; little sleep; pulse 110, of good power but
-easily compressed; much prostration.
-
-23d. No pain acknowledged in any organ; little sensibility; no sleep;
-much restlessness; delirium; expression of countenance wild; pulse 108,
-firm.
-
-24th. No pain; less sensible; tongue has become brown and dry; three
-stools; pulse 124, weak.
-
-25th. More sleep; more tranquil this morning; tongue also is more moist;
-but the stools have been passed in bed, and the pulse is 124, weak and
-fluttering.
-
-26th. More sleep; much more tranquil; more sensible; tongue more clean
-and moist; stools not passed in bed; the pulse notwithstanding is 136,
-and the pulsations are not distinct, but run into each other.
-
-28th. Mind distinct; more sleep; tongue continues more moist, but no
-stools and no urine have been passed; the latter has been drawn off by
-the catheter; pain is now complained of in the right lumbar region;
-pulse 123. Died next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium ulcerated; pancreas indurated,
-nearly of the consistence of cartilage, and of paler colour than
-natural; other viscera healthy. _Head._ Membranes natural; half an ounce
-of fluid at the base of the skull; substance of brain much softened.
-_Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE X.
-
-SARAH RAVEN, æt. 17. For symptoms see page 140.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines in general inflamed;
-lower part of ilium extremely ulcerated. _Head._ Both dura and pia mater
-vascular; arachnoid opake; much serum effused between the membranes.
-_Thorax._ [Pluræ of both sides adherent; left lung inflamed;] right lung
-healthy; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXVI.
-
-MARY M’GOWAN, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of fever; attack
-commenced with usual symptoms; at present, abdomen tender; tongue
-thickly coated and dry; lips and teeth sordid; much thirst; bowels
-purged; stools dark and offensive; pain of head which has been severe
-from the beginning continues, and is most severe over the fore-part;
-pulse 116, weak.
-
-9th. Abdomen and tongue the same; pain of head unabated; eyes dull and
-heavy; right cheek deeply flushed; pulse 110. C. C. ad ℥x. temporibus.
-
-10th. Abdominal symptoms unchanged; pain of head relieved, but not gone;
-pulse 132, weak.
-
-11th. Tongue cleaning; quite moist; three stools; very slight pain of
-head; delirium; pulse 120, weak.
-
-12th. Pain of head quite gone; but there is no other change.
-
-13th. No sleep; great restlessness; noisy delirium; pulse 126, weak;
-swelling, redness and pain of left parotid.
-
-15th. Tongue has become brown and dry; and respiration difficult and
-rattling; face flushed; colour dusky; lies on back quite prostrate;
-pulse 136, weak; inflammation of left parotid subsided, but it has now
-attacked the right.
-
-16th. Respiration hurried and noisy; skin in general dusky; cheeks
-extremely flushed and of deep purple colour; pulse scarcely to be
-counted; prostration extreme. Died next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular; several ulcers in
-ilium and cæcum; appearance of ulcers peculiar, resembling those of
-phthisis rather than those of fever; vermiform process externally
-vascular; internally contained a crop of bodies like tubercles or
-enlarged glands and so numerous as to form a layer under the mucous
-membrane. _Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; more fluid
-than natural in the ventricles. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ of left side
-adherent;] other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXVII.
-
-WILLIAM WALLER, æt. 24, barge builder, admitted on 22d day of fever. No
-tenderness of abdomen on firmest pressure; tongue loaded and dry;
-thirst; bowels said to be regular; no uneasiness of chest; some cough;
-pain of head, which had been severe, entirely gone; mind dull and
-confused; no sleep; face flushed; prostration; great sense of
-oppression; pulse 114, tremulous and indistinct.
-
-23d. No change, excepting that the tongue has become brown and dry.
-
-24th. Pulse 120, weaker and more tremulous: other symptoms the same.
-
-27th. Tongue has become extremely dry; thirst urgent; three stools,
-mixed with blood; abdomen not tender; pulse 100.
-
-28th. After yesterday’s visit, seized suddenly with violent delirium,
-urgent dyspnœa, and copious discharge of blood from the bowels; these
-symptoms continued until half past eleven, p. m. when he expired.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of greater part of small intestines much
-inflamed; that in lower part of ilium quite black and nearly
-sphacelated, containing several spreading ulcers; colon throughout of
-darker colour than natural; mucous membrane of rectum highly vascular;
-spleen enlarged and softened; [bladder thickened and vascular.] _Head._
-Arachnoid opake and milky, covering a large quantity of gelatinous
-fluid. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ of left side generally adherent, of right less
-extensively adherent;] substance of both lungs healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXVIII.
-
-MARGARET PENNIFOLD, æt. 20, servant. Admitted on the 8th day of fever,
-which, besides the ordinary symptoms, commenced with pain and tenderness
-of bowels: at present, abdomen tender, especially the epigastrium;
-tongue very red, sore, and cracked; lips and teeth sordid; much thirst;
-some uneasiness of chest on full inspiration; slight cough; some pain of
-head, especially in occiput; scarcely any sleep; mind much confused
-during the night, scarcely distinct during the day; pulse 105.
-
-9th. No pain; tongue the same; three stools; slept some; mind more
-distinct; pulse 100.
-
-11th. No pain; some cough; face flushed; colour of cheek dusky; voice
-hoarse.
-
-12th. Little change; pulse 108.
-
-15th. Still says she is free from pain; no tenderness of abdomen on firm
-pressure; tongue very red and dry; four stools, mixed with a large
-proportion of blood; rather more cough; sleeps well; pulse 116.
-
-16th. Stools mixed with blood; pulse 117.
-
-17th. Three stools, dark and offensive but without blood; pulse 100;
-other symptoms the same.
-
-19th. Stools in bed; much prostration; pulse 120, very weak; respiration
-difficult.
-
-20th. Vomiting; pulse 120, weaker.
-
-21st. Vomiting continues; six stools; mind confused: pulse 120.
-
-22d. Vomiting has ceased; deglutition difficult; face collapsed and
-cadaverous; five stools in bed; great prostration; pulse 117, extremely
-weak. Died in the night.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of pyloric end of stomach and of intestines
-in general vascular; that of jejunum and ilium very nearly black,
-presenting the appearance of extensive ecchymosis; ilium contained an
-infinity of elongated ulcers, many of which had penetrated the muscular
-coat; the cæcum and the lower part of the colon in a similar condition;
-there was no deposition of adventitious matter; but the ulcers were
-formed entirely in the coats of the intestine; other viscera healthy.
-_Thorax._ Mucous membrane of both bronchi inflamed; bronchial tubes full
-of mucus; mucous membrane of larynx perfectly healthy, and without the
-least thickening in any part; [apex of left lung adherent to costal
-pleura; adhering part of the substance of the lung contained a mass of
-tubercles, some of which were passing into the state of suppuration; the
-remainder of the lung more vascular than natural, and some parts of it
-hepatized; right lung less consolidated, but still more firm and
-vascular than natural.] _Head._ Brain and its membranes tolerably
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXIX.
-
-THOMAS BRYAN, æt. 18, labourer. Admitted on the 8th day of fever: at
-present pain of abdomen, much increased on pressure; tongue white and
-moist; much thirst; bowels loose; pain in right side on full
-inspiration; some cough; pain of head and back, which had been severe,
-gone; pulse 90.
-
-9th. A few hours after the visit, the pain in the side became
-exceedingly severe and was attended with frequent cough. On account of
-these symptoms he was bled to the extent of twenty-four ounces, with
-immediate and great relief: the pectoral symptoms have not returned;
-abdomen still tender; five stools, dark; no pain of head, but the skin
-over the scalp is hot, and there is some intolerance of light; pulse
-112. Takes a grain and half of calomel, with two of Dover’s powder,
-every six hours.
-
-10th. Pain of abdomen continues; vomiting; two stools; pulse 116.
-
-13th. Gums already affected; throat sore; none of the symptoms relieved;
-tongue has become brown and dry; five stools; less sensible; much
-moaning; pulse 120.
-
-14th. Abdominal symptoms undiminished; five stools; more insensible;
-pulse 112.
-
-16th. Insensibility increased to coma; little change in the other
-symptoms.
-
-20th. Severe pain in the abdomen, particularly in the region of the
-cæcum; tongue brown and dry and quite hard; four stools; pulse 118.
-
-23d. Vomits food and medicine; coma continues; delirium; pulse 118.
-
-24th. No change, excepting that the vomiting ceased, after having taken
-a scruple of calomel at a single dose.
-
-26th. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Ilium and cæcum much and extensively ulcerated; other viscera
-healthy. _Head._ Membrane of brain natural; substance vascular; more
-serum than natural in the ventricles; some at the base; much fluid in
-the theca vertebralis. _Thorax._ Posterior part of left lung
-tuberculated, and infiltrated with purulent matter; upper part of right
-lung still more tuberculated and condensed.
-
-
- CASE LXXX.
-
-ELIZABETH HAMMOND, æt. 50, married. Admitted on the 28th day of fever,
-which came on with the ordinary symptoms; at present she is without pain
-in any organ; face peculiarly pallid; some cough; pulse 120, and weak.
-
-29th. No tenderness of abdomen; no pain; cough; delirium; pulse 110.
-
-32d. Cough; delirium; pain, redness, swelling, and vesication of left
-leg; pulse 120, weak.
-
-35th. Tongue scarcely to be protruded; very tremulous; three stools;
-cough; much delirium; pulse 120, very weak; the vena saphena major
-easily to be traced along its whole course, being hard, tense, and
-painful.
-
-40th. Delirium; muscular tremor; much convulsive twitching of the face;
-pulse 130, extremely weak.
-
-40th. Delirium continues; muscular tremor increased; great prostration;
-leg more swollen, the tumefaction now extending up the thigh; the
-saphena traced to the middle of the thigh where it ends in a varix,
-which has for the last two days greatly enlarged; lymphatics along the
-course of the vein swollen; integuments of a dusky red colour; much
-thickening and hardening of the cellular tissue over the femoral
-vessels; says she has no pain in the leg; mind dull and confused, yet
-answers coherently when spoken to.
-
-43d. Delirium continues; prostration increases; lips and teeth covered
-with dark-coloured sordes; affected leg darker in colour, and colder to
-the touch; pulse 120; no tenderness of the abdomen, nor has it been
-tender through the whole course of the disease.
-
-44th. Died.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium, cæcum, and commencement of colon
-extensively ulcerated; viscera of head and thorax healthy; slight
-swelling of the whole left extremity; ankle œdematous; the cellular
-tissue along the entire course of the saphena major and femoral vein
-exceedingly condensed and hard; on opening the saphena vein there was
-found a layer of coagulable lymph lining its whole internal surface,
-which was universally vascular and rough; in many places, especially
-about the knee, the coats of the vein were very much thickened, so that
-the calibre of the vessel was diminished at least one-half its size; the
-lower part of the femoral vein was in a similar state, but its superior
-portion and the external iliac were little, if at all affected.
-
-
- CASE LXXXI.
-
-MARY FORD, æt. 30, married. Admitted on the 8th day of fever, which in
-addition to the ordinary symptoms, was attended at the commencement with
-pain in the abdomen, which continued for some time, but which is now
-entirely gone: states that the bowels have been very loose for upwards
-of a month past; tongue loaded and red; thirst; no uneasiness of chest;
-some cough; pain of head, which was severe in the commencement, quite
-gone; pulse 90; great prostration.
-
-9th. No pain in any organ; tongue unchanged; two stools, light and
-offensive; delirium.
-
-10th. Four stools in bed; delirium; lies on back quite prostrate; pulse
-105, weak.
-
-11th. Tongue not to be protruded; perfectly insensible; pulse 125.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of small intestines vascular; mucous membrane
-of ileum and cæcum contained several large ulcers; in other places the
-membrane was entire, but irregularly raised by submucous deposit so as
-to present the appearance of large ulcers. _Head._ Arachnoid highly
-vascular; effusion beneath all the membranes; more fluid than natural in
-the lateral ventricles. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXXII.
-
-ELEANOR NORRIS, æt. 12. Was seized eight days ago with sudden loss of
-strength, great confusion of mind, and severe pain in the head and
-limbs; the pain of the head continues, shooting down along the spinal
-cord to the loins; no tenderness of abdomen; tongue white; bowels
-purged; pulse 129, of good power.
-
-9th. Tongue has become brown and dry; five stools; scarcely any pain of
-head; delirium; pulse 120.
-
-14th. Abdomen now tender on pressure; tongue continues brown and dry;
-four stools; pain of back and loins returned; delirium; pulse 130.
-
-15th. Pain of abdomen continues; tongue still browner and more dry; four
-stools; delirium; pulse 128.
-
-16th. Deglutition difficult; pulse 120; great prostration.
-
-17th. Stools in bed; delirium and prostration increasing; pulse scarcely
-to be counted.
-
-18th. Great restlessness; much delirium; countenance wild and anxious;
-pulse exceedingly quick and weak.
-
-20th. Respiration hurried and laborious; pulse not to be counted;
-insensible; stools in bed. Died in the night.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of jejunum and ilium extremely ulcerated;
-omentum a mere web; all the other viscera healthy. _Head._ Membranes and
-substance of brain apparently natural. _Thorax._ [Costal pleura of left
-side inflamed and thickened; pulmonary pleura covered with pus; pleural
-sac contained two ounces and a half of serum mixed with pus; substance
-of left lung nearly healthy; right side healthy; two ounces of serum in
-pericardium.]
-
-
- CASE LXXXIII.
-
-MARIA MOORE, æt. 22, servant. Admitted on the 22nd day of scarlet fever:
-throat well; deglutition easy; no pain of chest; none of abdomen; tongue
-of dark red colour; bowels purged; some pain of head, especially at
-occiput; pulse 98.
-
-23d. Pain of head continues; noisy delirium; pulse 108; abdominal
-symptoms the same.
-
-30th. Amended the day following last report, and continued to improve
-until this morning, when she was again attacked with soreness of throat
-and difficult deglutition; tongue loaded; three stools; pulse 98.
-
-31st. Throat equally painful; deglutition equally difficult; pulse 110.
-
-32nd. After the application of leeches to the throat the pain became
-easier and the deglutition less difficult; internal fauces very red;
-uvula much swollen.
-
-33d. Throat again better; deglutition easy; pulse 120.
-
-35th. Throat well, but the voice is hoarse; four stools, mixed with
-blood; pulse 110.
-
-36th. Respiration hurried; tongue brown, dry, and cracked; lips and
-teeth sordid; four stools, mixed with lumps of coagulated blood, partly
-passed in bed. Died in evening.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum in part highly vascular
-and much thickened, in part ulcerated; pancreas indurated; other viscera
-healthy. _Thorax._ Epiglottis vascular and thickened; mucous membrane of
-arytænoid cartilages ulcerated; mucous membrane of trachea highly
-vascular; [pleuræ of both sides adherent; right lung filled with
-tubercles; bronchial glands enlarged.] _Head._ Not examined.
-
-
- CASE LXXXIV.
-
-CHARLES CROSSLEY, æt. 21. Admitted on the 15th day of fever, which came
-on with the ordinary symptoms: at present, tenderness of the
-epigastrium, and over the whole abdomen; tongue brown, cracked and
-tremulous; bowels purged; scarcely any pain of head; mind indistinct;
-expression of eyes wild; slight cough; pulse 40, soft.
-
-16th. After six leeches had been applied to the epigastrium the
-tenderness was much diminished: says he has now no pain any where; two
-stools; expression of countenance the same; pulse 96.
-
-17th. Abdomen has become swollen and hard, not tender on firm pressure;
-five stools; tongue unchanged; respiration hurried and noisy; no sleep;
-delirium; face pallid; eyes wild and rolling; pulse 100.
-
-16th. Abdomen hard, especially in hepatic region; slightly tender;
-vomiting; two stools, mixed with blood; extremities cold.
-
-19th. Abdomen hard, not tender; two copious stools, consisting almost
-entirely of blood; tongue the same; pulse 96.
-
-20th. One stool without any feculent matter, consisting entirely of
-blood; delirium; muscular tremor.
-
-23d. No stool for two days; having taken two drachms of castor oil, he
-had two copious evacuations of very dark colour, mixed with blood;
-abdomen more soft, not tender; tongue cracked in the centre, more clean
-and moist at edges; cough; pulse 108, soft.
-
-35th. From the morning of last report the hæmorrhage disappeared, sleep
-and sensibility returned, the tongue became more clean and moist, the
-strength improved, the appetite became keen: he was put upon low diet,
-and was allowed three ounces of meat daily and four ounces of wine: he
-appeared to be so much recovered, that it was thought he could bear this
-liberal allowance; but, immediately on this change of diet, the skin
-became hot, the cough returned, he had six stools without medicine, the
-delirium re-appeared at night, and the pulse rose to 100; there was not
-the slightest pain, either of the head or of the abdomen.
-
-36th. Tongue again brown and dry; three stools; no sleep; much
-restlessness; delirium; pulse 108, firm; skin extremely hot.
-
-43d. Stools and urine in bed; delirium; muscular tremor; subsultus
-tendinum; pulse 104.
-
-46th. Sloughs have formed on both hips and an abscess in the right
-groin.
-
-49th. Abdomen has become swollen, tense, and tympanitic; no stool;
-tongue the same; vomits every thing; a large black eschar on sacrum;
-much discharge from the ulcer in the groin; cough frequent; pulse 120,
-feeble; extreme prostration. Died in the evening.
-
-_Abdomen._ Lower portion of ilium and commencement of cæcum contained
-several ulcers, some of which were of large size; [peritoneal cavity
-contained two pints of serum, mixed with pus and flakes of lymph;
-intestines, liver, and abdominal parietes lined throughout with a coat
-of lymph, easily removeable with the scalpel; intestines adherent to
-each other and to the parietes of the abdomen.] _Head._ Arachnoid opake
-and of milky colour; pia mater highly vascular; much effusion beneath it
-and the arachnoid; several drachms of serum in the ventricles, and a
-large quantity at the base of the skull; substance of the brain highly
-vascular and much softened. _Thorax._ [In each cavity of pleura about
-six ounces of fluid; posterior part of lungs condensed; a few recent
-adhesions between the pleuræ of the right side;] other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXXV.
-
-MARY BAKER, æt, 23, servant. Admitted on the 22d day of fever, which, in
-addition to the ordinary symptoms, came on with nausea, anorexia and
-purging; at present complains of a sense of heat in the abdomen without
-pain; but there is uneasiness when firmly pressed; tongue white in
-middle, red at edges, moist; thirst; bowels stated to be regular; pulse
-104; no pain of chest or head.
-
-23d. Abdominal symptoms the same; no sleep; some pain of head; pulse
-120, weak; much sense of weakness.
-
-24th. Tongue has become dry; three stools; pain of head gone; some
-vertigo; delirium; expression of countenance anxious and sunk; pulse
-120.
-
-25th. Tongue more moist; three stools; slept better; expression of
-countenance more natural; but the pulse has risen to 130 and is
-extremely weak.
-
-26th. More pain of abdomen on pressure; more prostration; delirium
-continues; pulse 130, extremely weak. Died next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of small intestines highly vascular; mucous
-membrane of lower part of ilium and cæcum full of ulcers, some of which
-had penetrated through the muscular to the peritoneal coat; this latter
-membrane was very dark and approaching to gangrene; peritoneal cavity
-contained a considerable quantity of bloody serum; omentum dark and
-inflamed; cardiac extremity of the stomach vascular; other viscera
-healthy. _Head._ Dura mater adherent with more firmness than natural to
-the skull; other membranes healthy; more fluid than natural in the
-ventricles; substance of brain and cerebellum vascular. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of both bronchi highly inflamed; [left thoracic cavity
-obliterated by old adhesions; left lung completely hepatized; right lung
-loaded with blood and serum; right cavity contained a considerable
-quantity of blood and serum; heart flaccid; both auricular valves very
-dark.]
-
-
- CASE XI.
-
-GEORGE ENGLISH, æt. 25. For symptoms see page 141.
-
-_Abdomen._ Numerous ragged ulcers in the cæcum, which, having destroyed
-the mucous, had laid the muscular coat quite bare; both the muscular and
-the peritoneal coats were blackened and in the first stage of
-sphacelation; an aperture of about the size of a sixpence had been
-formed in them through which a considerable quantity of fæces had
-escaped into the peritoneal cavity; in different portions of the mucous
-membrane of the other intestines there were slight patches of
-inflammation; omentum much thickened, adhering anteriorly to the
-abdominal peritoneum and posteriorly to the intestines; the latter were
-so agglutinated together, that it was impossible to trace their
-convolutions; the peritoneal sac contained four pints and a half of
-serum mixed with pus; the peritoneal coat of the liver adhered to the
-diaphragm all around, except at one point where a sac was formed which
-was filled with serum; substance of liver healthy; other viscera
-healthy. _Head._ Dura mater vascular; pia mater highly vascular;
-arachnoid healthy; more fluid than natural between the membranes and in
-the ventricles; substance of the brain pretty healthy. _Thorax._ [Right
-pleura vascular; superior and middle lobes of right lung contained
-numerous miliary tubercles; lower lobe, one or two in the first stage of
-suppuration; the under surface of this lobe adhered to the diaphragm
-with great firmness, shewing that the disease of the abdomen had
-extended to the thorax; pleuræ of left side contained two ounces of
-bloody serum; substance of left lung healthy; pericardium contained
-three ounces and a half of serum; left ventricle of heart full
-three-fourths of an inch thick.]
-
-
- CASE LXXXVI.
-
-WILLIAM BAKER, æt. 26. Admitted on 15th day of fever: no account to be
-obtained of previous symptoms: too insensible to give any statement that
-can be depended on of his present feelings; points to lower part of
-chest and epigastrium as the chief seat of pain; abdomen tender on
-pressure; some cough; voice hoarse, husky, and feeble; no pain of head;
-pupils contracted; pulse 100, sharp.
-
-16th. Six stools, two passed in bed; hiccup; frequent cough; respiration
-laborious; pulse 84.
-
-20th. No perceptible change until to-day, when the stools, six in
-number, became mixed with blood; the expectoration is also tinged with
-blood; respiration more hurried and difficult; hiccup continues; pulse
-120.
-
-23d. Five stools in bed; hiccup gone; no sleep; great restlessness;
-pulse the same. Died next morning.
-
-_Abdomen._ Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular; mucous membrane of
-small intestines, and especially of ilium, inflamed and ulcerated; near
-the caput coli a large ulcer had perforated the peritoneal coat, and
-through the opening, which was an inch and a half in diameter, a
-quantity of fæculent matter had escaped into the cavity of the
-peritoneum; spleen very much softened, easily breaking down under the
-finger. _Head._ Pia mater highly vascular; substance of brain slightly
-vascular; a small quantity of bloody serum effused into the lateral
-ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi of dark red colour;
-tubes contained much frothy mucus; substance of both lungs gorged;
-[pleuræ of left side contained a pint and half of fluid; pericardium
-adherent to the pleura costalis; heart flaccid and pale.]
-
-
- CASE LXXXVII.
-
-THOMAS KENNIE, æt. 30, labourer. Admitted on 10th day of fever: attack
-commenced, besides the ordinary symptoms, with tenderness of abdomen: at
-present the abdomen, which is generally tender, is exceedingly so over
-the right iliac region; bowels stated to be regular; tongue foul, red
-and dry; thirst; some pain of chest on full inspiration and coughing;
-cough troublesome; respiration hurried; little sleep; mind confused;
-face flushed; pulse 120, weak.
-
-11th. Tenderness of abdomen continues; five stools; respiration hurried,
-with occasional cough and viscid expectoration; slight pain of head;
-mind distinct; eyes suffused; skin cool, covered with petechiæ. Died
-next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines very vascular, that of
-ilium intensely so; contained several oval and deep ulcers, one of which
-had perforated the peritoneum, the aperture of which was sufficiently
-large to allow the apex of the ring finger to pass through it; the
-peritoneal cavity contained about a pint of pus; the intestines were all
-glued together; the surface of the liver was very dark and much
-inflamed. _Head._ Membranes of brain vascular; substance rather
-vascular; more fluid than natural in the ventricles. _Thorax._ Viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXXVIII.
-
-DAVID PIGGOTT, æt. 19, furrier. Admitted on the 9th day of fever: at
-present, severe pain in the right hypochondrium, stretching towards the
-umbilicus, increased on pressure; tongue brown and dry; no stool; slight
-cough; some pain of head; eyes suffused; pulse 108, firm. V.S. ad ℥x.
-
-10th. Pain of right hypochondrium gone; tongue the same; no pain of
-head; very deaf; slept tolerably; pulse 100, soft.
-
-11th. No pain; tongue unchanged; one copious stool, consisting chiefly
-of blood; slept well; mind confused; countenance rather improved; pulse
-96.
-
-12th. No pain; two stools, with less admixture of blood; mind distinct;
-pulse 110.
-
-13th. Eight stools, scanty, without blood; tongue dry and furred; slept
-ill; great prostration; pulse 90. Died next day.
-
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines in general vascular,
-especially that of the ilium and commencement of the colon, in both of
-which were numerous ulcerations; one in the former had perforated the
-bowel, forming a hole of the size of a sixpence; about a quart of
-sero-purulent fluid in the peritoneal cavity; the intestines were glued
-together, and their peritoneal coat generally inflamed. _Head._
-Membranes of brain vascular; substance natural. _Thorax._ Viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE LXXXIX.
-
-WILLIAM SPOULL, æt. 23, baker. Admitted on the 22d day of fever: no pain
-or tenderness of abdomen; tongue red and dry; bowels loose; no pain of
-chest; some cough; no pain of head; some of limbs and back; mind
-distinct; little sleep; very deaf; pulse 102.
-
-25th. Tongue much furred and fissured; four stools; cough the same;
-pulse 108.
-
-26th. Four stools, mixed with blood; respiration hurried.
-
-27th. Tongue more clean, slightly aphthous; three stools without blood;
-respiration less hurried; pulse 104.
-
-29th. Severe pain of abdomen, from which he had hitherto been quite
-free, came on during the night; at present it continues very severe, is
-much increased on pressure; abdomen swollen and tense; four stools
-without blood; pulse 112, sharp.
-
-30th. Pain of abdomen not so severe, but still excited by full pressure;
-vomited a large quantity of bilious fluid; two stools, dark and slimy;
-respiration hurried; countenance sharp and anxious; pulse 124, small.
-Died two hours after visit.
-
-_Abdomen._ The mucous membrane, both of the small and large intestines,
-in general highly inflamed; the lower third of the ilium, the cæcum and
-the colon were full of ulcers, one of which, in the ilium, had
-perforated through all the coats of the intestine, and formed, near the
-ileo-cæcal valve, a large circular opening, of the size of a crown
-piece, through which the contents of the bowel had escaped into the
-cavity of the peritoneum; this cavity contained a large quantity of
-sero-purulent fluid, mixed with feculent matter; the convolutions of the
-intestines were glued together and their peritoneal coat every where
-highly inflamed; the spleen, liver, and pancreas were sound. _Head._ The
-brain and its membranes were healthy. _Thorax._ Viscera healthy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The attentive student of the important and instructive cases included
-under this section will have perceived that, in the order in which they
-stand, they exhibit a complete series of changes in the intestines from
-the slightest vascularity to the most intense inflammation; and from
-mere elevation and inequality of the mucous membrane, in consequence of
-adventitious deposit beneath it, or from the simple and most superficial
-abrasion of its surface, to the most extensive and deep ulceration, on
-to the ultimate perforation of all the coats of the bowel.
-
-When a number of cases are thus brought together and placed in juxta
-position it is impossible not to perceive, and indeed not to be forcibly
-struck with the uniformity with which a certain series of changes takes
-place. We do not see the same number of morbid appearances in every
-case, but we see in every case precisely the same morbid changes as far
-as they go, the difference being merely a difference in degree; so that
-the description of such a number of cases as has now been detailed would
-be tedious on account of its sameness, were it not that the fact they
-establish is one which it is of paramount importance to the practitioner
-that he should know; and that there appears to be no other means by
-which it can be duly impressed upon the mind.
-
-In like manner the uniformity of the symptoms which denote that these
-morbid changes are going on, is as remarkable as the regularity with
-which the changes themselves occur. Their great peculiarity, which it is
-as important to know as it is to understand their indication itself, is
-_their want of prominence_. They are always to be discerned, or with
-extremely rare exceptions; but they seldom or never force themselves
-upon the notice of the careless or extort the attention of the
-unobserving: still they are not the less constant in their occurrence
-because they come without noise, nor is the indication they give of
-their presence less significant because it is unobtrusive. They do not
-announce their presence by the excitement of violent paroxysms or by
-inducing intense pain, because the state of the system in which they
-take place is incompatible with acute sensation of any kind. The
-prominent symptoms during life are almost always in the head; the great
-changes of structure found after death are always in the intestines; and
-this, which the pathologist learns from observation, the physiologist
-might have predicted from his knowledge of function. The affection of
-the intestines in fever is never a simple or single affection: it never
-occurs alone, but always in combination with an affection of the brain;
-and the cerebral affection is always antecedent, the intestinal,
-invariably subsequent; while the certain consequence of the cerebral
-affection is a diminution, and ultimately an abolition of sensation. It
-is therefore quite impossible, from the very nature of the derangement
-that takes place in the animal economy, that the intestinal affection
-should ever be attended with violent pain. Occasionally, indeed, when
-the abdominal affection is very much in excess, and the cerebral
-affection is unusually slight, severe pain may be felt; but that is
-rare, and the total absence of pain, and even the total absence of
-tenderness on pressure, is more common. It is not then to the patient’s
-own complaint of pain in the abdomen that the practitioner must trust
-for the discovery of abdominal affection in fever.
-
-But though the patient seldom complain of pain in the abdomen, yet in
-the great majority of cases the abdomen is tender on pressure, and it is
-so in all, excepting when the cerebral affection is peculiarly severe or
-is very far advanced. These exceptions render this symptom not
-absolutely constant, although at the bed-side of the sick the
-practitioner will find it very rarely absent. The symptom which is still
-more constant, as the reader must have observed in the perusal of the
-preceding cases, and which therefore affords a very certain guide to the
-detection of the disease, is a loose state of the bowels. Whenever both
-concur there can be no doubt of the diseased process which is going on
-within the intestine: but as the tenderness may be obscured or lost from
-the intensity or advancement of the cerebral affection, so it is very
-remarkable that, in the progress of the intestinal disease, the bowels
-sometimes become regular and even constipated. The physician who sees
-the patient for the first time in this stage of the disease, can
-ascertain the condition of the mucous membrane of the intestines only by
-obtaining an accurate account of the preceding symptoms. And when it is
-possible to procure a distinct and complete history of the disease from
-its commencement, it is commonly found that nausea and vomiting were
-among the early symptoms, while, as we have seen, the latter is not
-unusually present in the more advanced stages. The result of the whole
-is that, excepting when the cerebral affection is most intense and
-overwhelming, the existence of inflammation and ulceration in the mucous
-membrane of the intestines in fever are denoted by signs which are quite
-constant, and in the fidelity of the indication of which we may repose
-implicit confidence. The importance of the diagnosis may perhaps plead
-our excuse for repeating them again. They are tenderness of the abdomen
-on pressure; loose stools; redness of the tongue, especially at the tip
-and edges, in general preceded by nausea and vomiting, and in the most
-exquisitely marked cases, and in their advanced stage, followed by a
-mixture of blood in the stools and a swollen, hard and tympanitic state
-of the abdomen. All these symptoms by no means always concur in the same
-case: but the presence of one or two of them will be sufficient to guide
-the attentive observer to the knowledge of the disease.
-
-We have seen that the appearance of blood in the stools is not very
-frequent: that the most extensive ulceration may and commonly does exist
-without it; still when blood does appear it is generally found in
-combination with an ulceration which is not only extensive, but which
-has penetrated deep into the coats of the intestine. But although this
-be the general fact, yet it must be borne in mind that blood may be
-poured out in large quantities without the existence of a single ulcer.
-In this case the blood issues from the capillary vessels of the mucous
-membrane of the intestine, and when examined after death this membrane
-is found to be of a dark red colour, and presents the appearance of
-ecchymosis.
-
-
-IV. CASES IN ILLUSTRATION OF THE MORBID CHANGES WHICH TAKE PLACE WITHIN
- THE HEAD, THORAX, AND ABDOMEN, IN THE SAME INDIVIDUAL; OR MIXED CASES.
-
-
- CASE XC.
-
-MARGARET EADES, æt. 18, dress-maker. Admitted on the 22d day of fever,
-which attacked with the ordinary symptoms: at present the mind is dull;
-the sensibility diminished; there is scarcely any sleep; the eyes
-injected and suffused; the skin hot; the tongue brown and dry; the pulse
-120, but there is no pain in any organ.
-
-23d. Insensibility increased to coma; delirium; tongue dry and quite
-black; gums bleed on the slightest touch; lips and teeth sordid; four
-stools, dark and offensive; pulse 110.
-
-27th. Coma undiminished; almost constant moaning; scarcely any sleep;
-three stools of same character; some cough; pulse 124, feeble.
-
-31st. All the symptoms aggravated; extreme prostration; countenance
-sunk; cough, without expectoration; respiration with mucous rattle;
-stools in bed: pulse 140, extremely feeble. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater vascular; arachnoid thickened and opake; substance of
-brain highly vascular, in every point thickly studded with red points;
-effusion between the membranes and into the ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of bronchi inflamed; substance of lungs partly condensed and
-partly tuberculated. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium inflamed and
-ulcerated; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCI.
-
-WILLIAM MIDDLETON, æt. 18, shoemaker. Admitted on the 5th day of scarlet
-fever, which commenced, in addition to the ordinary symptoms, with
-exceedingly severe head-ache, which continues undiminished; scarcely any
-sleep; eyes red and ferrety; tongue white; bowels loose; pulse 120;
-eruption apparent only on the chest; no soreness of throat nor
-difficulty of deglutition.
-
-6th. Pain of head nearly gone; more insensible; pulse 126; eruption
-fading.
-
-8th. Insensibility increased to coma; adnatæ glistening; tongue brown
-and dry; lips and teeth sordid; four stools.
-
-10th. Coma deeper; great restlessness; no sleep; stools in bed; pulse
-120, weaker.
-
-11th. Increasing restlessness; tongue not to be protruded; deglutition
-difficult; stools and urine in bed; pulse 150, indistinct.
-
-13th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Dura and pia mater highly vascular; arachnoid thickened and
-opake; substance of brain highly vascular; effusion between the
-membranes, into the ventricles, and at the base. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of bronchi vascular; substance of both lungs inflamed.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium ulcerated; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCII.
-
-SARAH SHARP, æt. 18. Admitted on the 22d day of fever: the pain of the
-head, which had been severe from the commencement, continues; complains
-also of much pain in back and limbs; abdomen tender; tongue fiery red;
-bowels purged; pulse 100, soft.
-
-23d. No change, excepting that the tongue has become brown and dry in
-the middle, but still remains exceedingly red at the edges; four stools;
-pulse 108.
-
-32d. Pain of head quite gone; that of abdomen, which had increased, has
-now also disappeared; no sleep; great restlessness; delirium; eyes dull
-and heavy; face flushed; tongue red and dry; four stools; pulse 110.
-
-40th. Cerebral symptoms unchanged; no cough or uneasiness of chest; skin
-dusky, that of the cheek of a deep purple colour; tongue loaded and dry;
-lips and teeth sordid; stools in bed; pulse quick and very feeble; great
-prostration.
-
-48th. Coma; discharge from both ears; vomiting; pulse 120, very weak.
-
-50th. Erysipelas of cheek, extending to scalp; much discharge from ears;
-tenderness of abdomen again returned; tongue again of fiery red colour;
-pulse extremely quick and feeble.
-
-70th. During the whole of the period since last report there has been
-occasional vomiting; the erysipelas gradually disappeared; the
-sensibility returned; the tongue became clean and moist; the stools
-improved, and there was even some return of appetite: on the other hand,
-there came on extensive excoriation, and at last sloughing of back and
-hips; the emaciation became very great, the prostration extreme, and at
-length, on the 86th day from the commencement of the fever, she sunk
-exhausted.
-
-_Head._ Membranes of brain highly vascular; substance natural; upwards
-of eight ounces of serum in the different cavities. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of trachea slightly reddened; bronchi vascular; lungs dark and
-much gorged with blood. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of intestines
-slightly vascular, [but the peritoneal coat highly inflamed, and
-contained on its surface a coating of coagulable lymph, which glued the
-convolutions of the intestines to each other and to the omentum.]
-
-
- CASE XCIII.
-
-CHARLES ENGLAND, æt. 22, servant. Admitted on the 11th day of fever:
-previous symptoms unknown. At present perfectly insensible; pupils
-contracted, insensible to light; face and lips of deep purple colour;
-extremities cold; full pressure induces some uneasiness in abdomen; body
-of tongue loaded and dry, edges red; deglutition difficult; pulse 100,
-feeble.
-
-12th. Some sleep through the night; more sensible to-day; no stool since
-admission; pulse 114.
-
-13th. Still more sensible; complains of giddiness; five stools; tongue
-beginning to clean.
-
-20th. Had been gradually improving since last report, and the pulse had
-fallen to 80; during last night he became extremely restless, with much
-delirium; mind now confused; face of a purple colour; tongue red and
-glossy; three stools; pulse 120.
-
-21st. Delirium; almost constant moaning; cheeks of purple colour; tongue
-brown and glossy; pulse 130, but so indistinct that it can scarcely be
-counted; lies extremely prostrate.
-
-22d. Erysipelas of face, extending down the neck; some cough; abdomen
-again tender; three copious dark-coloured stools; pulse 130. Died
-following day.
-
-_Head._ Scalp loaded with an unusual quantity of blood; the vessels of
-all the membranes of the brain exceedingly turgid; a large coagulum of
-blood between the dura mater and the arachnoid; substance of the brain
-exceedingly soft; an ounce and a half of bloody fluid at the base of the
-skull. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi extremely vascular;
-substance of lungs somewhat condensed and very much gorged; [two ounces
-of serum in each pleural cavity.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium
-much thickened, softened, and injected, exhibiting a few points of
-incipient ulceration; [mucous membrane of bladder thickened and
-inflamed; peritoneum lining the pelvis vascular;] other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCIV.
-
-JAMES ROBINSON, æt. 25. Admitted on the 8th day of relapse: at present
-mind confused; acknowledges no pain in head, chest, or abdomen; tongue
-not much loaded, moist; thirst; pulse 60, weak.
-
-9th. No pain; some sleep; occasional delirium; two stools; pulse 78.
-
-10th. Mind dull and heavy; returns no answer when spoken to; pulse the
-same.
-
-17th. Little change until to-day; the entire body is now covered with an
-efflorescence, consisting of minute papulæ, of a vivid red colour; mind
-dull and confused; pulse 120. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ An old fracture over that part of the coronal suture which joins
-the parietal bone, seems to have left the brain unaffected; inner
-surface of skull perfectly smooth; both membranes and substance of the
-brain highly inflamed; pituitary gland suppurated; cerebellum natural.
-_Thorax._ [Left lung contained many tubercles in the stage of
-suppuration; the apex, which was full of tubercles, adhered to costal
-pleura; right side healthy; pericardium contained two ounces of bloody
-serum; serous lining of auricles and ventricles of heart highly vascular
-and of dark red colour; valves of aorta and of auricles extremely dark;]
-no account recorded of the state of the mucous membrane of the bronchi.
-_Abdomen._ Omentum vascular; intestines throughout of dark red colour;
-all their coats every where exceedingly softened, the peritoneal peeling
-off with ease from the muscular; the mucous inflamed, not ulcerated; the
-mucous membrane of the stomach vascular; a considerable portion of the
-jejunum intussuscepted; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCV.
-
-ANN SMITH, æt. 23, married. Admitted on the 15th day of fever; pain of
-head gone; some vertigo remains; no uneasiness of chest; some cough
-which excites pain in the abdomen; the latter not very tender even on
-full pressure; tongue loaded in middle with white fur, red at edges; no
-stool for the last twenty-four hours; pulse 120, weak.
-
-17th. Eruption has appeared over almost the entire skin, consisting of
-minute papillæ of a dusky red colour; two stools; pulse 120.
-
-20th. Erysipelas extending over both shoulders; severe pains in the
-limbs.
-
-25th. Cough troublesome with copious viscid expectoration; erysipelas
-extending from the shoulders to the chest; tongue dry: delirium; pulse
-110, weak.
-
-26th. Cough diminished; respiration hurried; stools in bed; pulse 120,
-feeble.
-
-27th. Delirium continues; respiration more hurried; pulse extremely
-feeble.
-
-28th. Erysipelas still extending; powers sinking; respiration laborious;
-stools and urine in bed. Died in evening.
-
-_Head._ Arachnoid vascular; substance of brain vascular; sheath covering
-the lumbar portion of the spinal cord highly vascular; cord itself
-natural; effusion into the lateral ventricles; plexus choroides and
-velum interpositum highly vascular; pituitary gland gritty. _Thorax._
-Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed; substance of left lung intensely
-inflamed, being nearly as red as muscle and its lobes adherent;
-[corresponding side of pericardium highly vascular; right lung slightly
-inflamed; right pleuræ not adherent; left adherent throughout.]
-_Abdomen._ Patches of vascularity in mucous membrane of intestines and
-over their peritoneal coat; pyloric end of stomach vascular; spleen
-soft; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCVI.
-
-JOSEPH BAIRD, æt. 12. Admitted on the 22d day of fever; slight pain of
-head; severe pain across the loins; no uneasiness in chest; no cough;
-respirations 44; abdomen tender; tongue red, parched; bowels purged;
-pulse 134.
-
-33d. Abdomen tender, tumid, tense; four stools; tongue loaded with white
-fur; mind distinct; scarcely any sleep; extremely fretful.
-
-34th. No delirium; stools in bed; pulse 114. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of the brain vascular; at the surface of
-the right posterior lobe, an abscess of considerable size, the floor of
-which was formed by the pia mater; gelatinous effusion between the
-arachnoid and the pia mater. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi
-vascular; substance of lungs healthy; [left cavity of pleuræ contained
-eight ounces of bloody serum; right six.] _Abdomen._ Peritoneal and
-mucous coats of jejunum and ileum vascular; mesenteric glands greatly
-enlarged; several of them suppurated; [large quantity of serum mixed
-with pus in the peritoneal cavity; omentum much thickened; adhered to
-the superior portion of the spleen; to the edge of the left lobe of the
-liver, and to the portion of the diaphragm immediately above the spleen;
-in this manner it formed the external boundary of an abscess of
-considerable size in the substance of the spleen; portions of the sac
-itself ulcerated; the rest of the spleen nodulated; these nodules when
-cut into were found to consist chiefly of puriform matter contained in
-cells; thoracic duct enlarged; receptaculum chyli exceedingly enlarged
-and ulcerated.]
-
-
- CASE XCVII.
-
-CATHERINE FRENCH, æt. 24. Admitted on the 9th day of scarlet fever.
-Complaint came on with sudden loss of strength, shivering and violent
-pain of head and chest: at present throat sore; deglutition difficult;
-some pain of chest; great tenderness of abdomen; nausea and vomiting;
-tongue dry, brown and cracked; slight pain of head; eyes dull, heavy and
-suffused; pulse 104, pretty strong; no eruption.
-
-23d. The pain of throat, the difficult deglutition, the tenderness of
-the abdomen had disappeared; the pulse had fallen to 90, and she
-appeared to be gradually recovering until this day, when, preceded by a
-slight return of sore throat, erysipelas appeared on the face; no pain
-of head; tongue again brown and dry; pulse 96.
-
-24th. No sleep; delirium; erysipelas extending; pulse 108.
-
-38th. Erysipelas has disappeared, but other symptoms are aggravated;
-extreme restlessness; much delirium; frequent cough, with scanty
-expectoration; tongue brown, dry and cracked; pulse 86.
-
-39th. Respiration difficult; delirium; vomiting; pulse 120.
-
-41st. Respiration rattling; delirium; inclined to sleep; pulse 120.
-
-42d. Respiration increasingly difficult and painful; pulse 129.
-
-43d. Extremely restless; almost constant moaning; countenance anxious;
-cough; tongue continues brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid; pulse 122.
-
-44th. Died during the night.
-
-_Head._ An abscess over the posterior extremity of the sagittal suture,
-around which for the space of two inches, the pericranium was destroyed,
-leaving this portion of the bone bare. Dura mater natural; arachnoid and
-pia mater vascular; substance of brain natural; effusion between dura
-mater and arachnoid; lateral ventricles full of serum; two ounces at
-base. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ of right side covered throughout with pus of
-very thick consistence, presenting the appearance of the interior of a
-large abscess, contained two pints of fluid consisting of serum, pus and
-blood; superior lobe of right lung hepatized and tuberculated; some of
-the tubercles in a state of suppuration; middle lobe contained a large
-abscess; lower lobe much wasted, blackened, and in many points softened
-down to a black fluid; left thoracic cavity contained about one pint of
-pure serum; pleuræ very vascular but not adherent; substance of lung
-perfectly sound;] condition of mucous membrane of bronchi not stated.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium contained several ulcers; other
-viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE XCVIII.
-
-JOHN GREEN, æt. 10. Period and progress of disease unknown: throat much
-inflamed and ulcerated; deglutition difficult; respiration painful; much
-muco-purulent fluid constantly discharged from nostrils; eyes suffused;
-lips and teeth sordid; tongue cannot be protruded; pulse cannot be
-counted; noisy delirium; several dark-coloured vesicles on hands,
-especially in the neighbourhood of the joints. Died the same evening.
-
-_Head._ Membranes slightly vascular; arachnoid and dura mater adherent
-at several points; substance of brain slightly vascular; effusion into
-ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of trachea and bronchi highly
-vascular; larynx much inflamed; arytænoid cartilages ulcerated;
-epiglottis dark and thickened; [pleuræ adherent throughout; substance of
-lungs inflamed.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of intestines vascular;
-mesenteric glands enlarged; liver mottled on surface.
-
-
- CASE XCIX.
-
-ANN LEVITT, æt. 24, married. Admitted on the 16th day of fever, which
-came on with severe pain of the head and epigastrium; pain of head is
-now gone, giddiness remains; much pain of limbs; scarcely any sleep;
-mind confused; eyes dull and heavy; face flushed; no uneasiness of
-chest; abdomen extremely tender on pressure; tongue red, parched, and
-cracked; lips and teeth sordid; bowels purged; pulse 123.
-
-17th. After the application of ten leeches to the abdomen the tenderness
-is much diminished; the pulse fallen to 96; vomiting.
-
-18th. Eight leeches again applied; abdomen now free from pain; vomiting
-continues; tongue unchanged; pulse 106.
-
-19th. Vomiting undiminished; eight stools; abdomen again tender.
-
-20th. Vomiting; five stools; pulse 108; slight pain of abdomen on full
-pressure.
-
-22d. Abdomen tender, swollen, and tympanitic; eight stools; pulse 96;
-great prostration.
-
-24th. Abdomen less tender and tense; still more prostrate.
-
-25th. Stools in bed; pulse scarcely perceptible; features collapsed.
-Died in the night.
-
-_Head._ Membranes of brain vascular; substance natural; effusion into
-the ventricles and at base; pituitary gland suppurated. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of bronchi inflamed; tubes full of mucus, mixed with pus;
-[superior lobe of right lung a mass of tubercular disease; one of the
-tubercles the size of a pigeon’s egg, in a state of suppuration;
-effusion of serum into the left pleural cavity.] _Abdomen._ Mucous
-membrane of jejunum and ilium much inflamed; caput coli firmly adherent
-to the abdominal peritoneum; large quantity of serum effused into the
-hepatic region; substance of liver soft; gall-bladder in a state of
-suppuration; contained three large biliary calculi; omentum inflamed;
-[two large hydatids attached to the left ovarium.]
-
-
- CASE C.
-
-ROBERT EBBOTT, æt. 28, labourer. Admitted on the 12th day of fever: pain
-of head, which has been severe, is now only slight; frequent sighing; no
-pain of chest; frequent dry cough; respiration heavy and suspirious;
-abdomen tender; tongue dry, black, and cracked, red at apex; lips and
-teeth sordid; bowels purged; pulse 68.
-
-15th. Mind confused; insensibility increasing; abdomen tender; tongue
-quite black and extremely dry; teeth sordid; respiration the same; no
-stool; pulse 72, feeble. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater natural; longitudinal sinus contained a firm cord of
-fibrin; arachnoid and pia mater vascular; substance of brain natural;
-pituitary gland softened and suppurating; much effusion into the
-ventricles; at the base the membranes were elevated into a large bag,
-distended with fluid. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular;
-[right lung adherent to pleura, by a single point, at the upper part of
-the inferior lobe; substance contained numerous tubercles; left pleural
-cavity obliterated; left lung hepatized throughout, containing tubercles
-in every stage of disease; apex of heart adherent to pericardium.]
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum inflamed and extensively
-ulcerated; [liver exceedingly enlarged and hard, almost of cartilaginous
-firmness and texture, weighed seven pounds two ounces; right kidney
-externally nodulated, internally healthy; left, healthy externally, but,
-when cut into, found to contain several abscesses; urinary bladder
-small; walls one third of an inch thick.]
-
-
- CASE CI.
-
-JANE HALLAM, æt. 28, married. Admitted on the 6th day of fever: attacked
-with overwhelming loss of strength and severe pain of the head; pain of
-head continues, with distressing vertigo; no pain of chest; no cough;
-abdomen tender; tongue covered with white fur, but is extremely parched;
-thirst urgent; thinks she has had thirty stools within the last
-twenty-four hours; mind tolerably distinct.
-
-7th. Pain of head gone; mind much more dull and heavy; abdomen very
-tender; tongue has become brown and continues extremely dry; four stools
-dark and offensive; pulse 104, soft.
-
-8th. Scarcely any sleep; much restlessness; mind confused; insensibility
-increasing; pulse 90, weak. Died next morning.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; substance of brain in general much softened,
-but the floors of the ventricles especially were in an exceedingly
-softened state. _Thorax._ [Left pleuræ adherent at apex; superior lobe
-of left lung hepatized and stuffed with small tubercles; two adhesions
-in right pleuræ, one at apex; right lung stuffed with tubercles;]
-pericardium and heart healthy; condition of bronchi not stated.
-_Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum exceedingly vascular, but
-not ulcerated; patches of peritoneal coat of stomach vascular; [large
-lobe of liver scirrhous;] other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CII.
-
-JONATHAN STUDD, æt. 27. Admitted on the 28th day of fever; symptoms
-throughout appear to have been chiefly thoracic; at present frequent
-cough with viscid expectoration; great emaciation; pulse 102, extremely
-weak; no pain of head or abdomen; tongue foul; bowels regular; face
-pallid.
-
-29th. Cough continues; abdomen not tender; tongue brown and dry in
-middle, red at tip and edges; three stools; pulse 100; mind dull and
-confused; muscular tremor.
-
-30th. Cough the same; tongue unchanged; lips and teeth sordid; three
-stools mixed with blood; delirium; muscular tremor increased; pulse 108.
-
-31st. Abdomen has become tympanitic; three stools mixed with blood;
-delirium and muscular tremor increased; pulse 112, weaker.
-
-47th. On the evening of the day of last report he slept better and waked
-improved in all respects; this improvement appeared to be steady and
-progressive; the stools became natural; the pulse diminished in
-frequency and increased in strength; on this morning the stools
-continued natural; the pulse was 90, and he still seemed to be gradually
-though slowly recovering, when, without the return of any unfavourable
-symptom, he suddenly expired.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of brain healthy, but more fluid than
-natural in the ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi greatly
-inflamed and thickened; bronchial tubes full of mucus mixed with pus;
-pleuræ of left side of chest extensively adherent; substance of left
-lung healthy excepting some slight patches of hepatization. _Abdomen._
-Mucous membrane of small intestines extremely vascular, in many places
-presenting the appearance of ecchymosis; at the valve of the colon
-several small ulcers; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CIII.
-
-JOHN M’CARTY, æt. 22, labourer. Admitted on the 22d day of fever;
-complaint commenced with symptoms of severe cold; at present, slight
-pain of chest; cough, inducing pain in the abdomen, which is not tender;
-pain of head gone; eyes injected and suffused; face flushed; tongue
-brown and dry; bowels stated to be regular; pulse 99, weak.
-
-23d. Cough very severe; abdomen not tender; tongue dry, brown and
-cracked; four stools; no pain of head; face flushed; eyes ferrety; pulse
-90.
-
-24th. Mind more confused; eyes more injected; delirium.
-
-25th. Insensibility increasing; no sleep; tongue more dry and brown;
-lips and teeth sordid; four stools; pulse 96.
-
-26th. Constant delirium; stools and urine in bed; pulse 104.
-
-28th. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes and substance of brain vascular; more fluid than
-natural in ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular;
-[pleuræ of right side slightly adherent.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of
-jejunum, cæcum and ilium very much ulcerated; spleen soft; other viscera
-healthy.
-
-
- CASE CIV.
-
-SARAH NASH, æt. 14. Admitted on the 22d day of disease; pain of head
-appears to have been very severe but it has now wholly subsided; lies
-quite insensible; pupils dilated, but contractile; muscles of
-extremities quite rigid; hands clenched; arms and legs extended and
-inflexible; no tenderness of abdomen on fullest pressure; tongue brown
-and dry; no stool for four days; pulse 110, extremely feeble and
-indistinct.
-
-23d. Muscles of lower extremities rather less rigid; hands continue
-clenched; eyes in general closed; when opened appear injected and
-suffused; much grinding of the teeth; great restlessness; noisy
-delirium; two stools; pulse 126, stronger.
-
-24th. Great restlessness; scarcely any sleep; almost constant grinding
-of the teeth; pulse 129, of good power.
-
-26th. So restless that the pulse cannot be counted; exceedingly peevish;
-began to take two grains of calomel with half a grain of opium every
-four hours.
-
-27th. Little change excepting that she is now sensible of some pain in
-the epigastrium on full pressure, and acknowledges some pain in the
-head; pulse 142.
-
-32d. No amendment in the cerebral symptoms, and the strength is
-diminished; the mercurial odour is already quite evident, and the mouth
-is slightly ulcerated; no ptyalism; pulse 126, weak; calomel and opium
-omitted.
-
-36th. Noise and delirium continue; ulceration of mouth gone; pulse 140,
-very weak. Calomel and opium were again resumed.
-
-27th. Slight ptyalism; no improvement; pulse 130, extremely weak and
-indistinct.
-
-38th. Ptyalism continues; sinking. Died.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; substance of brain much softened; effusion
-between all the membranes and into the ventricles. _Thorax._ Bronchi of
-both lungs vascular, and contained a large quantity of purulent matter;
-right lung much hepatized; left slightly consolidated. _Abdomen._ Ilium
-and cæcum very much ulcerated; spleen very firm, contained one tubercle;
-other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CV.
-
-WILLIAM GANDER, æt. 22, servant. Admitted on 15th day of fever; no
-account to be obtained of previous symptoms; some pain of head; much
-giddiness; mind confused; delirium; expression of eyes wild; face
-flushed; abdomen tender; tongue foul at root, moist, very red at apex;
-bowels purged; pulse 99, of good power.
-
-16th. No sleep; violent noisy delirium; eyebrows contracted; face
-flushed; six stools; pulse 100.
-
-19th. Intensity of cerebral symptoms progressively increasing; constant
-violent delirium; muscular tremor; subsultus; tongue cannot be
-protruded; pulse 112. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; substance of brain natural; four ounces of
-serum in the lateral ventricles. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of trachea
-and bronchi highly vascular; other viscera healthy. _Abdomen._ Glands of
-the mucous membrane of the intestines in general enlarged, many of them
-inflamed; some of them in a state of commencing ulceration, others
-completely ulcerated, so that the ilium and lower part of colon were
-full of ulcers, which varied in size, from that of a split pea to a
-crown piece; mesenteric glands much enlarged and dark; spleen very soft;
-other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CVI.
-
-GEORGE BURY, æt. 9. Admitted on the 11th day of fever: complaint
-commenced with nausea, pain of abdomen and severe head-ache; the latter
-continues; abdomen, especially epigastrium, tender; tongue red; much
-thirst; bowels constipated; pulse 116.
-
-14th. Pain of head gone; countenance extremely pallid; no sleep; great
-restlessness; delirium; abdomen still tender; tongue red and dry; eight
-stools, dark and offensive; pulse 130. Died next day.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; substance of brain highly vascular;
-pituitary gland in a state of suppuration; cerebellum vascular; effusion
-between dura mater and arachnoid; one ounce of serum in ventricles, two
-at base; pia mater covering the spinal cord highly vascular; substance
-of cord natural. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi slightly vascular;
-tubes contained some mucus, mixed with pus; [left pleuræ slightly
-vascular; lower lobe of left lung hepatized; right pleuræ healthy; lower
-lobe of right lung also hepatized, and contained several hard
-tubercles;] other viscera healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of lower
-end of ilium and entire cæcum thickly studded with ragged ulcers, raised
-and very foul, with indurated margins and irregular surfaces; longest
-diameter of ulcers in direction of longitudinal fibres of muscular
-coats; mesenteric glands very large, many of them being the size of
-almonds; other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CVII.
-
-JOHN MEREDITH, æt. 23, porter. Admitted on the 22nd day of fever, which
-came on, besides the ordinary symptoms, with pain of chest, cough and
-hoarseness: states that these symptoms were getting better when, a few
-days ago, he was attacked with pain of the abdomen, accompanied with
-loose stools: at present the abdomen is exceedingly tender on pressure;
-tongue brown and dry in the middle, edges white and moist; bowels
-purged; distressing hiccup; pain of head, which was severe in the
-commencement, gone; mind dull and heavy, but answers any question
-distinctly; countenance anxious; features sunk; pulse 88, feeble; slight
-degree of hoarseness and some cough remain.
-
-23d. Tenderness of abdomen undiminished; hiccup continues very
-distressing; vomiting; bowels purged; tongue brown and dry; scarcely any
-sleep; pectoral symptoms the same; pulse 76.
-
-24th. Tenderness of abdomen, hiccup, vomiting, purging, all increased;
-eight stools since last report; much restlessness; pulse 84.
-
-25th. Appeared to be more easy yesterday, but relapsed into his former
-state to-day. Died following morning.
-
-_Head._ Membranes vascular; arachnoid thickened and opake; substance of
-brain vascular; more fluid than natural in the ventricle. _Thorax._
-Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular; other viscera healthy. _Abdomen._
-Mucous membranes of small intestines vascular; [peritoneum universally
-and greatly inflamed; that covering the intestines coated with a layer
-of coagulable lymph, by which their convolutions were united into one
-diseased mass; false membranes were formed by this exudation which
-extended from the under surface of the liver to the right iliac fossa,
-where they formed a cyst, in which eight ounces of purulent matter were
-contained; the peritoneum covering the abdominal surface of the
-diaphragm inflamed; liver enlarged,] but its substance appeared healthy;
-other viscera natural.
-
-
- CASE CVIII.
-
-ELIZABETH TURNER, æt. 26, servant. Admitted on the 15th day of fever: no
-account to be obtained of previous symptoms: at present extremely
-restless; much delirium; almost constant talking or moaning; no sleep;
-mind quite confused and wandering; when roused to answer a question she
-seems sensible for a moment, but immediately lapses into low muttering
-incoherence; if asked whether she has any pain in the head she points to
-the forehead; says she has no pain in chest or abdomen; no cough;
-abdomen not tender.
-
-16th. No sleep; constant restlessness; almost unceasing incoherent
-talking; incapable of answering when spoken to; tongue cannot be
-protruded; stools in bed; pulse too feeble and indistinct to be counted.
-Died in the evening.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater along the course of the longitudinal sinus very
-adherent to the arachnoid; arachnoid and pia mater white and opake;
-surface and substance of brain highly vascular; surface of cerebellum
-vascular; substance healthy; pituitary gland suppurating; more fluid
-than natural in the ventricles; an ounce at the base. _Thorax._ Mucous
-membrane of bronchi highly inflamed; bronchial tubes filled with mucus
-mixed with pus; [pleura costalis of right side vascular; slight effusion
-into right pleural cavity, and into parenchyma of right lung; lower lobe
-much inflamed; pleuræ of left side adherent; that covering left side of
-diaphragm much inflamed; substance of left lung partly inflamed, partly
-consolidated.] _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines inflamed;
-in that of ilium numerous large, raised ulcers; [liver adherent by
-several unnatural connexions to diaphragm, spleen and transverse arch of
-colon, but its substance was healthy; appendix vermiformis likewise
-adherent to abdominal peritoneum;] head of pancreas enlarged; [internal
-inguinal glands much enlarged, and some of them impacted with calcareous
-matter;] other viscera healthy.
-
-
- CASE CIX.
-
-MR. W——, æt. 50. The progress of this case having been observed with
-great care from the commencement to the termination of the disease, and
-affording an excellent illustration of the insidious manner in which the
-mixed form of fever sometimes attacks, and of the silent but rapid
-progress it makes without exciting alarm, until, at last, symptoms the
-most formidable, and which, to those who are not acquainted with the
-nature of the malady, appear to be most sudden, supervene, it may be
-useful to give a detailed account of it.
-
-This gentleman had been out of health six months previously to the
-present attack of fever: he had been observed to be gradually losing
-flesh, and fading; yet he laboured under no complaint that could be
-ascertained, excepting that his appetite failed; that he could digest
-well no kind of food; that he was badly nourished and, therefore, weaker
-in body and less vigorous in mind than usual.
-
-About three weeks before the fever commenced, his stomach-complaints
-became worse, and for these he requested the advice of his friend Mr.
-Chaldecott. During this gentleman’s attendance, his patient was one day
-attacked with slight chilliness, an unusual degree of lassitude,
-together with pains in the limbs: but the chilliness never amounted to
-rigor; the general pains were not severe; there was no pain whatever in
-the head; yet the sudden debility which affected both mind and body was
-very striking. Still the mind was perfectly distinct; the sleep was
-sound; the expression of the countenance was natural; the tongue,
-however, became loaded with white fur; there was some thirst; the pulse
-varied from 84 to 96, while the temperature and the softness of the skin
-remained in a healthy state. In this manner he went on about eight or
-ten days, and, during the whole of this period, he was daily questioned
-by his medical attendant and examined with much anxiety relative to the
-condition of the organs in the head, chest and abdomen; but he was
-steady in affirming that he was free from all uneasiness in the head,
-and that he had no pain in the chest; nor could any pain be excited by
-the fullest pressure, either in the epigastrium or in any part of the
-abdomen. It was observable, however, that he had some cough without
-expectoration, and that his respiration was short and hurried. His
-appearance, too, indicated more disease than his sensations; he was
-obviously worse than he expressed, or than could be accounted for from
-the apparent affection of any organ, and this excited alarm both in his
-family and in his medical attendants; and it is always a truly alarming
-condition.
-
-On the 11th day a remarkable change took place: for two or three hours
-he was chilly; to this succeeded heat of skin and flushing of the face;
-what was very alarming, the colour of the flash was purple, while that
-of the whole face was dusky; there was no cough, but the respiration was
-short and hurried; the mind was confused and dull, though a coherent
-answer might still be obtained to any question that was asked; the pulse
-now rose to 120, there was little or no sleep, but great restlessness
-during the night, in the course of which delirium appeared, and the next
-morning there came on muscular tremor. As the day advanced the flushing
-and heat disappeared; the mind became quite distinct, and the pulse fell
-to 96. Towards evening he again became restless, the pulse rose to 104,
-and about one o’clock, a.m. the increased heat, the flushing of the
-face, the purple colour of the cheek, the dusky appearance of the skin,
-the short and hurried respiration, and the convulsive action of the
-muscles all returned, and in a greater degree, while the pulse again
-rose to 120. From this state he never recovered in the least degree, but
-became more and more dull, and at length nearly insensible; his debility
-rapidly increased until it became extreme; he lay quite prostrate on the
-back, with his arms extended, as if lifeless; the muscular tremor
-increased; the respiration became extremely short and hurried; the
-tongue became dry, red, glazed, and sticky; the bowels torpid; the pulse
-130; and with these symptoms he expired on the 13th day of fever.
-
-_Head._ Dura mater healthy; arachnoid thickened and opake; much
-gelatinous effusion between it and the pia mater; substance of brain
-highly vascular and firm; lateral ventricles distended with fluid, much
-also at the base. _Thorax._ Mucous membrane of bronchi universally of a
-dark red colour and lined with a tenacious fluid, which was slightly
-sticky; bronchial tubes filled with frothy mucus; substance of lungs
-perfectly healthy. _Abdomen._ Mucous membrane of small intestines
-generally inflamed; lower part of ilium and commencement of colon filled
-with large and raised ulcers, some of which were just forming, while
-others had penetrated through a thick mass of adventitious deposit to
-the muscular coat of the intestine.
-
-Before closing these illustrations of the pathology of fever, it may be
-proper to give an example of the modifications which take place when
-this disease proves fatal in the state of gestation. If fever attack
-during pregnancy, there is the greatest possible danger of miscarriage,
-and the great majority of those who miscarry die. There is no
-complication which requires a more delicate and cautious management; and
-the management which experience shews to be the best will be stated in
-the proper place: in the mean time, the following case is given as an
-illustration of the morbid appearances which are found (and the
-appearances are very uniform) when abortion is the precursor of death.
-
-
- CASE CX.
-
-MARY CUTLER, æt. 37, married. Admitted on the 5th day of fever, in the
-commencement of which, in addition to the ordinary symptoms, there was
-much nausea; this feeling continues at present, and is now accompanied
-with vomiting; epigastrium tender; cannot lie without pain in the left
-side; cough frequent, and exciting uneasiness in the chest; tongue white
-and dry; bowels bound; some pain of head, especially in the forehead;
-scarcely any sleep; much pain in the extremities; pain of throat with
-difficult deglutition; pulse 122; skin warm; six months pregnant.
-
-6th. Much retching and vomiting; tenderness of the epigastrium and
-abdomen; bowels very loose; tongue white in the middle, red at the
-edges; severe pain in the chest; great dyspnœa; constant, urgent cough
-with difficult mucous expectoration; severe pain in the head; no sleep;
-great restlessness; pulse 150, sharp but compressible. V. S. ad ℥xij.
-
-7th. Buff on blood extremely firm; retching and vomiting gone; pain of
-side entirely removed; less cough; dyspnœa diminished; pain of head
-better; slept much better; pulse 120.
-
-9th. After a tolerable night, attacked this morning with urgent dyspnœa,
-soon became perfectly insensible; was delivered of a fœtus six months
-old; at present, nearly insensible; respiration hurried and laborious;
-tongue brown and dry; one stool; pulse 110; skin moderately warm.
-
-10th. Free lochial discharge; all the symptoms greatly improved; tongue
-white; moist; pulse 84, soft.
-
-13th. Lochial discharge nearly ceased; no pain in head, abdomen, or any
-where, except the face which is attacked by erysipelas; tongue continues
-moist and is nearly clean; pulse 108.
-
-14th. Erysipelas increased and extending; tongue, has again become brown
-and dry; pulse 110.
-
-16th. Erysipelas extending; severe pain in epigastrium and over abdomen,
-much increased on pressure; distressing sense of nausea but no vomiting;
-tongue the same; pulse 96, weak and irregular.
-
-17th. Pain of abdomen increased; stools in bed; no sleep; extreme
-restlessness; respiration hurried and wheezing; pulse 130, weak. Died in
-the evening.
-
-_Head._ Membranes of brain vascular. _Thorax._ [Pleuræ covering right
-lung coated with a layer of coagulable lymph; in both pleural cavities a
-large quantity of serum mixed with flakes of lymph and pus; that part of
-the pleura of the right side which lines the diaphragm highly inflamed;]
-substance of both lungs healthy. _Abdomen._ Peritoneum in general more
-vascular than natural; patches of it in a state of intense inflammation;
-peritoneal sac contained much serum mixed with flakes of lymph and pus;
-pelvis of right kidney inflamed; ovaria and uterus of very dark colour
-and intensely inflamed; other viscera healthy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It would be easy to multiply cases to an indefinite extent, but, since
-those which have been cited exhibit a complete view of the pathology of
-fever, as far as it has yet been ascertained, any further details would
-fatigue the reader without instructing him. And what is this pathology?
-What are the events, the detail of which has occupied us so long? The
-account of the pathology of fever is the history of inflammation, and
-the description of the individual changes that take place in the organs
-that constitute the febrile circle, is an enumeration of various
-products of inflammation which are formed within them. There is scarcely
-a fatal case of fever which does not afford, in one or other of the
-organs of that circle, some inflammatory product; there is no
-considerable number of fatal cases which does not furnish a specimen of
-every inflammatory product. And what are the severest cases of fever,
-and why are they the severest? With the single exception immediately to
-be stated, the severest cases are those in which, together with a severe
-primary affection of the nervous system, this inflammatory action is in
-the greatest degree of intensity, and is seated in the greatest number
-of organs; and they are the most severe, not only on account of the
-severity of the primary affection of the nervous system, but also
-because it is in them that the inflammation is the most intense, and
-because that inflammation attacks the system at one and the same time in
-the greatest number of points. From among the preceding cases, fix upon
-any one in which the powers of life were, from the commencement, the
-most completely overwhelmed, and in which they were the most rapidly
-exhausted, and when the brief struggle for existence is over, examine
-the changes that have taken place in the internal organs—what is it that
-is found? traces of inflammation, legible, deep, extensive; while, in
-almost every case, these traces are thus legible, deep, and extensive,
-in proportion to the apparent intensity of the fever, and to the
-rapidity with which it extinguished life. In this point of view, how
-important, how instructive, how invaluable is the lesson which the mixed
-cases of fever afford! With few and rare exceptions (and in all diseases
-some exceptions occasionally occur to what appear to be the best
-established and the most invariable laws) these are the cases in which
-the symptoms are the most urgent, and in which they run their course
-with the greatest rapidity; these are the cases in which the debility is
-the most striking; in which it comes on the most early, and proceeds to
-the greatest degree of prostration; these are the cases which are the
-most purely typhoid, the most truly adynamic; these are the cases which,
-in general, commence with the most sudden and alarming deprivation of
-physical and mental power; in which all pain and uneasiness are soonest
-lost in stupor, in which the stupor most rapidly increases to
-insensibility; in which delirium comes, perhaps, as early as the third
-or fourth night, accompanied with its attendant, muscular tremor, and
-too often with its most formidable ally, erysipelas: in which, at this
-early period, the respiration is short and hurried, the skin dusky, the
-colour of the cheek purple, the tongue brown and dry, the lips and teeth
-sordid, the abdomen tender, and the stools loose; in which, in a day or
-two more, the abdomen is swollen, tense, and tympanitic, the stools
-passed in bed, the patient prostrate on his back, completely senseless
-and powerless, while the pulse is 120 or 130, and so feeble that it can
-scarcely be distinguished. But what is this debility? in what does this
-adynamic state consist? It consists of a peculiar affection of the
-nervous system, followed rapidly by intense inflammation of the brain or
-of its membranes, or of both: by intense inflammation of the mucous
-membrane of the bronchi, and by intense inflammation or extensive
-ulceration of the mucous membrane of the intestines. And why is the
-patient weak or adynamic? Because he is not only assailed by an
-affection of the nervous system, which deprives the organs of the
-stimulus necessary to enable them to perform their functions with due
-vigour, but, at the same moment, inflammation is set up in three of the
-great systems, the healthy action of which is most essential, not only
-to strength but to life: thus the citadel is attacked at one time at
-three of its capital points. It is not asserted that inflammation alone
-constitutes the state of fever, nor that the danger of the patient is
-always in exact proportion to the degree of the inflammation. How it
-differs from inflammation, and what is superadded to the inflammatory
-state, will be shewn immediately; but it is a most important fact, that
-the degree of the debility is most intimately connected with the
-intensity and the extent of the inflammatory action. Now and then, as
-has been already stated, the intensity of the nervous affection is so
-great, and so rapidly destructive of life, that there is no time for an
-inflammatory process to be set up, much less for an inflammatory product
-to be formed. The patient is struck dead as if by lightning, or by
-Prussic acid, or by apoplexy. In this country, he does not actually die
-as instantaneously as he might be destroyed by the electric fluid or by
-poison, although there are countries, seasons, and particular spots, in
-which the concentration of the febrile poison appears to be sufficiently
-great to extinguish life instantaneously; and even in this country, life
-is sometimes destroyed by a stroke of fever as rapidly as it is by a
-stroke of apoplexy, when the latter does not prove fatal in the first
-few hours.
-
-Now the peculiarity in these cases is, that the internal organs, after
-death, exhibit no signs of inflammation, unless vascularity be
-inflammation. The organs which, in ordinary cases, are inflamed, are in
-these cases turgid with blood. Are the terms debility or adynamia
-appropriate expressions to designate even this condition of the organs?
-Just as appropriate as they would be to express the condition of a
-person who is struck dead by lightning, whose muscles are incapable of
-contraction, and whose blood will not coagulate. Those who apply these
-terms even to such forms, and, _à fortiori_, to any other forms of
-fever, must be ignorant either of the nature of the disease, or of the
-constitution of the human mind. If they know the disease, they know that
-the patient appears to be weak because the primary operation of the
-disease is upon the nervous system—an operation which, as has just been
-stated, while it disturbs that due and equal distribution of nervous
-influence which is necessary to the healthful action of the organs, and,
-therefore, to the general strength of the system, is not incompatible
-with, but promotive of an excitement of the vascular system, which
-terminates in inflammation. Debility is the last, the ultimate result of
-the disturbance of the functions of a certain series of organs, but part
-of this very disturbance of function, and a most important part, a part
-which exerts the greatest influence over the progress of the disease and
-the life or death of the patient, consists not in the weakened, but in
-the augmented strength and the increased activity of the vascular
-system. To designate the ultimate result upon the system by a term which
-gives an entirely false view of the individual processes in the economy,
-by which that ultimate result is produced, must, we repeat, arise either
-from an ignorance of the true nature of those processes, or from not
-reflecting on the influence which words exert over the manner in which
-the human mind conceives of things. For the sake of the progress of the
-science of medicine, for the sake of rendering the language of medicine
-the correct expression of the knowledge which the science has actually
-attained, and, above all, for the sake of accomplishing the great object
-of medicine, the preservation of human life, it is high time that these
-terms with which physicians have so long allowed their minds to be
-abused, should be banished from medical nomenclature, or, at any rate,
-from that part of its nomenclature which appertains to fever.
-
-
- II. PATHOLOGY OF THE FLUIDS IN FEVER.
-
-The pathology of the solids in fever, derived from inspection of the
-fatal cases after death, has already acquired, as we have seen, a high
-degree of perfection. The pathology of the fluids is scarcely at all
-known, and the difficulty of arriving at exact and certain results is
-great. Why the investigation of the morbid changes that take place in
-the fluids should be a much more arduous task than that of tracing the
-changes produced in the structure of the organs, is too obvious to need
-to be pointed out; but those only who have actually engaged in
-researches of this nature can form a just conception of the number of
-repetitions that are requisite of the same analysis, of the care
-required in conducting each, and consequently, of the labour and time it
-is necessary to devote to the investigation, before satisfactory results
-can be obtained. The analysis of the animal fluids in their healthy
-state is far from being perfect; yet their composition in the state of
-health must be ascertained, as far as it can be ascertained, as a
-preliminary step: and, in order to discover the morbid changes that take
-place in the blood, in the urine, in the products of respiration, and in
-those of transpiration, and still further to determine the nature and
-extent of such changes in the different types and stages of fever, it is
-obviously necessary to examine the respective fluids and gases in a
-great number of cases, and to vary the experiments in a great variety of
-modes. Experiments of this kind, on an extensive scale, have been
-undertaken by my friend Mr. Cooper; and, when this work was commenced,
-they had already advanced so far that there appeared to be a prospect
-that, before its completion, they would be sufficiently matured to
-justify us in laying the results before the reader. And that deviations
-from the state of health, and some of them of great importance, do take
-place in these fluids, and especially in the blood and the urine, is
-ascertained. What they are, with what degree of constancy they occur,
-how far they are respectively connected with the cerebral, the thoracic,
-the abdominal, and the mixed affections, with different degrees of
-intensity in these affections, and with different stages of their
-progress, we hope, at no distant period, to be able to lay fully before
-the public.
-
-In the mean time, it is of some importance to bear in mind the true
-place which the results of such experiments, be those results what they
-may, and be they established with all the clearness and certainty that
-can be desired, must always hold. Changes in the fluids can only be
-second in the series of morbid events; they can never hold the first
-place in that series; they can never be primary antecedents or first
-causes, but merely sequents or effects. To assign the reason of what
-must be so obvious to every one who is acquainted with the elements of
-physiology, would be entirely out of place here, because it would
-suppose the reader to be wholly ignorant of the functions of the animal
-economy. Our knowledge of the pathology of fever can never be complete,
-until we know the morbid changes that take place in the fluids as
-perfectly as we are acquainted with the alterations of structure that
-are produced in the solids, and we ought, therefore, to spare no labour
-to render our knowledge of the former as exact and certain as it is of
-the latter. But, as far as we can at present see, when this is
-accomplished, we shall have acquired little that is of practical
-utility. There is but slight, if there be any ground to hope that, when
-the humoral pathology shall have arrived at the greatest possible degree
-of perfection, it will furnish us with any additional means of
-preventing, curing, or even mitigating the severity of the disease. With
-that disorder of the system over which we have some control, with those
-morbid actions which we possess some means of subduing or changing, we
-are already well acquainted. In our knowledge of the invariable tendency
-there is to the production of certain changes in the structure of
-certain organs; in our knowledge of the vascular action by which those
-alterations are effected, we may be said, in a practical point of view,
-to be already in possession of the most important part of knowledge
-which we can ever hope to acquire, unless, indeed, we may indulge the
-expectation, of which it would be truly melancholy to be deprived, that
-we may discover a more sure and effectual mode of preventing these
-organic changes, or of restoring to a sound state the organs that may
-become diseased. It is this part of the pathology of fever alone that
-can afford a clear and steady light to conduct us to the safe and
-effectual treatment of the malady. Every step we take without this
-invaluable guide must be taken in the dark, and will be, therefore, not
-only likely to be false, but very likely to be fatal. When, on the
-contrary, we undertake the management of fever under the direction of
-this faithful guide, in every measure we venture to adopt we, at least,
-know at what we aim: we propose to ourselves a definite object which we
-endeavour to accomplish by an instrumentality with the powers of which
-we are in some degree acquainted: we may not succeed, but we fail
-because we want the means to do what we clearly see requires to be done:
-if we do not arrest the progress of the disease, at least we do not add
-to its strength by the adoption of violent and desperate expedients,
-because we feel called upon to do something, yet know not what to
-attempt; we do not destroy, if we cannot save. The physician,
-enlightened by the pathology of the disease, who prescribes for a
-patient in fever, is like a skilful surgeon, who is guided in the
-performance of a difficult and delicate operation by a knowledge of
-anatomy so intimate, that every touch of his scalpel exposes a tissue
-with which he is acquainted, and discloses the site of a vessel with
-which he is familiar; the object aimed at by the operation may not be
-obtained, but, at least, the cause of its failure is not that the
-operator wounds a structure which he ought to have avoided, or opens an
-artery, of the situation and distribution of which he is ignorant. On
-the contrary, the physician who prescribes for a patient in fever,
-without knowing the pathology of the disease, is like a Charlatan, who
-plunges his instrument boldly into the chest or the abdomen, without
-knowing where it goes or caring what it wounds; it may possibly open a
-tumour and let out the disease, but it is more likely to pierce some
-vital organ and to let out life.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- _Of the Relation between the Phenomena of Fever; or the Theory of the
- Disease._
-
-
-In the preceding chapters it has been shown what are the real events
-which take place in fever, the assemblage of which constitutes the
-disease: it has also been shown in what order these events succeed each
-other, and upon what conditions of what organs they depend. To assign
-further the true relation between these events, is to establish the
-theory of fever in the only philosophical sense of the term theory: and
-that relation must already have suggested itself to the mind of the
-attentive reader.
-
-We have seen that the first indications of disease are clearly traceable
-to the nervous system: that the disorder of the functions of the brain
-and spinal cord with which the attack always commences, demonstrates
-that these organs form the primary seats of the malady: that the
-derangement in the functions of these organs is truly _invariable_, and
-is invariably the first morbid condition that is observed to take place:
-that there never was a case of fever, from the slightest to the most
-severe, in which these organs were not in a greater or less degree in a
-disordered state, and in which that disordered state did not precede
-every other. This affection of the nervous system then, the invariable
-antecedent of all that follows, is the primary essential event in the
-morbid series which constitutes fever.
-
-What the real nature of this primary affection of the nervous system is,
-we are wholly ignorant, and we ought at once to confess our ignorance.
-We have already entered into some considerations, derived from the
-difference in the order in which the phenomena of fever and of
-inflammation succeed each other, to show that these two diseases are not
-identical.[30] When these phenomena are still more attentively
-considered, other differences are observable between them, which confirm
-the opinion that the two diseases are not the same. Not only is
-derangement in the nervous and the sensorial functions invariably the
-first in the series of morbid events in fever, while it is not the first
-in inflammation, but that derangement is always much greater in the
-former than in the latter, and proceeds in a regular and determinate
-course, such as has been fully explained in the preceding pages, and to
-which there is nothing analogous in the progress of inflammation.
-
-To the condition of inflammation a peculiar but an unknown condition of
-the blood-vessels appears to be indispensable. To the state of fever, no
-such condition of any part of the vascular system, as far as we have the
-means of judging, is absolutely indispensable, although it be very
-commonly coincident. No such condition appears to be present, at least
-no such condition has yet been ascertained to be present, either in the
-very mildest or in the severest form of the disease: at the latter
-extreme of the scale, at least, we might expect to find the most
-striking and unequivocal indications of the existence and operation of
-inflammation, were that agent really present; and yet it is precisely
-here that the ordinary signs of inflammatory action are completely
-absent.
-
-Moreover, we have no example of instantaneous death by the sudden
-excitement of inflammation in any organ, or in any number of organs:
-inflammation is a process: a certain number of events take place in a
-certain order; and there is always, as far as has been hitherto
-observed, some interval between these events. A case is recorded in
-which inflammation of the bowels (acute enteritis) proved fatal, as was
-supposed, in eight hours from the commencement of the attack; but so
-rapid was the process, that the intelligent surgeons who witnessed it
-doubted whether the time when the disease began could have been noted
-accurately: at all events, it does not accord with the best-established
-facts relative to the process of inflammation, that it should prove
-fatal without the lapse of some hours. Fever, on the contrary, does not
-need as much as a single hour to complete the work of death. It is well
-known that the poison which, in a certain state of concentration,
-produces fever with the ordinary period of duration, in a higher state
-of concentration produces instantaneous death; and that, in certain
-climates and seasons, it is not uncommon for persons previously in sound
-and vigorous health, on exposure to that poison, to sicken and to die in
-a shorter space of time than is requisite, under ordinary circumstances,
-for the mere formation of the inflammatory process. The state of the
-system, in the primary attack of fever, and the state of the system in
-inflammation, do not, therefore, appear to be identical. The truth is,
-that we do not know what the real state of the system is in either case,
-but we see that the phenomena of the one differ from those of the other;
-to conclude, therefore, that the states are the same is not a sound
-induction. While, then, we are constrained to admit that we know nothing
-of the nature of the primary affection of the nervous system in fever,
-the closest consideration of all the phenomena alike constrains us to
-conclude, that that affection is peculiar and specific.
-
-This peculiar and specific affection appears to be much more analogous
-to the condition into which the nervous system is brought by the
-application of certain poisons, than to that which is proper to pure
-inflammation. The more closely and extensively the subject is
-investigated, the more clear and satisfactory the evidence becomes, that
-the great primary cause of fever is a poison, the operation of which,
-like that of some other poisons, the nature of which is better
-understood, and the action of which has been more completely examined,
-is ascertained to be upon the nervous system. How these poisons act upon
-the nervous system we do not know, nor can we possibly know, as long as
-we remain so profoundly ignorant of the nature of the action of the
-nervous system in the state of health.
-
-It may be considered then as established, that the primary morbid
-condition of the body, in fever, consists of an affection of the nervous
-system, which there is reason to believe is of a peculiar and specific
-nature, although that nature be at present wholly unknown.
-
-This specific derangement of the nervous system having continued for
-some time, the vascular system becomes disturbed. How the nervous system
-so influences the vascular as to bring it into the morbid condition into
-which it passes, is as unknown to us as the peculiar affection of the
-nervous system itself. That there is the most close and intimate
-connexion between these two systems, and that they exert over each other
-the most important influence both in the state of health and of disease,
-are in the present state of our knowledge ultimate facts.
-
-With two apparent exceptions, (whether these two cases form real
-exceptions may still admit of doubt) the vascular derangement connected
-with, and dependant upon nervous derangement, passes sooner or later
-into true inflammation. Of this we have the most complete and
-indubitable evidence—evidence derived both from changes, the known
-results of inflammatory action, produced in the structure of organs; and
-from the generation of new products, such as are formed by no other
-known process but that of inflammation. Almost every change of organic
-structure which inflammation is ascertained to be capable of producing,
-is found to take place in fever: almost every product which inflammation
-is ascertained to be capable of forming, is observed to be generated in
-fever: it is not possible to doubt, therefore, that the morbid condition
-into which the vascular system is brought in the progress of fever, is
-that of inflammation. In what circle of organs inflammation is
-peculiarly liable to be excited in this disease, by what particular
-character febrile inflammation is distinguished, and what remarkable
-differences it exhibits in intensity and extent, have been fully
-illustrated.
-
-It follows, then, that the second event that takes place in the morbid
-series constituting fever, is inflammation.
-
-But however really and constantly inflammation may take place in fever,
-and in whatever intensity, and to whatever extent it may be carried, yet
-the inflammation is never pure or simple: the condition of the inflamed
-organs is never the same as that into which they are brought by mere
-phlegmasia: there is always inflammation, and _something else_: and if
-what we have so much insisted on be true, this must necessarily be the
-case, because the state of inflammation succeeds to another, a distinct,
-and a pre-existing condition of the system: that something else is the
-unknown, but the peculiar and specific affection of the nervous system,
-which has already been stated to be the invariable antecedent of
-whatever subsequent affection may take place. Thus this affection of the
-nervous system is not only the invariable antecedent of every other
-condition, but it is omni-present with every other condition, and its
-presence is a most powerfully influential presence; it operates at every
-instant, in every organ, and every function of the economy, although, as
-we have seen, its operation is peculiarly great, and, as far as we can
-perceive, specific in certain organs and functions. The combination of
-this nervous affection with inflammation, and the influence which this
-combination exerts over the inflammatory state, we express by saying
-that the inflammatory state in fever is modified: we see that
-inflammation is present, but we see that it is not the same as
-inflammation in a pure phlegmasia: we see, as has just been stated, that
-there is inflammation, and something else superadded; namely, a peculiar
-affection of the nervous system, which gives to the febrile inflammation
-a peculiar character, or which modifies it in a specific manner.
-
-It has been stated that there appear to be two exceptions to the
-universality of the presence of inflammation. Of these exceptions, one
-is exemplified in the mildest form of the disease. In every case of
-fever, the function of the vascular system is disturbed in a greater or
-less degree, as has been fully shown: but the doubt is whether that
-disturbance invariably pass into the state of inflammation. Since the
-morbid condition of the nervous system, in the mildest case, remains
-only for a certain period, and then uniformly gives place to the return
-of health, there seems to be no possible means of determining this
-question. And even in the second case, where the intensity of the
-nervous affection is incompatible with life, and death follows with
-extreme rapidity, the real condition of the vascular system appears to
-be equally doubtful. In both, that condition may possibly be a
-modification of one and the same state, and that state may be identical
-with inflammation—inflammation existing in different degrees of
-intensity. On the other hand, both may differ essentially from the state
-of inflammation. The nervous affection in the first may be too slight to
-excite inflammatory action, while in the second it may be so
-overwhelming as completely to oppress every function of the economy, and
-therefore, instead of exciting, may paralyse the capillary
-blood-vessels; and consequently paralysis of the capillary vessels,
-instead of intense excitement of them, may possibly be the real
-condition of the vascular system, for example, in congestive fever.
-
-But however this may be, the only difficulty in the subject relates to
-these two forms of the disease—the very mildest and the very severest.
-In all the intermediate cases, the condition of the vascular system is
-clear and certain. In all these, there can be no more doubt that that
-system is in a state of true inflammation, than there can be that the
-capillary vessels of the pleura are in a state of inflammation in
-pleuritis. Yet, as we have just stated, in fever the inflammation is
-never the same as it is in pleuritis. In fever there is a combination of
-a specific affection of the nervous system, with that specific affection
-of the vascular system, which constitutes the state of inflammation: in
-pleuritis there is the specific affection of the vascular system,
-without the specific affection of the nervous; and this combination of
-the two affections in fever modifies the nature of febrile inflammation.
-
-This view of the constitution of fever appears to explain in the most
-luminous and complete manner every peculiarity of the febrile state: to
-reconcile all its apparent anomalies, with which few who have studied
-the subject have not been perplexed: to establish the true distinction
-between fever and inflammation; and to show why the phenomena exhibited
-by these two affections are so essentially different, and why therefore
-each requires a different mode of treatment. In this point of view no
-theory was ever more eminently practical, or led to a more guarded
-practice. Inflammation does not lose its nature by being combined with
-that peculiar affection of the nervous system which converts it into
-fever; it only modifies its state: the remedies proper for fever do not
-differ from those which are effectual in inflammation; they only require
-to be modified in accordance with the modified nature of the disease. He
-who believes fever to consist of an affection of the nervous system
-alone, every other affection that may be combined with it being
-accidental, will rarely think of using the lancet: he who believes fever
-to consist of inflammation alone, and overlooks the presence of the
-nervous affection, will be apt to carry the employment of the lancet too
-far: he alone who embraces the view of both, brings within his own all
-the phenomena: he alone adopts a sound theory of the disease, and we now
-see that he alone is likely to be led to a sound practice. When the
-theory of a disease collects, arranges and points out the true relation
-between all its phenomena, there is good reason to conclude that that
-theory is sound; but when it moreover directly leads to that treatment
-of the malady which experience shows to be the most safe and the most
-effectual, its truth is established by every test that can be applied to
-it.
-
-The consideration of the diseased states of the other systems and
-functions that take place in fever, need not detain us long. The
-respiratory appears to be the next function that becomes deranged. The
-intimate and inseparable connexion which physiology teaches us subsists
-between the respiratory and the circulating systems, might lead us to
-anticipate the fact which pathology demonstrates. We know that the
-respiratory system is constructed for the circulating: that the form,
-the extent, the complication of the respiratory apparatus depend
-entirely upon the quantity of blood that is to be regenerated, and the
-degree of perfection with which that regeneration is to be accomplished.
-It is therefore impossible that any considerable derangement in the
-function of one of these systems should continue long, without being
-accompanied with a proportionate derangement in the other. The function
-of respiration cannot be materially deranged, without producing a morbid
-condition of the blood, that vital fluid which it is the specific object
-of the process to purify and regenerate. The function of secretion
-depends upon the quality of the blood conveyed to the secreting organ,
-upon the action of the capillary vessels of that organ, and upon the
-supply of nervous influence received by those vessels; it follows, that
-in a disordered state of the nervous, the circulating and the
-respiratory organs must be attended with a derangement in the process of
-secretion; while the excreting being necessarily connected with the
-secreting processes, the vitiation of the one cannot fail to occasion a
-corresponding deterioration of the other.
-
-Thus we see that the organs and functions deranged in fever are closely
-and inseparably connected: that no continued disorder can take place in
-the one, without producing a proportionate disorder in all the others:
-that a peculiar and specific affection of the first, according to the
-established laws of the vital economy, invariably produces a peculiar
-and specific affection of the second, and the second, a third, and so on
-throughout the circle. And now we see why a certain number of organs are
-invariably affected in fever; why these organs invariably become
-affected in a certain order; why the nature of their affection is
-invariably the same; and why, finally, the ultimate condition of the
-system, the general result of these individual morbid changes, never
-varies.
-
-Writers on fever in general have confined their account of the phenomena
-of this disease to an explanation of the relation between the cold and
-the hot fits. Were their success in establishing that relation as
-complete as it is defective, they would still have done little or
-nothing, by a view so incomprehensive, towards establishing the theory
-of fever. Both the cold and the hot fits, about the exposition of which
-such a theory is alone concerned, are themselves accidents, since in the
-most formidable and dangerous forms of fever, the supposed relation
-between these phenomena is not only constantly disturbed, but often the
-phenomena themselves do not occur, it being one of the very characters
-of some of the intensest fevers, that the temperature is little changed,
-and that the diminished temperature which may be, or which may have been
-present, is never succeeded by any increase of heat. The true theory of
-this, as of every other disease, must be sought in the study of its
-pathology, and can be found only by comparing the pathology of the
-organs ascertained to be affected with their physiology. The cold stage
-of fever, when it exists, is produced by a disturbance of the functions
-of the circulation and of the respiration, and these functions are
-disturbed, because the organs in which they have their seat no longer
-receive their accustomed and their requisite supply of nervous influence
-from the nervous system. The hot stage, when it exists, arises from a
-disturbance of the same functions: and the reason why we cannot assign
-with precision why the same cause produces in the one case a diminished,
-and in the other an increased temperature, or why the temperature is
-disturbed at all, is because we do not know with precision on what
-circumstances in the animal economy the generation of heat depends: when
-the physiologist has clearly and completely ascertained all the
-circumstances upon which this process depends, the pathologist will
-probably have but little difficulty in tracing with equal clearness and
-completeness the connexion between the disturbance of that process, and
-the commencement of the febrile state.
-
-In conclusion, then, the doctrine of fever which appears to approximate
-most nearly to the truth, may be summed up in few words. The immediate
-cause of fever is a poison, which operates primarily and specifically
-upon the brain and the spinal cord. The diseased state into which these
-organs are brought by the operation of this poison, deprives them of the
-power of communicating to the system that supply of stimulus (nervous
-and sensorial influence) which is requisite to maintain the functions of
-the economy in the state of health. The organs, the seats of the
-functions, deprived of their supply of nervous influence, become
-deranged, the derangement in each taking place in a fixed order, and in
-a determinate manner. Subsequently to the nervous and the sensorial, the
-organs the next to suffer are those of the circulation; then those of
-respiration; and, ultimately, those which belong to secretion and
-excretion. The condition of the nervous system which produces this
-derangement in this circle of organs, occasions further, in that portion
-of the circulating system which consists of the capillary blood-vessels,
-that peculiar state which constitutes inflammation: hence inflammation
-is almost always established in one or more of the organs comprehended
-in the febrile circle, and sometimes in all of them. The peculiar and
-primary affection of the nervous system, which is here assigned as the
-cause of inflammation, does not become identical with inflammation, but
-superadds the morbid condition of inflammation to its own; does not
-lapse into or terminate in the inflammatory state, but accompanies it,
-and by this combination modifies in a peculiar manner the inflammatory
-process.
-
-The great practical conclusion to be deduced from this doctrine of fever
-is, that while the inflammatory processes that are thus set up in so
-many important organs, greatly aggravate the severity of the disease,
-and ought to be constantly kept in the view of the practitioner, both on
-account of their own peculiar danger, and also because they are perhaps
-the only real states over which he has any control, yet that these
-inflammatory processes do not alone constitute fever; that their
-removal, though essential to the cure, will not complete the cure; that
-another, a primary, and a most formidable disease, is at the same time
-to be contended with, and that the presence of this distinct and primary
-disease requires very important modifications in the treatment of the
-inflammatory condition.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- _Of the Causes of Fever._
-
-
-The causes of fever are of two kinds; first, those which immediately
-produce the disease, and secondly, those which bring the system into a
-condition capable of being affected by the first: the former, are called
-the exciting, the latter, the predisposing causes: a third has been
-spoken of in relation to this as well as to other diseases, namely, the
-proximate. But what is really meant by the proximate cause of disease
-(if the term have any meaning) is the condition of the organ, or of the
-system, produced by the operation of the exciting cause: this term,
-therefore, designates an effect, not in any proper sense, a cause: it
-relates to the disease itself, not to that which produces it.
-
-
- I. OF THE IMMEDIATE, OR EXCITING CAUSE OF FEVER.
-
-The immediate, or the exciting cause of fever is a poison formed by the
-corruption or the decomposition of organic matter. Vegetable and animal
-matter, during the process of putrefaction, give off a principle, or
-give origin to a new compound, which, when applied to the human body,
-produces the phenomena constituting fever. What this principle or
-compound is, whether it be one of the constituent substances which enter
-into the composition of organised matter, or whether the primary
-elements of organised matter, as they are disengaged in the process of
-putrefaction, enter into some new combination, and thus generate a new
-product, we are wholly ignorant. Of the composition of the poison, of
-the laws which regulate its formation, and of its properties when
-generated, we know nothing beyond its power to strike the human being
-with sickness or death. We know that, under certain circumstances,
-vegetable and animal substances will putrify: we know that a poison
-capable of producing fever will result from this putrefactive process,
-and we know nothing more.
-
-Of the conditions which are ascertained to be essential to the
-putrefactive process of dead organic substance, whether vegetable or
-animal, those of heat and moisture are the most certain, and as far as
-we yet know, the most powerful. Accordingly, in every situation in which
-circumstances concur to produce great moisture, while the heat is
-maintained with some steadiness within a certain range, there the
-febrile poison is invariably generated in large quantity, and in great
-potency. Wherever generated, we have no means of ascertaining its
-existence but by the effects it produces on the human body. Now and then
-circumstances arise which illustrate these effects in an exceedingly
-striking manner. This is the case when large numbers of men, previously
-in a state of sound health, are simultaneously exposed to it. Examples
-of such occurrences, as numerous and as complete as can be desired, were
-long since recorded, among many others, by one very accurate observer,
-who is of the number (no small one) of those who have given valuable
-lessons to the world, which have been forgotten, and to which it is a
-useful labour to recall the attention of the present age.
-
-“In the beginning of June, 1742,” says Sir John Pringle, in his
-Observations on the Diseases of the Army, “the British troops began to
-embark for Flanders. There were in all, of foot and cavalry, about
-16,000: the winds were favourable, the several passages short, the men
-landed in good health, and went into their several garrisons. The
-head-quarters were at Ghent. During the Summer and Autumn the weather
-was good, the heats moderate, and the country in general healthy. The
-British officers continued well, but many of the common men sickened.
-Ghent is situated between the high and the low division of Flanders; one
-part of the town called St. Peter’s Hill, is much higher than the rest,
-and in this, the barracks, having drains and free air, were quite dry;
-so that the soldiers who lay there enjoyed perfect health. But those who
-were quartered in the lower part of the town (mostly on the
-ground-floors of waste houses, unprovided with drains, and of course
-damp) were sickly. The battalion of the first regiment of guards was a
-remarkable instance of this difference of quarters. Two of the companies
-lay on St. Peter’s Hill; the remaining eight in the lower part of the
-town, in rooms so very damp, that they could scarce keep their shoes and
-belts from moulding. In the month of July, the sick of this battalion
-amounted to about 140; of which number only two men belonged to the
-companies on the hill, and the rest to those in the lower town.”[31]
-
-It is further stated, that in the end of August, Ostend having
-surrendered, the garrison, consisting of five battalions British, was
-conducted to Mons, where they continued about three weeks: that these
-men had been so healthy that, when they marched out, upon the
-capitulation, they left only ten sick; but that the same corps having
-been put into damp barracks at Mons, while the town was surrounded with
-an inundation, fever immediately appeared, and prevailed to such an
-extent, that in this short space of time 250 were seized with the
-disease.[32]
-
-Of the campaign in 1748, it is stated that the troops had scarcely been
-a month in the cantonments, when the returns of the sick amounted to
-2000: that afterwards the number became much greater: that those who
-were near the marshes suffered by far the most, both in the number and
-the violence of the symptoms; that the Greys, cantoned at Vucht (a
-village within a league of Bois-le-duc, surrounded with meadows, either
-then under water, or but lately drained) were the most sickly; that for
-the first fortnight they had no sick, but, after continuing five weeks
-in that situation, they returned about 150; after two months, 260, which
-was about half the regiment; and at the end of the campaign, they had in
-all but 30 men who had never been ill: that a regiment at Nieuland,
-where the meadows had been floated all Winter, and were but just
-drained, returned sometimes above half their number: that the Scotch
-Fuzileers at Dinther, though lying at a greater distance from the
-inundations, yet being quartered in a low and moist village, had above
-300 ill at one time, while a regiment of dragoons, cantoned only half a
-league south-west of Vucht, were in a good measure exempted from the
-distress of their neighbours, such was the advantage even of that
-distance from the marshes, of the wind blowing mostly from the dry
-grounds, and of a situation upon an open heath, somewhat higher than the
-rest.
-
-When the troops were in Zealand, where the poison was in a high degree
-of concentration, they had not been a fortnight in the cantonments,
-before several of the men belonging to those regiments which were
-stationed nearest the inundations, were seized simultaneously with
-lassitude and inquietude, a sensation of burning heat, intense thirst,
-frequent nausea, sickness and vomiting, aching of the bones, pain in the
-back, and violent headache. There were some instances of the head being
-so suddenly and violently affected that, without any previous complaint,
-the men ran about in a wild manner, and were believed to be mad, till
-the solution of the fit by a sweat, and its periodic return, discovered
-the true nature of their delirium. Most of the men were first taken ill
-upon their return from forage. The regiment being cantoned close upon
-the inundations, and many of the quarters being above two leagues from
-the place where the magazines were kept, the men were obliged to set out
-about four in the morning, in order to get back before the greatest heat
-of the day. At this early hour, the meadows and marshes on each side of
-the road were covered with a thick fog, of an offensive smell. The party
-generally returned before noon; but several of the men, even before they
-could get back to their quarters, were already in a violent fever; some,
-in this short space of time, were actually delirious; and a few, on
-their way home, were so suddenly taken with a phrenzy, as to throw
-themselves from their trusses into the water, imagining they were to
-swim to their quarters. One man, on reaching home, was suddenly seized
-with intense headache, got out of his quarters, and ran about the fields
-like one distracted. Three years after this sickness, it was found that
-two of the men who were thus suddenly affected with phrenzy, though they
-recovered of their fever, had ever since been epileptic, and that all
-the rest who had been ill, remained exceedingly liable to returns of an
-intermitting fever.
-
-The suddenness with which fever sometimes attacks individuals on board a
-ship, or even an entire ship’s crew, on the approach of the vessel to a
-shore where this poison is generated in large quantity, and in a high
-state of concentration, illustrates its operation, perhaps, in a still
-more striking manner. Dr. Maculloch, who has laboured with great ability
-and zeal to recal attention to the most important and long-forgotten
-subject of malaria, relates an instance of some men on board a ship, who
-were seized, while the vessel was five miles from shore with fatal
-cholera, the very instant the land-smell first became perceptible.
-Several of these men, who were unavoidably employed on deck, died of the
-disease in a few hours. The armourer of the ship, who, before he could
-protect himself from the noxious blast, was accidentally delayed on deck
-a few minutes, to clear an obstruction in the chain cable, was seized
-with the malady while in that act, and was dead in a few hours.
-
-Dr. Potter states[33] that he witnessed the rise of a most malignant
-yellow fever, in a valley in Pennsylvania, which contained numerous
-ponds of fresh water, and which, from the heat and dryness of the
-season, emitted a most offensive smell: that the fever prevailed most,
-and with the greatest degree of malignity among the people who lived
-nearest these ponds; and adds an exceedingly instructive case,
-illustrative of the generation and operation of this cause of fever,
-recorded by Major Prior, in his account of a fever which attacked the
-army of the United States at Galliopolis. The source of the malady was
-clearly traced to a large pond near the cantonment. When the disease was
-most severe, it assumed the continued form, and was accompanied with
-yellowness of the skin: when proper means were taken to destroy the
-pond, the fever immediately lost its continued form, and became first
-remittent, then intermittent, and ultimately disappeared. “The fever,”
-says this intelligent officer, “was, I think, justly charged to a large
-pond near the cantonment. An attempt had been made two or three years
-before to fill it up, by felling a number of large trees that grew on
-and near its margin, and by covering the wood thus fallen with earth.
-This intention had not been fulfilled. In August, the weather was
-extremely hot, and uncommonly dry: the water had evaporated
-considerably, leaving a great quantity of muddy water, with a thick
-slimy mixture of putrefying vegetables, which emitted a stench almost
-intolerable. The inhabitants of the village, principally French, and
-very poor, as well as filthy in their mode of living, began to suffer
-first, and died so rapidly, that a general consternation seized the
-whole settlement. The garrison continued healthy for some days, and we
-began to console ourselves with the hope that we should escape
-altogether: we were, however, soon undeceived, and the reason of our
-exemption heretofore was soon discovered. The wind had blown the air
-arising from the pond from the camp; but, as soon as it shifted to the
-reverse point, the soldiers began to sicken: in five days, half the
-garrison was on the sick list, and in ten, half of them were dead. They
-were generally seized with a chill, followed by headache, pains in the
-back and limbs, red eyes, constant sickness at stomach, or vomiting, and
-generally, just before death, with a vomiting of matter like
-coffee-grounds. They were often yellow before, but almost always after
-death. The sick died generally on the seventh, ninth, and eleventh days,
-though sometimes on the fifth, and on the third. As some decisive
-measures became necessary to save the remainder of the troops, I first
-thought of changing my quarters, but as the station was in every respect
-more eligible than any other, and had been made so by much labour and
-expense, I determined to try the experiment of changing the condition of
-the pond, from which the disease was believed to have arisen. A ditch
-was accordingly cut; what little water remained was conveyed off, and
-the whole surface covered with fresh earth. The effects of this scheme
-were soon obvious. Not a man was seized with the worst form of the fever
-after the work was finished, and the sick were not a little benefitted,
-for they generally recovered, though slowly, because the fever became a
-common remittent, or gradually assumed the intermitting form. A few
-cases of remitting and intermitting fever occurred occasionally, till
-frost put an end to it in every form. As soon as the contents of the
-pond were changed, by cutting the ditch, the cause, whatever it was,
-seems to have been rendered incapable of communicating the disease in
-its worst form.”
-
-Dr. Potter further states that, on one occasion, he saw a lady, who had
-been confined three days only, and whom he found in the agonies of
-death, with the skin of a deep orange colour, the eyes red and
-prominent, the pulse intermittent, and ejecting copiously from the
-stomach every eight or ten minutes, the secretion now known by the name
-of the black vomit; that she expired in a convulsion, while he sat at
-her side; that petechiæ appeared immediately after death, and that
-putrefaction succeeded so rapidly, that it was necessary to order
-immediate interment: that, shortly afterwards, he was called to a
-gentleman who had been ill five days, and who, having expired in an hour
-or two after his visit, was removed into the coffin with the utmost
-difficulty, the flesh literally dropping from the bones: that, in one
-family residing in a house which stood on a level piece of ground,
-apparently beyond the reach of noxious exhalation, there being no
-stagnant water, as was supposed, within a mile of it, he found the
-mother labouring under a bilious remitting fever, which had continued
-eleven days; the daughter, seventeen years of age, suffering from a
-similar fever; two sons, the one between eight and nine, and the other
-six, ill with dysentery; and the father, on the brink of the grave, from
-a most malignant fever. There being no apparent cause for the condition
-of this afflicted family, the immediate neighbourhood of the house being
-free from the ordinary sources of malaria, and the adjacent country
-being not unhealthy, the condition of the house itself was minutely
-investigated. The cause of the evil was manifest. It appeared that the
-present family had resided in the house only about five weeks; that
-immediately preceding their occupation of it, a man had died suddenly in
-it; that he himself (Dr. Potter) was seized with nausea and general
-lassitude, immediately on leaving the house after his first visit; and
-that a fever, as he supposes, was arrested by a strong dose of
-tartarized antimony, which operated violently by vomiting and purging.
-On examining the premises, it was found that the cellar contained water
-about two feet deep, which had remained there from the first week in
-June, the country having been then inundated by torrents of rain. The
-cellar being useless, the door had been closed, and the only vent for
-the pestiferous gases was through the floor, which was open in several
-places. The family being immediately removed, all the sick became
-convalescent from the time they ceased to breathe the air of the place.
-The owner of the house hired two men to empty the cellar. These men
-having ripped up the floor, and placed a pump in the deepest part of the
-water, evacuated the cellar to the dregs in one day. On the second day
-after the execution of this task, one of these men was seized with a
-chilliness, succeeded by an ardent fever, which terminated with the
-usual symptoms of yellow fever; namely, hæmorrhages, yellow skin and
-petechiæ, and proved fatal on the third day from the attack: the day
-following the seizure of the first, the second man was attacked with
-similar symptoms, and died on the seventh day of the disease, with the
-black vomit, in addition to the ordinary symptoms of the yellow fever.
-
-These examples may suffice to illustrate the operation of that febrile
-poison which arises chiefly from the decomposition of vegetable matter.
-The poison derived from the putrefaction of animal matter is still more
-pernicious: its effects are more powerful in degree, and worse in
-character; it operates more intensely on the nervous system, and less on
-the vascular; and the fevers it produces are invariably of the typhoid
-type, and of the continued form.
-
-Without doubt, a febrile poison, purely of animal origin, in a high
-degree of concentration, would kill instantaneously; and when not
-intense enough to strike with instantaneous death, it would produce a
-continued fever with the typhoid characters, in the greatest possible
-degree of completeness and perfection. And this appears to afford the
-true solution of the origin of the plague. The more closely the
-localities are examined of every situation in which the plague prevails,
-the more abundant the sources of putrefying animal matter will appear,
-and the more manifest it will become, not only that such matter must be
-present, but that it must abound. And this also is one of the truths
-which was known to the observers of former times, but which has been
-forgotten. Were it not that the professional reading of an age, is
-bounded by as strict a line as that which divides century from century;
-were it not that no one reads back beyond the authority which happens to
-give to the day its prevailing doctrines; were it not that the great
-repository of facts treasured up in the volumes of the close observers,
-though sometimes the bad reasoners of former days, thus becomes
-neglected for the dogmas of some modern writer, who reasons as ill, and
-who observes less, the notion that vegetable malaria produces only
-intermittent fever, never could have become so prevalent as it is at
-present, nor could the influence of animal malaria ever have been so
-entirely overlooked. But it chanced that Cullen, in his definition of
-intermittent fever, assigned the miasma of marshes as the origin of the
-disease, while he makes no mention of animal malaria in his definition
-of any of the forms of fever; and as this author superseded all former
-authorities, by becoming the great authority of the age, few of his
-successors are acquainted in the slightest degree with the writings
-anterior to his period: whence it has happened that the numerous and
-invaluable facts observed and recorded by his predecessors, relative to
-the cause of fever, have been disregarded until they have become wholly
-unknown. To cite the antient and the more modern authorities who have
-observed and recorded the influence of animal malaria in the product of
-plague, would be to enumerate every distinguished writer, from Pliny and
-Diodorus Sicculus, down to Galen, from Galen to Mead, and from Mead to
-Pringle.
-
-In assigning the reason why Grand Cairo, in Egypt, is the birth-place
-and the cradle of the plague, Mead states that this city is crowded with
-vast numbers of inhabitants, who live not only poorly, but nastily; that
-the streets are narrow and close; that the city itself is situated in a
-sandy plain, at the foot of a mountain, which keeps off the winds that
-might refresh the air; that consequently the heat is rendered extremely
-stifling; that a great canal passes through the midst of the city, which
-at the overflowing of the Nile is filled with water; that on the
-decrease of the river, this canal is gradually dried up, and the people
-throw into it all manner of filth, carrion, offal, and so on; that the
-stench which arises from this, and the mud together, is intolerably
-offensive; and that, from this source, the plague constantly springing
-up every year, preys upon the inhabitants, and is stopped only by the
-return of the Nile, the overflowing of which washes away this load of
-filth: that in Ethiopia the swarms of locusts are so prodigious, that
-they sometimes cause a famine, by devouring the fruits of the earth, and
-when they die, create a pestilence, by the putrefaction of their bodies;
-that this putrefaction is greatly increased by the dampness of the
-climate which, during the sultry heats of July and August, is often
-excessive; that the effluvia which arise from this immense quantity of
-putrefying animal substance, combined with so much heat and moisture,
-continually generate the plague in its intensest form; and that the
-Egyptians of old were so sensible how much the putrefaction of dead
-animals contributed towards breeding the plague, that they worshipped
-the bird Ibis, from the services it did in devouring great numbers of
-serpents, which they observed injured by their stench when dead, as much
-as by their bite when alive.
-
-Nothing can be more striking than the cases recorded by Pringle, and
-which daily occurred to him of the production of fever, exquisitely
-typhoid, (according to the language of that day, jail and hospital
-fever) and of the sudden transition of intermittent and remittent into
-the continued and typhoid type, from the presence of a poison clearly
-and certainly of animal origin. Whenever wounded soldiers, with
-malignant sores, or mortified limbs, were crowded together, or whenever
-only a few of such diseased persons were placed in a room with the sick
-from other diseases, with those labouring under intermittent and
-remittent, for example, a severe and mortal typhus immediately arose;
-nay, whenever men, previously in a state of sound health, were too much
-crowded together for any considerable time, typhus (jail or hospital
-fever) was sure to be produced. The instances of such occurrences that
-are detailed, are too numerous to be cited, but they are so clearly
-stated, and so striking, that they well deserve to be consulted by
-whoever is desirous of clearly tracing the operation of this great cause
-of fever.
-
-But by far the most potent febrile poison, derived from an animal
-origin, is that which is formed by exhalations given off from the living
-bodies of those who are affected with fever, especially when such
-exhalations are pent up in a close and confined apartment. The room of a
-fever-patient, in a small and heated apartment in London, with no
-perflation of fresh air, is perfectly analogous to a stagnant pool in
-Ethiopia, full of the bodies of dead locusts. The poison generated in
-both cases is the same; the difference is merely in the degree of its
-potency. Nature, with her burning sun, her stilled and pent-up wind, her
-stagnant and teeming marsh, manufactures plague on a large and fearful
-scale: poverty in her hut, covered with her rags, surrounded with her
-filth, striving with all her might, to keep out the pure air, and to
-increase the heat, imitates nature but too successfully; the process and
-the product are the same, the only difference is in the magnitude of the
-result. Penury and ignorance can thus at any time, and in any place,
-create a mortal plague. And of this no one has ever doubted. Of the
-power of the living body, even when in sound health, much more when in
-disease, and above all, when that disease is fever, to produce a poison
-capable of generating fever, no one disputes, and the fact has never
-been called in question. Thus far the agreement among all medical men,
-of all sects, and of all ages, is perfect.
-
-But it happens that there is another form of animal matter capable of
-producing fever: namely, a matter secreted by the living body,
-constituting not only a poison, but a peculiar and specific poison. This
-specific poison produces not merely fever, but fever with a specific
-train of symptoms. In the acknowledgment of this fact, also, the
-agreement among all medical men is equally perfect.
-
-But some contend that the poison generated in the first case, and that
-generated in the second, may both be properly called contagions: others
-maintain that the application of the same term to two cases so
-specifically different, destroys a distinction which it is useful to
-preserve, and that it would be more correct, as well as more conducive
-to clearness of conception, to call the poison generated in the first
-case an infection, and to restrict the term contagion, to designate the
-poison generated in the latter. Vast and immeasurable as the difference
-appears to be between the contagionists and the anti-contagionists, if
-regard be had merely to their language, yet if attention be paid only to
-their ideas, to this, and to this only, narrow as the compass is, the
-whole controversy is reduced. It resolves itself wholly into the
-question, whether one word shall be used to express two cases which
-differ from each other in some important circumstances, or whether it
-may not be more convenient to employ two terms, and strictly to
-appropriate each to designate its own specific class. It must be
-manifest that, since both sects are perfectly agreed about the facts,
-the dispute can be only verbal. If the one would consent to restrict
-their use of the term contagious, for which there is the best authority
-and ancient custom, to those diseases which arise from a specific
-contagion, and would call those which arise from every other poison
-infectious, there would be an end to this apparently interminable, and
-in many respects mischievous, controversy.
-
-Is the febrile poison, whether of vegetable or animal origin, or whether
-composed of both, capable of adhering to clothes, apparel, and other
-substances, in such a manner as truly to infect them, so that when
-applied to the bodies of the healthy, at any distance of place, and at
-some distance of time, the specific effects of the poison are produced?
-That such substances may be so imbued with the poison of the small-pox,
-all admit: that the evidence should not be as complete relative to the
-power, or the inability of such substances to convey and communicate the
-poison of ordinary continued fever, is alike disgraceful to the state of
-our science, and injurious to the cause of humanity. There is no reason
-why the question should not be settled with absolute certainty; there is
-no manner of difficulty in determining it. Experiments the most direct,
-complete, and decisive, might be performed, which, if observed, during
-their progress, by competent witnesses, and duly authenticated, might
-ascertain the point with sufficient clearness and certainty, to satisfy
-not only the present age, but future generations. Once, for all, the
-full trial might be made, and if the trial were really full, it need
-never be repeated. A series of experiments completely decisive of the
-question, as far as regards the fever of our own country, which might be
-easily extended to the plague, were some time ago drawn out, and
-exertions were made to carry them into effect; but in the prevailing
-state of public opinion and feeling, it was found absolutely impossible
-to institute them on a scale at all adequate to render them decisive,
-without the aid of Government. There seems to be no possible mode of
-performing them effectually, unless Government will co-operate, by
-granting a free pardon to such convicts, as will voluntarily allow
-themselves to be made the subjects of them. The risk to them would be
-slight, the evil to the community none; while the danger, the suffering,
-the disease, the mortality that would be prevented, to say nothing of
-the expense that would be spared by the decision of the question, would
-be incalculable. It is earnestly to be hoped that those who have it in
-their power to afford the means of putting this question at rest, will
-not allow it to remain in its present unsettled state. Science,
-commerce, humanity, alike demand that the truth should be ascertained.
-
-This subject, it is my intention to take up, and to discuss fully in a
-future publication, in which will also be investigated some inquiries,
-which it has been found impossible to include in the present volume;
-such as whether the vegetable and animal poison we have been
-considering, be the only true exciting cause of fever; by what means its
-general diffusion is effected; on what conditions its propagation
-depends; by what measures its extension may be checked, and its power
-diminished or destroyed; what circumstances in the modes of life, in the
-habits of society, in the structure of houses, in the condition of the
-public streets and the common sewers, in the state of the soil over
-large districts of the country, as influenced by the mode of
-agriculture, drainage, and so on, favour or check the origin and
-propagation of this great curse of civilized, no less than of
-uncivilized man. It is obvious that these inquiries will include the
-investigation of several exceedingly curious and important statistical
-questions; and the object of these researches will be accomplished
-should they lead to the establishment of any useful principles of
-extensive application.[34]
-
-
- II. OF THE REMOTE OR PREDISPOSING CAUSES OF FEVER.
-
-The remote or the predisposing causes of fever have been stated to be
-those circumstances which bring the body into a condition capable of
-being affected by the immediate or the exciting cause. Whatever
-diminishes the vigorous action of the organs, impairs their functions,
-and so weakens the general strength of the system, is capable of
-becoming a predisposing cause of fever; and every predisposing cause
-acts in one or other of these modes, and becomes a predisposing cause
-only and in proportion as it lessens the energy of the system, or
-disturbs the balance of its actions, which in fact is to render some
-portion of it weak. During a state of vigorous health the body is
-endowed with the power of resisting the influence of noxious agents,
-which in a less perfect state of health are capable of producing intense
-and fatal disease; and the action of all predisposing causes is to
-lessen this resisting power, or to weaken the energies of life.
-
-Of all predisposing causes, the most powerful is the continued presence
-and the slow operation of the immediate or the exciting cause. It is a
-matter of constant observation, that the febrile poison may be present
-in sufficient intensity to affect the health, without being sufficiently
-potent to produce fever. In this case the energy of the action of the
-organs is diminished, their functions are languidly performed, the
-entire system is weakened, and this increases, until at length the power
-of resistance is less than the power of the poison. Whenever this
-happens, fever is induced; not that the power of the poison may be at
-all increased; but the condition of the system is changed, in
-consequence of which, it is capable of offering to the noxious agent
-that assails it less resistance.
-
-We have seen that the vegetable or animal poison may exist in sufficient
-intensity to produce fever on the slightest exposure to it, without the
-operation of any predisposing cause, in a body in the state of the
-soundest health, and endowed with the greatest degree of strength.
-Examples of this kind are but too frequent in tropical climates. In
-countries where the temperature never rises so high, and seldom
-continues so long, it is rare that fever is produced immediately, on
-exposure to the exciting cause. Concentrated and potent as that poison
-is in many parts of Flanders, yet Sir John Pringle states that, in
-removing to an unhealthy situation, the men rarely became ill at once;
-that they generally continued in tolerable health for some days; and
-that recruits recently arrived in the country, resisted the noxious
-agent longer than the men who had been long there. Dr. Potter gives a
-remarkable example of the same fact, with regard to the yellow fever,
-which fell under his own observation, and states other facts, strikingly
-illustrative of the influence and operation of the predisposing causes.
-Strangers, from certain countries, he informs us, are insusceptible of
-yellow fever in America. In the most malignant and protracted epidemics
-which afflict that country, these strangers uniformly escape: emigrants
-from the West Indies, and other warm latitudes, for example, invariably
-resist the cause which produces these maladies in the native
-inhabitants. But the curious fact is, that such persons are unable
-permanently to resist the operation of the exciting cause; for, after a
-residence in America of some years, their constitution is so completely
-assimilated by the influence of the climate to that of the American,
-that they become equally sensible to its febrile miasma, and are as
-exquisitely impressed by them, as the American citizens themselves. The
-illustration is equally striking and instructive, if the position be
-reversed. The natives of northern climates are extremely susceptible to
-the influence of these miasma; that susceptibility is in exact
-proportion to the latitude of their country: those from the north of
-Europe scarcely ever escape an attack; the natives of Great Britain are
-nearly as susceptible to the influence of the poison, while persons even
-from the more northern countries of the United States are more liable to
-the disease than the citizens of the southern and middle states.
-
-Dr. Potter performed some experiments, to show that the continual
-presence of the exciting cause not only operates upon the general
-system, but actually produces a morbid change in the blood, before it
-induces fever. During the prevalence of an epidemic, it was observed
-that, in all the cases in which the patients were bled, the general
-appearance of the blood was precisely the same; that the coagulum was
-either of a yellow, or of a deep orange colour, and that a portion of
-the red particles was invariably precipitated. It occurred to Dr. Potter
-that, if the cause of the disease were contained in the common
-atmosphere, the blood of those who had inhaled it a certain time would
-exhibit similar phenomena; and that, should this be the case, it would
-prove that the cause, before actually producing the disease, brought
-about a state of the system, which predisposed it to be affected by the
-poison. To ascertain the appearances of the blood in persons who were
-exposed to the febrile poison, but who still remained apparently in
-perfect health, he drew a quantity of blood from five persons, who had
-lived during the whole epidemic season in the most infected parts of the
-city. To external appearance and inward feeling, each of these persons
-was in sound health. Their blood could in no respect be distinguished
-from the blood of those who laboured under the most intense forms of the
-prevailing fever. As it was necessary to the conclusiveness of the
-experiment that their blood should be compared with the blood of those
-who lived in an atmosphere unquestionably pure, Dr. Potter selected an
-equal number of persons who dwelt on the hills in Baltimore country, and
-drew from each of them ten ounces of blood. The contrast was most
-manifest. The serum was neither of a yellow, nor of an orange colour;
-there was no red precipitate; the appearances were such as are found in
-the blood of persons in perfect health.
-
-A young gentleman having returned to the city from the western part of
-Pennsylvania, on the 10th of September, in a state of sound health, Dr.
-Potter drew a few ounces of blood from a vein, on the day of his
-arrival; it exhibited no deviation from that of a healthy person. He
-remained in the family until the 26th of the month, that is sixteen
-days. On the 16th day the bleeding was repeated. The serum had assumed a
-deep yellow hue, and a copious precipitation of red globules had
-likewise fallen to the bottom of the vessel.
-
-In these experiments, the blood in six persons indicated the operation
-of the morbid cause, while each remained in a state of apparent health.
-Of these six persons, four were actually seized with yellow fever during
-the prevalence of the epidemic; and the other two, though they escaped
-any formal attack, did not escape indisposition. They were affected with
-headache, nausea, and other indications of disease, like hundreds
-besides, who were never absolutely confined to the house, and who never
-took any medicine, but who still experienced in nausea, giddiness,
-headache, pain in the extremities, and so on, abundant intimations of
-the presence of the poison.
-
-These examples may suffice to show how the exciting, may itself become a
-most powerful predisposing cause. The predisposition to subsequent
-attacks, after the system has once suffered from the disease, is very
-remarkable; that predisposition remains for a considerable period after
-convalescence and apparent recovery. Of this, striking examples
-continually occur both with regard to intermittent, and to continued
-fever. In fact, the disposition to relapse, remains until the
-constitution has recovered its previous strength and vigour, however
-distant that period may be. The influence of cold, moisture, fatigue,
-intemperance, constipation, anxiety, fear, and all the depressing
-passions, are likewise extremely powerful predisposing causes. They
-enable a less dose of the poison to produce fever, and they increase the
-intensity of the fever when it is established. They all act by weakening
-the resisting power inherent in the constitution, that is, by enfeebling
-the powers of life.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- _Of the Treatment of Fever._
-
-
-We have seen that the first indication of disease in fever is traceable
-to the nervous system; that the nature of this primary affection of the
-nervous system is unknown; that it may possibly be the commencement of
-inflammation, modified by the nature of the nervous substance, in which
-the inflammatory action has its seat, and by the nature of the cause
-that excites it, namely, a peculiar poison: or, on the other hand, it
-may possibly be something distinct from inflammation, but having a
-peculiar tendency to excite it. In either case, the inflammation that is
-present in fever, is peculiar and specific, differing essentially from
-ordinary or simple inflammation. Whether the affection of the nervous
-system consist merely of inflammation of the nervous substance excited
-by a peculiar poison; or whether it consist of some unknown condition of
-the nervous system to which inflammation is superadded, and by which the
-character of that inflammation is modified, the great practical result
-is the same, namely, that febrile inflammation and ordinary inflammation
-are not identical, and that the difference between the two affections is
-such as to require a very considerable modification in the treatment
-appropriate to each.
-
-The only morbid condition of fever, of which we have any knowledge, and
-over which the medical art has any control is that of inflammation.
-Although, as has been so often stated, inflammation be not the primary
-febrile affection, as far as regards the order of events, yet it is, at
-least, the primary affection, as far as regards the treatment, if it be
-not the sole affection that admits of treatment. The remedies proper for
-febrile inflammation do not differ from those which are adapted to
-ordinary inflammation; but they differ materially in the mode in which
-they ought to be applied, and the extent to which they ought to be
-carried. They can be understood neither in their mode nor measure, until
-the following questions are determined; namely, What is the precise
-object that should be aimed at in the treatment of fever? What is it
-which it is most important to do, and which it is in the power of the
-medical art to accomplish? An exact and true answer to these questions
-will afford an invaluable guide in practice: it will point out with
-clearness what is to be attempted; and it will put a stop to useless and
-pernicious aims.
-
-It is in vain to hope to terminate fever by a stroke of art. The pursuit
-of a remedy, so long and so earnestly sought, endowed with the power of
-cutting short the disease, is to the physician what the search after the
-philosopher’s stone was to the alchymist, with this difference, that the
-alchymist, engaged in a vain pursuit, lost only his time and labour; but
-the physician, engaged in a pursuit equally hopeless, will often, in
-addition, lose his patient. Fever cannot be cured instantaneously; and
-to bring a fever patient under the influence of agents capable of
-exciting a powerful influence upon the system, in the expectation of at
-once removing fever, is pregnant with danger; and the expectation upon
-which such practice is adopted, must appear fallacious to whoever has
-studied the nature of the disease.
-
-Fever cannot be cured instantaneously: it may be moderated; it may be
-gradually subdued; from being violent and dangerous, it may be rendered
-mild and safe: the physician may bring it to this condition; and this is
-all that he can accomplish. If it come under his care early, and he know
-with promptitude and decision at what to aim, he will rarely fail in his
-efforts to secure this object.
-
-Since the various forms or types of fever differ in nothing but the
-degree of their intensity, in detailing the treatment, it will be
-necessary only to state first of all, the remedies which are appropriate
-to the disease; and, secondly, the modification of these remedies, which
-may be required by the different degrees of intensity in which it is
-commonly found to exist.
-
-1. The common continued fever of this country, in its mildest form,
-requires little or no treatment. There is no affection of any organ
-intense enough to need the application of a powerful remedy. All the
-organs which constitute the febrile circle are deranged in their
-functions, but that derangement is so slight that a cure takes place
-spontaneously in the course of a few days. Confinement to the bed; the
-abstraction of stimuli; fever diet; a calomel purgative at night,
-consisting of one or two grains of calomel with six or ten of rhubarb,
-followed in the morning with half an ounce of castor oil; and these
-remedies repeated every day, or every alternate day, constitute the
-whole treatment which is required.
-
-2. Whenever the fever passes beyond this, its mildest form, it becomes a
-serious disease. It is never for a moment to be trifled with; never for
-a moment to be neglected. Because it is moderate in the commencement, it
-is not to be presumed that it will continue moderate through its
-subsequent course: it may become most formidable; if the proper remedies
-are not applied early and vigorously, it generally does become truly
-alarming; the train only is apparent; the mine is concealed; the only
-safety for the patient is to prevent the train from being kindled; if
-that be once kindled, it may be no longer possible to save the patient
-from destruction.
-
-When the mildest case of fever passes to a severer form, what is the
-event that happens? What is the change that takes place in the organs?
-The preceding pathology will, indeed, have been written in vain, if
-there can now be any doubt in the mind of the reader on that point. The
-great value of the facts there disclosed is, that they teach us what
-happens in organs which we cannot see, and declare to us by the external
-signs or symptoms, the internal actions that are going on. Out of the
-hundred cases which have now been recorded, and the history of which has
-been made known from its commencement to its termination, take any one,
-or fix upon any number, in which the symptoms from being slight became
-moderate, and from moderate severe, or, in which the symptoms were
-severe from the beginning, what is found after death? Inflammation, in
-general, rising in degree, and increasing in extent, or both, in
-proportion to the intensity of the febrile affection. If this, which may
-be justly considered as the law of the disease, be not absolutely
-constant and uniform, it may be safely affirmed, at least, that there
-are as few apparent exceptions to it, as to any general law that can be
-named.
-
-The object to be aimed at in practice, then, is clear: it is to prevent,
-or to remove inflammation. Accomplish this, the fever will not be cured
-at once; it will still go on for some time; but it will come sooner to a
-close, and it will proceed mildly and safely to its termination. Fail to
-accomplish this, and the fever, however mild at first, will increase
-more and more in severity until it become truly formidable, and death
-take place at last, in consequence of the destruction of the organs by
-the process of inflammation.
-
-If excitement be set up in an organ which has as invariable a tendency
-to terminate in inflammation as a stone to fall to the ground, what is
-the proper remedy to prevent the transition of excitement into
-inflammation? Bleeding. Before we can say that inflammation is
-established we may foresee that it will come: if the preceding
-excitement be not stopped, we know that it will as surely come as that
-blood will flow from a wounded blood-vessel. Because we cannot tell the
-precise moment when increased vascular action passes into actual
-inflammation, are we quietly to look on and do nothing until we have
-made that discovery? We know that inflammation is at hand; we know what
-will prevent it, or, at any rate, what has a powerful tendency to
-prevent it: shall we not bring into immediate and vigorous use our means
-of prevention, or shall we wait until the inflammatory action shall have
-given unequivocal and alarming indications of its presence and operation
-before we interfere? To trifle in such a manner, to lose these precious
-moments when we have such a fearful, such an active, and, if once it be
-allowed to become active, such a masterless enemy to contend with as
-fever, is as great a folly as it would be when a building is on fire to
-stand idle by as long as the fire is smouldering, and to take no measure
-to extinguish it until it has burst into flame, nay, not until the flame
-has spread from the floor to the ceiling, and from the ceiling to the
-roof. We may not be able to see a single spark, but if we see the smoke
-and feel the heat, we know that there is fire somewhere, and that
-however concealed at present it will soon make itself visible enough,
-and that it will consume not only the structure in which it originates,
-but others with which it may come in contact if it be not put out. With
-equal certainty we know that fever, though apparently mild in the
-commencement, will excite inflammation in vital organs, and that that
-inflammation, if it be allowed to establish itself, will place the
-fabric of the body in the most imminent danger. The physician, in the
-first stage of fever, armed with his lancet, is to his patient what the
-fireman with his engine, before the flames have had time to kindle, is
-to a building that has taken fire. At this early stage, the former can
-check inflammation with almost as much ease and certainty as the latter
-can prevent the flames from bursting out. On the contrary, the physician
-who is called to treat inflammation in the later stage of fever is in
-the position of the man who arrives with the apparatus for saving the
-house when its stories have been already consumed and its roof has
-fallen in.
-
-Bleeding in fever cannot be performed too early. The very first moment
-of excitement, could that be discovered, is precisely the moment when
-the employment of this powerful remedy would produce the greatest
-effect. The earlier the bleeding, the greater will be the impression
-made upon the disease, and the less upon the patient; or, the more
-effectually will the inflammatory action be stopped by the loss of the
-smallest quantity of blood.
-
-When inflammation has actually come on, there is then not a moment to be
-lost; that inflammation must be stopped; the accomplishment of this
-object is the great end which the practitioner should aim at in every
-thing he attempts; until he has done this he has done nothing; until he
-has done this he ought to give neither sleep to his eyes nor slumber to
-his eye-lids; until he has done this he ought to feel that there should
-be no rest for himself, because there is no safety for his patient.
-Until the inflammation is subdued blood must be taken; be the quantity
-it may be necessary to abstract, in order to accomplish this object,
-what it may; be the bleedings it may be requisite to repeat what they
-may; the vein must be allowed to flow, and it must be opened again and
-again until this object is secured. If this golden opportunity be
-allowed to escape, and this object be not obtained, the risk is most
-imminent. During this early period the physician is master over the
-disease; if he allow it to pass away without obtaining the victory, the
-disease becomes master over the physician. From that moment his control
-over it is gone. Never can he regain his lost advantage. Fever is a
-process that advances with a step as steady as time, and like time it
-never retraces a step. At a subsequent period its progress may be
-sometimes retarded, and now and then it may be weakened; but, after the
-lapse of a few days, this is all which the most complete success is then
-capable of accomplishing.
-
-Mere relief of inflammation is nothing; to render a severe inflammation
-a less severe inflammation is to do nothing; because the less severe
-inflammation may be fatal just as certainly as the more severe: the
-inflammation must be subdued, or the case, if not wholly lost, becomes
-dangerous and doubtful.
-
-The abstraction of blood must be carried to the extent of subduing the
-inflammation: there is no other limit to the quantity to be taken but
-that which is adequate to subdue the inflammation. To attempt to measure
-the quantity by drachms or ounces is wholly vain; because, if the remedy
-be properly employed, the quantity will vary in every individual case.
-To take an ounce more than the subdual of the inflammation requires is
-injurious; to take an ounce less is still more pernicious; to take the
-quantity necessary to accomplish the object, and no more, is to use the
-lancet—that powerful instrument, so dangerous in rash hands, and no less
-dangerous in weak, with the discernment and decision of a master. He who
-with a knowledge which gives and which justifies boldness and decision,
-is able thus to employ this great remedy, is a skilful physician, who
-has derived from study and experience the best fruit they can yield: he
-who has not yet reached this perfection of his art, (and who among us
-can pretend to the attainment?) must still go on to observe and to
-learn.
-
-The object to be accomplished then is clear; that means of obtaining it
-are known; and when these means are promptly, boldly, and effectually
-employed, what is the result of experience? That after all, the quantity
-of blood it is necessary to abstract is not large. The tendency of the
-preceding observations is not to countenance frequent and large
-abstractions of blood in fever, but to save the blood of the patient, by
-taking the due quantity at the proper time. Smaller bleedings will
-subdue febrile than pure inflammation. Febrile inflammation, as has been
-so often stated, is a modified inflammation, the modification consisting
-in less activity in the vascular system and greater depression in the
-nervous. Whence a moderate bleeding will make an impression upon febrile
-inflammation which can be equalled in pure inflammation only by a large
-bleeding. He who takes away sixteen ounces of blood in fever adopts a
-bolder and more decisive practice, and brings more effectual relief to
-his patient, than he who abstracts thirty ounces of blood in some other
-forms of inflammation; and he who takes away six ounces of blood in one
-febrile case, does more than he who takes away sixteen in another. But
-the question never can be whether the bleeding should be small or large:
-that is nothing. The thing to be considered is the condition of the
-organs, the state of the system; not the ounces of blood to be taken,
-nor the number of periods at which it is to be removed. Abstract blood
-to the subdual of the inflammation—that is the rule; abstract blood at
-the very commencement of the inflammatory action; if you are in time to
-do it, at the very commencement of the febrile excitement. Then little
-blood will be lost, and the patient will be safe. And when this is done,
-nothing of importance remains to be done. The practitioner who has been
-thus active in the commencement will be idle during the future progress
-of the disease. Daily as he repeats his visit he will find that his
-interference is not required, and will admire to see with what ease a
-disease of frightful power is disarmed, and rendered innoxious, if it be
-attacked in infancy, and not neglected or trifled with until it be
-nurtured to maturity, and allowed, at last, to put forth unchecked the
-strength of that maturity.
-
-If, after the abstraction of sixteen ounces of blood at the commencement
-of the attack, the vascular excitement be not completely subdued, in the
-course of three or four hours the same quantity must be again taken; and
-if, the next morning, that excitement continue, it will probably have
-already passed into inflammation; and, therefore, the vein must be once
-more opened, and the blood allowed to flow until the pain, wherever
-seated, be entirely removed. To check the disease, instead of subduing
-it, does not in the least diminish its future strength, and, by
-weakening the powers of life, it even hastens the period of mortality.
-Nothing is more common than the appearance of typhoid symptoms, on the
-second or third day after bleeding has done nothing but lessen the
-inflammatory action; whereas, had it been carried somewhat, and
-generally only a little, farther, the patient would have been
-convalescent at the very period when his danger becomes most imminent.
-In cases where general bleeding produces a decided impression on the
-inflammation, but does not stop it, cupping, or even leeches, will often
-complete what the lancet commenced.
-
-A due impression having been made upon the inflammation by bleeding, the
-subsequent treatment should consist of purgative medicines, given to the
-extent of producing three, or at most four stools in the twenty-four
-hours: beyond that number no advantage is obtained by purging; more
-frequent evacuations, indeed, weaken the patient, but not the disease.
-The best purgatives consist of one or two grains of calomel, with six or
-eight of rhubarb, repeated every night, or every other night, and
-followed the next morning by two drachms, or half an ounce of castor
-oil, or by the common senna draught. Cold sponging, if the skin be hot;
-acidulated drink, if there be thirst; perfect quiet, a dark room, a
-silent nurse, affording prompt attendance, with a noiseless step, a
-cheerful countenance, and no words—this, together with three tea-cups
-full of thin arrowroot or gruel, in the twenty-four hours, given in
-divided portions, at intervals of about two or three hours, comprises
-all else that will be required, or that will be useful, until the period
-of convalescence.
-
-Such is the simple, but most efficient treatment appropriate to the
-common fever of London and its neighbourhood (and I do not speak of the
-treatment proper for any forms of the disease as it exists elsewhere,
-and which I have not seen) in its ordinary degree of severity.[35]
-
-Suppose, however, the proper treatment not to have been applied; suppose
-the case to have been neglected or mismanaged; either not to have been
-seen at all, or to have been too much contemned; suppose the pain in the
-head to have been not severe; that no complaint was made of it; or that
-giddiness only was felt; that the skin was not burning hot, but
-moderately warm; that the pulse was neither strong, nor bounding, nor
-hard; but of moderate strength, and soft; that the mind was tolerably
-distinct, and the restlessness not great: why should blood be drawn?
-what indication is there for the employment of so violent a remedy in so
-mild a case? No symptom is prominent; no symptom is urgent; the case
-will do well.
-
-Such is the view that would be taken by the great majority of
-practitioners of this kind of case, and their treatment, without doubt,
-would be correspondingly inert. And this is the true origin, in many
-cases, of typhus symptoms; of adynamic fever. The disease is allowed to
-take its own course; and the product of every fever, at a certain stage
-of its process, is adynamia: the physician does not perform his office;
-the disease advances; the restlessness increases; there is no sleep;
-delirium comes on; muscular tremor begins to be perceptible; the pulse
-rises; the sensibility diminishes; and stupor, if it be not already
-present, is close at hand. And now the disease, it is sufficiently
-obvious, is severe; now, it is admitted, it calls for a powerful remedy;
-and, now for the first time, the lancet is thought of. But the bleeding
-relieves no symptom; it increases some; the progress of the inflammation
-is not checked; the adynamic symptoms are more fully developed; the
-patient is more prostrate, and the fever, in all respects of a worse
-character: the inference is, that bleeding is a most inefficient and
-dangerous remedy in fever; and this inference is deduced from
-experience; those who draw the conclusion, judge from what they see;
-they disclaim reason; they pretend only to understand and to respect the
-lessons of experience.
-
-I appeal to the attentive observer, whether this be not a faithful
-history of the progress and termination of hundreds of fever cases;
-whether such a history may not be recorded as of daily occurrence;
-whether what has been stated be not commonly the view, the practice, the
-result, and the lesson.
-
-I will not appeal to the different history that belongs to cases that
-are differently treated. But I do earnestly appeal to the pathology that
-has been stated; that, at least, is experience, and it teaches a lesson,
-which it is worse than foolish to despise or to forget. Every symptom
-just enumerated, has been detailed over and over again in the cases that
-have been laid before the reader: inspection after death must have made
-the conditions of the organs, as indicated by those symptoms, familiar
-to his mind. Of what avail can bleeding be, when the patient is brought
-into the condition which first excites alarm, in the case here supposed?
-The blood is no longer in its vessels; it is beneath the membranes, or
-in the ventricles, or at the base of the brain; the inflamed capillaries
-have done their work upon the cerebral substance and upon its membranes;
-and have left proof enough of their activity, in the thickening of the
-one, and the softening or the induration of the other. What can
-blood-letting do in this state of the organs? What can shaving the head,
-and applying cold do? What can blisters do? What can purgatives do? And
-above all, what can wine do? Nothing can be done; at least, nothing
-effectually or certainly.
-
-If there be still pain, if the sensibility be little diminished, if the
-pulse be not very quick and weak, it may yet be possible to check the
-further progress of the inflammation; to prevent the disorganization of
-the brain from advancing; but the means to accomplish this, must now be
-tried with the most extreme caution: perhaps, in the whole compass of
-medical practice, there is no case which requires a nicer discrimination
-than this, when it has arrived at this point. The abstraction of a few
-ounces of blood may stop the inflammatory action of the vessels before
-they have produced such a change of structure as is incompatible with
-life, and such as the powers of life cannot repair. But if the
-abstraction, even of this minute quantity of blood, at this point of the
-inflammatory process, do not put a stop to that process, the remedy will
-co-operate with the disease, to depress the powers of life, and will
-deprive the patient of what chance of recovery he might otherwise have
-had. To decide in a case which requires such nice discernment, and in
-which, even with the best discernment that can be exercised, the event
-must always be so doubtful, is a task which few physicians, who
-understand the nature of it, find either easy or agreeable.
-
-But instead of bleeding, the proper remedy may possibly be the very
-reverse: it may be requisite to afford a stimulus. The change of
-structure produced by the inflammatory process may not have proceeded to
-such an extent as to be absolutely incompatible with life; but the
-powers of life maybe so exhausted by the inflammatory excitement that,
-unless aid be brought to them, they will be overpowered, and sink:
-afford them appropriate aid, and they will rally, and, although slowly,
-ultimately repair the lesion which the organs have sustained.
-
-This is precisely the condition, and perhaps it is the only condition,
-under which stimuli are really beneficial in fever. Whenever such
-remedies are indicated, the vascular action is weak, and there appears
-to be a want of due supply of arterial blood to the brain. Of all
-stimuli, wine or brandy is the best. If it be doubtful whether a
-stimulus can be borne, or will prove beneficial, a few ounces of wine
-may be administered. It will soon be manifest whether it be the
-appropriate remedy. If the restlessness, the heat, the delirium increase
-under its use, it will be obvious that it cannot be borne; if, after
-some hours, no perceptible impression be made upon any symptom, it is
-seldom of the least service, given to any extent, or persevered in for
-any length of time. If it be capable of doing any good, some improvement
-in the symptoms is commonly perceptible in a few hours after it is first
-administered. Sometimes that improvement is sudden and most striking;
-more commonly it is slight, slow, but still easy to be seen. If the
-pulse become firmer, and especially slower, the tremor slighter, the
-delirium milder, the sleep sounder, the skin cooler, and, above all, if
-the sensibility increase, and the strength improve, it is then the
-anchor of hope. It will save the patient if it be not pushed too far,
-and if it be withdrawn as soon as excitement is reproduced, should that
-happen, which it often does.
-
-No certain indication for the administration of wine can be drawn from
-one or two symptoms alone: neither from the state of the pulse, nor of
-the skin, nor of the tongue; neither from the tremor, nor from the
-delirium. There is an aspect about the patient, an expression not in his
-countenance only, but in his attitude, in the manner in which he lies
-and moves, being, in fact, the general result, as well as the outward
-expression of the collective internal diseased states, that tell to the
-experienced eye when it is probable that a stimulus will be useful.
-Depression, loss of energy in the vascular system, as well as in the
-nervous and the sensorial, indicated by a feeble, quick, and easily
-compressed pulse, no less than by general prostration, afford the most
-certain indications that the exhibition of wine will be advantageous:
-and if the skin be at the same time cool and perspiring, the tongue
-tremulous, moist, or not very dry, and the delirium consist of low
-muttering incoherence, these symptoms will afford so many additional
-reasons to hope that it will prove useful. On the contrary, if the skin
-be hot, the eye fierce or wild, the delirium loud, noisy, requiring
-restraint, and the general motions violent, it is as absurd to give
-wine, as to pour oil upon a half-extinguished fire, with the view of
-putting out the yet burning embers.
-
-When wine is indicated, but does not produce a decided effect, brandy
-may be substituted. I have seen no benefit arise from giving either in
-large quantity. When the condition is really present in which alone it
-can be useful, a moderate quantity will accomplish the only purpose it
-can serve. In every other condition, wine may be administered to any
-extent, (and I have given half a pint every hour) until the stomach
-return it, by vomiting, without the slightest impression being made upon
-the disease, or any, or scarcely any, upon the system. The malady is in
-possession of the seat of sensibility; it has destroyed the organ; it
-has abolished the function: what advantage can result from the
-application of stimuli? The spirit that could feel their impression, and
-answer to it, is gone: organs destroyed by overstimulation, cannot be
-regenerated by the application of additional stimuli: the apparatus is
-broken; the wheels are clogged; the obstruction lies in that part of the
-mechanism in which the main power that works the machinery is generated;
-that obstruction cannot be removed; the movements of the machine must
-cease. Even when the case is not thus utterly hopeless, wretched is the
-physician whose only dependence for the safety of his patient is in
-wine.
-
-These considerations ought not to make us desponding, or inert, even
-under the worst circumstances, as long as the case is not absolutely
-desperate; but they ought to impress deeply and indelibly upon the mind
-of the practitioner who has the first charge of a fever patient, that
-the disease must be conquered in the very first days, or it will
-conquer, and that there are no means by which that conquest can be
-rendered sure or probable, but that afforded by the lancet.
-
-Very much the same observations apply to the exhibition of opiates.
-There is a condition of the system in which an opiate puts a stop to a
-state of exhausting agitation and restlessness; procures tranquil sleep;
-lessens delirium, and operates most favourably on all the symptoms. This
-may be when the skin is cool and perspiring; the tongue moist, or not
-very dry; the delirium low, and the pulse and the patient weak. No kind
-of opiate in any form in which it can be administered ever proves in the
-least degree beneficial whenever the skin is very hot, the tongue very
-dry, or the general motions and actions of the patient are violent.
-
-Now and then the powers of life rally unexpectedly and wonderfully: they
-throw off a load which appeared to have oppressed them totally and for
-ever. It is therefore the duty of the medical attendant to be always at
-hand until the termination even of the most desperate case, and
-carefully to watch every change that takes place; for changes may
-suddenly occur which may give him a clue to bring in invaluable
-assistance. He may be suddenly called upon to give a stimulus; he may be
-suddenly called upon to check re-excited and inordinate action. To
-describe in words the countless variety of circumstances under which it
-may be necessary that he should take very unexpected and decided
-measures, and not a few of which may demand of him clear discernment and
-nice discrimination, is quite impossible: he can acquire the power of
-performing the most difficult and arduous duty he has undertaken only by
-studying the disease, and by rendering himself perfectly familiar with
-the principle of its treatment.
-
-When the inflammatory action has proceeded unsubdued and has terminated
-in some change of structure, probably accompanied with copious effusion,
-as indicated by the symptoms detailed under the cases illustrating
-cerebral affection, advantage is sometimes obtained by affecting the
-system with mercury. In this condition of the brain it is not easy to
-bring the system under the influence of mercury; when it can be
-accomplished, the patient is commonly, though not invariably, snatched
-from death. In several instances I have known this treatment successful
-under apparently the most hopeless circumstances. When the success is
-most complete, the convalescence is invariably tardy, and often appears
-to be doubtful; the mind for a long time remains feeble, infirm, and
-almost fatuous; and, as in the two cases recorded by Pringle, though
-such patients recover of their fever, it is long before the nervous and
-the sensorial systems are restored to a sound state. The best mode of
-exhibiting mercury is in the form of a pill, consisting of two grains of
-calomel with half a grain of opium, given every three, four, or six
-hours.
-
-3. To a fever which is severe from the commencement the preceding
-observations apply with double force. Then, if the most powerful
-remedies are not immediately employed, and if they are not brought to
-bear at once upon the severe symptoms in the completest combination, the
-case is wholly lost. The delay of an hour is pregnant with danger; the
-delay of a few hours places the efficacy of any measures that can be
-taken in great uncertainty; and the delay of a day or two renders their
-most vigorous application utterly useless. Whereas, knowing, as we now
-know, the condition of the organs upon which the severity of every case
-depends, and knowing remedies appropriate to that condition of sovereign
-efficacy, exceedingly few of such cases would be lost were these
-remedies employed with due vigour at the commencement of the attack. The
-typhoid symptoms with which it is commonly thought such cases commence
-would never appear. The patient would be convalescent, or at least would
-labour only under a mild form of fever at the period when, without these
-remedies, his condition would be hopeless. The practitioner ought never
-for a moment to forget that it is in the power of early and active
-treatment to deprive these severe cases of all their severity and,
-consequently, of all their danger; but that, after the lapse of a day or
-two, all human skill will be exerted in vain.
-
-It remains to say a word or two relative to the modification of the more
-powerful remedies, as the prominent affection may have its seat in the
-brain, the lungs, or the intestines.
-
-
- I. OF THE MODIFICATION OF THE TREATMENT IN CEREBRAL AFFECTION.
-
-The treatment in a cerebral case of moderate severity has been already
-sufficiently explained. Blood must be drawn to the subdual of the
-inflammation, and if blood be abstracted early, two, or at most three,
-moderate bleedings will be all that will be required.
-
-But when the attack commences with severe cerebral affection, the
-bleeding must be proportionally large, and early as it is copious. A
-bleeding adequate to subdue a moderate, will be utterly inert in a
-severe degree of cerebral disease. I give, as a specimen of what may be
-sometimes required, the case of Dr. DILL. I saw my friend at the very
-commencement of his attack, and was, therefore, able to carry into
-effect what I conceive to be the proper treatment with due promptitude
-and vigour. I saw him before there was any pain in the head, or even in
-the back, while he was yet only feeble and chilly. The aspect of his
-countenance, the state of his pulse, and the answers he returned to two
-or three questions, satisfied me of the inordinate, I may say the
-ferocious, attack that was at hand. Having taken an emetic without
-delay, as soon as its operation was over, blood was taken from the arm
-to the extent of twenty ounces. During the night, severe pain in the
-limbs, especially in the loins, and intense pain in the head came on.
-The blood that was taken on the preceding evening was not inflamed.
-Early in the morning he was again bled to the extent of about sixteen
-ounces, with great diminution, but not entire removal of the pain: the
-pain not lessening, towards the afternoon he was again bled to the same
-extent: the pain was now quite gone; the blood from both these bleedings
-was intensely inflamed. During the night the pain returned, and, in the
-morning, the eyes were dull and beginning to be suffused, while the
-pulse continued slow and intermittent, and the respiration suspirious;
-but the face was blanched, and the pulse, in addition to its other
-characters, was weak. Instead of opening the vein afresh, twelve leeches
-were applied to the temples; these very much relieved, but still did not
-entirely remove the pain; for this reason, he was cupped to the extent
-of sixteen ounces: this operation afforded very great relief, and he
-continued easy until the following evening, when the pain returned, and
-he was again cupped on the temples to the same extent. Immediate relief
-followed this second operation; but, unfortunately, the pain returned
-with great violence towards evening, and it was now impossible to carry
-the bleeding any farther. Within twenty-four hours, it was plain that
-typhoid symptoms in abundance would be present, for the fur on the
-tongue was becoming brown, and there was already slight tremor in the
-hands. No more blood could be taken with any prospect of advantage, nor
-even with safety; yet, without the aid of some powerful remedy the case
-was lost.
-
-The whole scalp was now enveloped in ice, but so intense was the heat of
-the head that it was melted in a few minutes, and the clothes, steeped
-in the evaporating lotion, dried with extraordinary rapidity. Neither of
-these expedients produced the least perceptible effect.
-
-What was to be done? Recourse was had to a measure the efficacy of which
-is but little known and less appreciated; a remedy the power of which is
-second only, if, under some circumstances, it be not even superior, to
-that of the lancet; a remedy which can never supercede the lancet nor
-dispense with it, but which, when added to it, forms by the combination
-a treatment so powerful and efficacious that it might render death, from
-the acutest cerebral inflammation, as rare as recovery is at present.
-
-This remedy is known by the name of the cold dash. It consists of
-pouring a column of cold water upon the head in a continued stream from
-a height of from six to ten feet. The mode of applying it is as follows.
-The patient is seated in a large tub; a table is placed at the side of
-the tub upon which a man stands, and at as great an elevation as his
-arms can reach, pours upon the naked head of the patient a steady but
-continued stream of cold or iced water, from a watering-pot without the
-rose. The stream is made to fall as nearly as possible upon one and the
-same spot. At first the elevation must be slight, for the shock is too
-violent if the stream be poured at once from the highest point. There is
-a record, that in the East, where ingenuity so long laboured for tyranny
-to invent the most exquisite modes of torment, the victim was placed
-with his bare head under a small stream of cold water which was so
-directed as to fall unceasingly upon one spot. In this instance cruelty
-was cheated of its object by its ignorance of the mode in which its
-expedient operated. The device was well adapted to kill but not to
-produce pain, for insensibility must soon have put an end to suffering.
-
-Employed as a remedy, there is no degree of burning heat which the
-animal economy is capable of producing, no intensity of vascular action,
-and no violence of pain that can resist its continued application.
-Sooner or later, usually in from ten to twenty minutes, the heat, though
-most intense, disappears, the skin becomes cold, the face pallid, the
-features shrunk, while the pulse is reduced to a mere thread, and the
-pain of the head, however violent and intolerable, entirely ceases.
-After the patient has been wiped dry, which he should be as rapidly as
-possible, and placed in bed, the symptoms may soon return in all their
-violence; the same process will again remove them, and as often as the
-former recur the latter must be repeated. Three or four repetitions will
-commonly suffice to subdue the most intense cerebral affection. In the
-case of Dr. Dill, the relief it brought was instantaneous and most
-complete. From a state of intense suffering it rendered him perfectly
-easy, and from a state of imminent danger, safe. I had no anxiety about
-him from the moment he came out of his tub, although it was necessary to
-pass him through the same ordeal three times; but he himself having
-tried this remedy on his sister, having in her case witnessed its
-efficacy, and now felt it in his own, was extremely desirous that it
-should be repeated as soon as he was conscious of any return of pain. In
-consequence of its application, together with the copious depletion that
-preceded it, at the period when under ordinary treatment, the most
-exquisite typhoid symptoms would have been present, he was
-convalescent.[36] If we consider how powerful the abstraction of caloric
-must be by every fresh current of water that falls upon the head, to
-what a mere thread the minute external blood-vessels must be
-constringed, and consequently to what an extent the internal must be
-affected, we shall not wonder at its efficacy. Powerful as the cold
-affusion is when exhibited in its ordinary mode, yet the impression it
-makes upon the brain, compared with the effect produced by this remedy,
-may be said to be what the application of six leeches to the temples is
-to the abstraction of thirty ounces of blood.
-
-Cold applications to the head, and evaporating or iced lotions, are
-useful in mild cases; they may keep up the effect produced by this in
-the more severe, but to hope to control the latter by their aid alone,
-is to expect to coerce a giant, by twisting around his arms a spider’s
-thread.
-
-
- II. OF THE MODIFICATION OF TREATMENT IN THORACIC AFFECTION.
-
-Fortunately, there is a remedy nearly as powerful and efficacious in
-intense thoracic affection, as blood-letting and the cold dash are in
-the cerebral. In the severe bronchial affection of fever, blood-letting
-is of little avail. It seems to have scarcely any control over the
-peculiar affection of the lining membrane of the bronchial tubes, or
-even over the inflammation of the substance of the lung, which so often
-accompanies the intense form of thoracic disease. It weakens the
-patient, without making a decided impression upon the disease. Laennec
-states that the pathology of pneumonia could scarcely be learnt under
-his practice; for that he treated the disease, not by blood-letting, but
-by tartar emetic; and that all his patients recovered. I thought this
-one of the exaggerated statements in which medical writers sometimes
-delight to indulge; but it immediately occurred to me that this remedy
-might prove exceedingly efficacious in the bronchitis of fever. Its
-efficacy has surpassed my expectation. It seldom fails if exhibited with
-promptitude and decision. The mode in which it is most efficiently
-administered, is in doses of two grains, dissolved in an ounce of water,
-and repeated every second, third, fourth, or sixth hour, according to
-the severity of the case.
-
-In the slight bronchial affection, which is so constantly present in
-fever, nothing is required but the mucilage of gum-arabic, or a little
-of the almond emulsion now and then, with the tincture of hyosciamus, or
-two or three grains of the compound powder of ipecacuanha, to allay the
-irritation of the cough. The inflammation of the mucous membrane, when
-slight, spontaneously subsides.
-
-
- III. OF THE MODIFICATION OF THE TREATMENT IN ABDOMINAL AFFECTION.
-
-No remedy at all comparable in efficacy to the preceding has yet been
-discovered for the inflammation of the mucous membrane of the
-intestines, which forms so constant and formidable a part of the organic
-affection of fever. General bleeding has but little influence over the
-disease. If employed early and with due activity, it will prevent the
-affection from occurring, but, when once it has supervened, large
-bleedings are out of the question, and even small and repeated bleedings
-are not as effectual as leeches. In severe cases, the abdomen should be
-covered with leeches, and they should be re-applied daily, until the
-pain and tenderness are gone, or, at least, have become slight, for it
-is often impossible entirely to remove the tenderness. The abdomen
-should be covered with a poultice as soon as the leeches fall off.
-Afterwards, the application of a linen rag, moistened constantly with
-the oleum terebinthinæ, keeps up the effect produced by the leeches,
-and, when the affection is slight, may supersede their use altogether.
-
-When the purging is considerable, five grains of the hydrargyrum cum
-cretâ, with five of the pulvis ipecacuanhæ compositus, given every night
-or every night and morning, often checks it; if this remedy fail, a
-stronger opiate may be exhibited, and sometimes an anodyne enema may be
-administered with great advantage. If there be constipation, one or two
-drachms of castor oil is the proper laxative. Active or irritating
-purgatives are highly injurious.
-
-When blood is mixed with the stools or there is considerable hæmorrhage
-from the intestines, every thing that can irritate the mucous membrane
-must be carefully avoided. The mineral acids sometimes appear to check
-the discharge. The infusion of roses rendered stronger by the addition
-of a few drops of the sulphuric acid, is a convenient mode of
-administering such medicines, and the efficacy of the draught is
-sometimes improved by the addition of a drachm of the tincture of
-hyosciamus. It is not uncommon for copious discharges of blood to
-alternate with constipation. In this case the mildest laxative must be
-administered with caution. The powers of life are sometimes so
-prostrate, that three or four stools, excited by purgative medicines,
-are sufficient to exhaust them. A tea-spoonful of castor oil, repeated
-at intervals of six hours, is all that should be attempted. Now and then
-a stimulant has a greater effect in checking the hæmorrhage than an
-astringent, and then the oleum terebinthinæ is the best remedy.
-
-
- IV. We have spoken of a fever still more intense
-
-even than this, severe as it is, under the name of the intensest form of
-fever. And of this, the same may be said as was stated of the mildest,
-that there is little or nothing to be done. As far as regards the
-treatment, the two extremes of fever, the mildest and the most intense,
-meet, for in the first no remedies are required, and in the second, none
-are of any avail. In these latter cases, there is no remedy and no
-combination of remedies yet known, capable of affording effectual aid.
-The abstraction of the smallest quantity of blood is fatal: the
-application of the cold bath is out of the question; the warm bath is
-inert; the vapour-bath affords rather more prospect of benefit; but the
-proper remedies, if any exist, remain to be discovered.
-
-When a person has swallowed a certain quantity of laudanum, there are
-remedies which are capable of counteracting the poison and of saving the
-patient. When he has swallowed a larger dose, provided it amount to a
-certain quantity, no remedies will avail, excepting the application of
-the stomach-pump. Unless the poison be promptly expelled from the
-system, adopt with the utmost vigour the best-concerted expedients which
-the medical art can supply, the patient will die. A person afflicted
-with the intensest form of fever, is in the condition of a person who
-has swallowed this large dose of poison. When a pump is invented,
-capable of extracting _his_ poison from the brain, he may be saved.
-
-
- V. OF THE TREATMENT OF SCARLET FEVER.
-
-Little modification is required in the treatment of scarlet fever. The
-most important difference between continued fever without and with an
-eruption, is the greater predominance of nervous affection in the former
-and of inflammatory affection in the latter. Accordingly, in scarlatina
-there is not only a greater tendency to inflammation than in ordinary
-fever, but the inflammation which is set up in the febrile circle of
-organs approximates more to the character of pure inflammation. There is
-greater vascular action, with less nervous and sensorial depression. The
-consequence is, that blood-letting may be carried to a greater extent,
-and will be attended with still more decided and more certain efficacy
-than in ordinary fever. After a decided impression has been made upon
-the vascular excitement by general bleeding, the application of ten or
-twelve leeches to the throat is of sovereign efficacy. If scarlatina be
-treated in this manner on the second day, or sometimes even on the
-third, though it commence with exceedingly severe symptoms, yet the
-patient will be convalescent in the course of three or four days.
-
-It is not probable that much advantage would be derived from the detail
-of numerous cases to illustrate the modification of treatment, and the
-circumstances under which particular remedies should be chosen. A few
-are subjoined as specimens of the ordinary extent to which bleeding may
-be carried, and of the usual conditions under which wine may be
-exhibited, and of the results, when favourable, produced by each remedy.
-
-
- CASE CXI.
-
-MARY ANN HUNT, æt. 24, servant. Admitted on the 14th day of fever:
-attack commenced with shivering, succeeded by heat, nausea, and
-head-ache; until last night, has had no stool for five days. At present,
-no pain of head or chest; much pain of limbs; sleeps well; severe pain
-over the epigastrium, increased considerably by coughing and by
-pressure; tongue thickly coated with a whitish-yellow fur, through which
-the papillæ appear large and prominent; much thirst; no appetite; no
-stool to-day; skin warm; catamenia regular; pulse 135, of good strength.
-
-V.S. ad ℥xxvj. Haust. Sennæ Sal. quam primum. Acid. Mist. pro potu.
-Mist. Acet. Amm. C. 6tâ q. h.
-
-15th. Pain of limbs quite gone; that of epigastrium also entirely
-removed; no tenderness on the fullest pressure; tongue more clean; less
-thirst; several stools; slept well; skin cool; pulse 84, soft. Blood in
-both basons very buffy. Cont. med.
-
-16th. Continues quite free from pain; tongue nearly clean; two stools;
-skin cool, moist; pulse 88. Pt. med.
-
-18th. No return of pain; tongue clean; pulse 87; four stools; skin
-natural. Pt. med.
-
-22d. Sat up yesterday and the day before, since which the skin has
-become more warm, the pulse more quick, and the tongue more loaded, but
-there is no local pain, and the bowels are open.
-
-23d. Pains of limbs returned; slept ill; tongue loaded at root; pulse
-110.
-
-24th. Pains diminished; pulse 100; tongue still furred; skin warm.
-
-26th. Pains gone; skin cool and moist; tongue the same; two stools;
-pulse 100.
-
-28th. Tongue more clean; skin warm; pulse 76.
-
-35th. Convalescent. Inf. Case. c. Senna bis.
-
-41st. Dismissed cured.
-
-
- CASE CXII.
-
-ELEANOR WELBY, æt. 21, servant. Attacked four days ago with chilliness,
-shivering and pain of head. At present, pain of head gone; mind
-distinct; little or no sleep; eyes suffused and injected; no uneasiness
-of chest nor cough; throat sore, with difficult deglutition; tenderness
-of abdomen on pressure; tongue loaded on body with white fur, extremely
-red at edges and tip; lips and teeth sordid; some thirst; bowels
-regular; pulse 129, of good strength, yet easily compressed;
-efflorescence of skin of dark red colour, approaching to a dusky hue.
-V.S. ad xvj. Hirud. viij. gutturi. Ol. Ricini, ʒiij. quam primum. Mist.
-Acid. pro potu.
-
-6th. No uneasiness of head; slept ill; eyes suffused and injected; face
-swollen; still complains of soreness of throat, which is undiminished;
-tongue moist; teeth sordid; lips sordid and cracked; less thirst; three
-stools; pulse 120, firm; blood very sizy and cupped. Rep. V.S. ad ℥xiij.
-et Hirudines viij. gutturi. Pt. Med.
-
-7th. Expression of countenance more natural; face less swollen; more
-sleep; throat greatly relieved; deglutition quite easy; no tenderness of
-abdomen on full pressure; tongue more clean and moist; lips and teeth
-less sordid; pulse 111; eruption less distinct. Haustus Sennæ Sal. c. m.
-
-8th. No uneasiness of head, throat, or abdomen; sleep natural; tongue
-beginning to clean, much less red; pulse 114; skin exfoliating.
-
-9th. Convalescent.
-
-14th. Has been gradually gaining strength and is now quite well.
-Dismissed cured.
-
-
- CASE CXIII.
-
-MARY JONES, æt. 33, married. Three days ago attacked with shivering,
-succeeded by glows of heat, severe pain in the back and lower
-extremities, with much head-ache. At present, pain of head severe,
-especially over the forehead; mind distinct; scarcely any sleep; no
-uneasiness of chest; some cough; abdomen tender on pressure; tongue not
-much loaded; some thirst; no appetite; one stool; pulse 108, of some
-power.—V.S. ad ℥xvj. Ol. Ricini, ʒiij. q. p. Mist. Acid. pro potu.
-
-Hora 3tia, p. m. Pain of head diminished since the bleeding, but by no
-means removed; much pain of back; some of abdomen; pulse 112, strong,
-full, sharp, and not easily compressed. Blood with firm and thick buff.
-Rep. V.S. ad ℥xvj. statim. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s.
-
-4th. After the second bleeding last night, the pain was entirely
-removed: she slept well, and the pain continued absent until this
-morning, when it returned with great severity, or rather violence. She
-was bled to the extent of fourteen ounces with immediate and great
-relief: blood in both cups with firm buff and proportion of crassamentum
-large: at present, the head is quite free from pain; there is scarcely
-any pain in the back; no tenderness of the abdomen; tongue loaded in
-middle with white fur, moist at edges, of natural colour; four stools;
-pulse 120, weak.—Pt. med.
-
-5th. No return of pain in the head; that of back continues; slept ill;
-tongue much more clean and quite moist; four stools; pulse 120, weak;
-skin warm and damp. Omit. pulv. Pt. alia med.
-
-6th. Pain of head returned with great severity last night, for which she
-was bled to the extent of four ounces with only temporary relief; no
-sleep on account of the severity of the pain; skin hot; entire scalp
-extremely hot; face pallid; nothing unnatural in the appearance of the
-eye, and no intolerance of light; pulse 120, sharp, but easily
-compressed; tongue loaded with white fur; thirst; four stools; buff on
-blood pretty firm.
-
-C. C. ad ℥x. nuchæ. Camphoræ, gr. v. c. Extract. Hyosci. gr. iij. 6ta.
-q. h. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. Lotio frigida capiti raso.
-
-7th. Pain of the head entirely removed since the cupping, and has not
-since returned; slept well; face continues very pallid; tongue loaded
-with white fur in middle; very pallid; pulse 120, of good strength;
-feels quite easy, but very weak. Cont. Pilulæ. Capt. Haust. Quininæ
-Sulph. 6ta. q. h.
-
-8th. No return of pain in the head; some in loins; scarcely any sleep;
-tongue the same; four stools; pulse small and extremely weak. Pt. Med.
-omnia. Capt. Vini Albi, ℥iv. in dies.
-
-9th. Free from pain in the head, back, and every organ; scarcely any
-sleep; much restlessness; delirium; countenance pallid and sunk; feels
-very weak; tongue the same; four stools; pulse 120, not so weak as
-yesterday. Pt. Med. Vini Albi ad ℥viij.
-
-10th. Slept ill; much restlessness and delirium; frequent and deep
-sighing; severe pain in the lower extremities recurring in paroxysms;
-she says the pain is as if some one were rending her limbs from her;
-tongue white, moist; four stools; pulse 110, weak; takes and relishes
-her wine. Statim capiat Haustus Anodynus, c. Liq. Opii Sedativi, gtts.
-xl. Augt. Vini Albi, ad ℥x. Cont. alia med.
-
-11th. Long and tranquil sleep after the draught; less delirium; no
-sighing; no return of pains in the limbs; mind perfectly distinct;
-“feels greatly better;” countenance much more animated; tongue the same;
-pulse 108, more strong and firm, but still easily compressed. Cont. Med.
-Rept. Haustus Anodynus hora decubitus.
-
-12th. Slept well all night; “feels very much better to-day;” no return
-of pain; complains only of sense of lowness; pulse 96, weak. Pt. Med.
-omnia.
-
-13th. Continues to improve in all respects.
-
-14th. Feels stronger; pulse 108, of good strength; occasional muscular
-tremor. Pt.
-
-18th. Continues steadily to improve. Pt. Jus. Bov. lbj. in dies. Vini
-Albi, ℥vj.
-
-23d. Convalescent. Omit. Med. Inf. Cascaril. c. Senna, bis.
-
-33d. Free from complaint. Dismissed cured.
-
-In this case bleeding was carried to the utmost extent to which it could
-be carried with safety, and rather beyond it; but it was one of those
-cases in which less was to be apprehended from the bleeding than from
-the disease.
-
-
- CASE CXIV.
-
-FRANCES JACOB, æt. 17, destitute. Four days ago seized with nausea,
-vomiting, headache, and other febrile symptoms. At present, much pain of
-epigastrium, which is extremely tender on pressure; throat sore;
-deglutition very painful; much vertigo; scarcely any headache; no sleep;
-mind confused through the night; some pain of chest on full inspiration;
-cough, with viscid copious sputa; very considerable dyspnœa; aspect of
-countenance leaden-coloured and oppressed; skin warm, of a dusky,
-unhealthy red colour; tongue very red, not much loaded; bowels
-constipated; pulse 135, tremulous and indistinct. Abradat. Capillitium.
-Hirud. viij. faucibus externis. Postea Empl. Emoll. Empl. Lyttæ nuchæ.
-Inhal. Vap. Aq. Calid. Garg. c. Borat Sodæ. Ol. Ricini ʒiij. q. p. Pulv.
-Aper. Mit. h. s.
-
-5th. No pain of head; no sleep; mind confused; much low talkative
-delirium; still uneasiness of chest on full inspiration; throat less
-painful; deglutition more easy; dyspnœa and cough the same; abdomen
-tender; tongue unchanged; four stools; pulse 120, feeble and indistinct;
-skin covered universally with very unhealthy red, dusky efflorescence.
-Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. Mist. Camphor, ℥iss. c. Tt. Hyosciami, ʒj. et
-Ammon. Carbon, gr. x. 4ta. q. h. Vini Albi, ℥vi. in dies.
-
-6th. Much delirium; some sleep; skin of same colour; rather more
-sensible to-day; says she has no pain of head, but sense of severe
-soreness all over her; much cough; four stools; pulse 120, weak. Pt.
-Med. et Vin.
-
-7th. Slept well; less delirium; “feels much better;” countenance greatly
-improved; skin more warm; colour much more natural; throat still
-painful; deglutition difficult; some tenderness of the epigastrium on
-full pressure; scarcely any over the abdomen; tongue red at edges, brown
-and dry in middle; much thirst; three stools; pulse 108, soft, not very
-weak; lips and mouth surrounded with an herpetic eruption; skin not
-abraded, but covered with soft scab. Pt. Med. omnia.
-
-8th. Slept well; asleep at present; no delirium pulse 108, soft.
-
-9th. Still more improved; pulse 96, soft.
-
-13th. Pulse 87; other symptoms the same. Pt.
-
-14th. Complains more of pain of epigastrium, which is considerably
-tender on pressure; other symptoms the same. Catap. Sinap. epigast. Pt.
-alia.
-
-15th. Epigastrium much relieved; other symptoms the same. Pt.
-
-18th. Convalescent.
-
-24th. Dismissed cured.
-
-
- CASE CXV.
-
-MARGARET SKEY, æt. 37, married. Five days ago attacked with sense of
-cold, shivering, and heat, together with pains in the bones. At present
-complains of pain in small of back; no headache; no pain of chest; some
-cough; no tenderness of abdomen; tongue white and dry; much thirst;
-bowels constipated; sleeps tolerably; pulse 112. Haust. Sennæ Sal. q. p.
-et c. m. Rep. Mist. Acid. pro potu.
-
-6th. Abdomen very tender; tongue red; four stools; much thirst; skin
-warm; face flushed; pulse 100, easily compressed. Hirud. x. abdom.
-Postea Catap. Emoll. Rep. alia.
-
-8th. Much delirium through the night; considerable muscular tremor; pain
-of abdomen gone; tongue tremulous, but not much coated; much thirst;
-four stools; pulse 100, weak; frequent shivering. R. Quininæ Sulph. gr.
-ij. Aq. Rosae, ℥j. M. Sit Haustus, 6tis. q. h. sumendus. Jus. Bov. lbj.
-in dies. Rep. alia.
-
-10th. No sleep; mind confused; two stools passed in bed; urine in bed;
-respiration laborious; pulse 90, weak. Alcohol (brandy) ℥iv. ex Aqua per
-diem. Pt. Med.
-
-13th. Slept better; less delirium; two stools not passed in bed; pulse
-96.
-
-15th. More power; stools not passed in bed; other symptoms the same. Pt.
-
-17th. Strength again rather diminished; tongue rather brown; much
-thirst; pulse 100; no pain. Pt.
-
-21st. Little change, excepting that the tongue is more brown, dry, and
-tremulous; pulse 108, extremely feeble; mind distinct; no delirium; two
-stools. Aug. Alcohol ad ℥vj.
-
-22d. Tongue less brown and more moist; pulse 108, stronger; slept well.
-Pt.
-
-24th. Countenance much more animated; tongue more clean, quite moist,
-still brown towards root; pulse 110. Pt.
-
-25th. Countenance still more improved; tongue more clean; no longer
-brown; pulse 102, weak.
-
-26th. Much improved; tongue nearly clean; two stools; pulse 108, weak.
-
-27th. Gains strength. Alcohol ad ℥iij.
-
-34th. Convalescent, but still very weak. Cerevis. lbj. Pt. alia.
-
-45th. Has been gradually, though very slowly gaining strength; tongue
-now clean; appetite good; bowels regular (Low Diet); 2 ozs. meat daily.
-
-52d. Dismissed cured.
-
-
- II. TREATMENT DURING THE CONVALESCENCE.
-
-The management of the convalescence is one of the most difficult parts
-of the treatment and one of the most unsuccessful, not because there is
-any thing which requires to be done, nor because there is any disease
-which prevents recovery, but because the patient is considered as well
-when he is only convalescent. Of the great tendency there is to relapse
-during the whole of this period few medical men are sufficiently aware,
-and the unprofessional attendants on the sick are totally ignorant of
-it. For a long time the brain, the bronchi, and the intestines remain so
-irritable that the slightest excitement is capable of renewing the
-diseased action which has recently subsided; but without excitement of
-some kind, that renewal never takes place. It is the duty of the
-physician and the nurse to guard the patient from such excitement, which
-they may always do completely; so that whenever there is a relapse, the
-physician, or the nurse, or both must be in fault: as long as they
-perform their duty with judgment and firmness there is no such thing;
-but this part of their duty which is extremely simple, they cannot be
-induced to believe to be of importance: no one who has not seen death
-happen over and over again from the neglect of it will believe it, and
-even those upon whom melancholy experience has impressed the truth most
-strongly, constantly allow themselves to be surprised at the slightness
-of the excitement by which, and the advanced period of the convalescence
-at which relapse may happen. It is not easy for a nurse to resist
-incessant importunity and even reproach; and there are suspicions to
-which a physician is subjected, which, when he sees that they are
-entertained, it requires some moral courage to enable him to bear.
-Without doubt he deserves the worst that can attach to him if he allow
-the caprice, or the impatience, or the injustice of his patient, or any
-earthly consideration to induce him to swerve from the faithful
-discharge of the duty he has undertaken. The unreasonableness of the
-convalescent, should be considered and treated as the delirium of the
-preceding stage.
-
-The mismanagement of the convalescence consists chiefly in allowing the
-patient to rise too early from bed, and to take solid food too soon and
-in too large a quantity; and these are by far the most frequent causes
-of relapse. Were I to place on record all the instances I have seen of
-fatal relapse from these two causes alone, the list would be frightful.
-Many patients, the very day they become convalescent, think they ought
-to be allowed to get up. They feel well, they think they are so; they
-earnestly declare that they are so. They are impatient of bed; they
-imagine it keeps them weak: “if you would but allow me to rise how
-thankful I should be; how much more it would refresh and strengthen me
-than any thing that can now be done.” Such is the language which is
-constantly addressed to the physician in the early period of
-convalescence, and if he be weak enough to yield to it and allow his
-patient to rise, it is a chance if he ever rise again. The most cautious
-and experienced physician sometimes finds himself deceived, falling into
-the same error with his patient, and thinking him stronger than he is.
-Whenever this happens, the physician has great reason for self-reproach,
-_because he ought to allow no risk to be run_. Often, however, in
-private practice, the physician is allowed to have no control whatever
-over the management of the convalescence—he is dismissed as soon as the
-patient is out of apparent and urgent danger; dismissed hastily, often
-to be more hastily recalled to witness the death of him whom every one
-thought to be well.
-
-But if merely rising from bed at too early a period occasion the death
-of great numbers, eating heartily of solid food is a still more frequent
-and certain cause of it. The appetite is generally keen immediately
-after fever has subsided: if animal food be allowed as soon as the
-appetite craves for it relapse is sure to be produced. Often and often
-have I seen fatal cerebral and abdominal inflammation excited in a few
-hours after the commission of this error. I do not expect, by any
-language at my command, to communicate to others my own conviction of
-its danger. I know that such a conviction can be produced in no one who
-has not an opportunity of observing the convalescence of large numbers;
-and I know that no one who has such an opportunity can be without it.
-
-There are three conditions under which this danger is peculiarly
-imminent. First, when the disease has been unusually severe and
-protracted. The more intense the fever and the longer it has lasted, the
-more are all the organs enfeebled, and the longer do they retain the
-irritability of weakness, In this state, anything beyond the gentlest
-stimulus will induce vascular excitement, which will rapidly pass into
-inflammation.
-
-Secondly, when the disease was severe in the commencement, and has been
-promptly subdued by active treatment. Whenever copious bleeding brings
-on a precocious convalescence, that convalescence is invariably
-uncertain and infirm. It is always steady as long as it is properly
-protected, but it has not strength equal to its apparent health: it is
-as tender and fragile as it is sensitive: the least noxious agent
-impresses it; the least stimulus overpowers it. The patient is suddenly
-relieved from a load that oppressed him; the organs react with
-preternatural vigor; they have enough to do to sustain the reaction of
-the system: stimulate them still further by animal food and wine, and
-they will be sure to be over done; and this artificial excitement will
-be as fatal as the excitement of disease. It can be of little
-consequence to the patient whether he die of malaria or of chicken.
-
-Thirdly, when the disease was slight in the commencement and through its
-subsequent progress, but the convalescence proved tardy and imperfect.
-In this case, animal food and wine are pernicious and highly dangerous,
-and often prove more fatal than a severe form of fever. Nothing is
-advantageous or safe for such a patient but perfect rest and quiet and
-the blandest farinaceous diet.
-
-I have now laid before the reader all that I have been able to learn of
-this frequent and most formidable disease. I am conscious that some of
-the views which have been exhibited are opposed to the prevalent
-doctrines of the day, and that some parts of the treatment recommended
-must appear to many unnecessary and hazardous. But since I have
-suggested no doctrine which has not been deduced from a long and careful
-study of the phenomena, and recommended no practice which has not been
-derived from large experience, I trust that the former will not be
-rejected without examination, nor the latter condemned until its failure
-have been witnessed. I have opposed with earnestness, perhaps some may
-think with vehemence, certain opinions and modes of practice which I
-conceive to be pregnant with evil; but as I have never intended the
-slightest reproach or blame to the advocates of the doctrines I condemn,
-so I shall feel truly grateful to any one who will point out any mistake
-into which I may have fallen. Those who have studied this disease with
-the best success are the most sensible how much remains to be done to
-render our knowledge of it perfect and our treatment of it effectual.
-Many are the dark spots that still remain upon this part of the field of
-knowledge; many are the labourers that must work long and skilfully
-before they are removed; while, if the successful investigation of
-medical science in general contribute largely to the well-being of man,
-the successful study of this branch of it must be pre-eminently
-beneficial. It is computed that upwards of one-half of the human race
-perish by this fell disease in one or other of its forms: when this fact
-is coupled with the truth disclosed by the annexed tables, which shew at
-what age this malady is most prevalent and fatal, we become duly
-impressed with the importance of labouring to render our knowledge of
-this dreadful disease complete, that we may lessen, as far as possible,
-the suffering of our common nature, and extend to its utmost limit the
-term of human life, too brief when most protracted, but constantly cut
-short by this great enemy of our race, just as adolescence is ripening
-into manhood.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX.
-
-
-The annexed Tables furnish, in general, their own commentary. The facts
-established by some of them are curious and important. I lay them before
-the reader without observation, at present; but I shall have occasion to
-return to them hereafter.
-
-
- _Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for
- 1825._
-
- ┌──────┬──────┬───────┬─────────┬─────────┬────────────────────┬──────────────┐
- │Weeks.│Admis-│Deaths.│ Heat. │Moisture.│ Wind. │ Weather. │
- │ │sions.│ │ │ │ │ │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 〃 │ 〃 │ 〃 │Max. Min.│Max. Min.│ 〃 │ 〃 │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 1│ 6│ 0│ 54 32½│ 964 685│West. North. │Fine. │
- │ 2│ 9│ 2│ 46 34│ 966 755│North. East. │Hazy. │
- │ 3│ 16│ 1│ 46 34│1000 763│West. North. │Cloudy. │
- │ 4│ 13│ 4│ 50½ 32│ 984 711│North. North-West. │Cloudy. Hazy. │
- │ 5│ 7│ 1│ 51 30│ 839 614│West. West by North.│Fine. │
- │ 6│ 10│ 2│ 48 33│ 971 783│South-West, WbN. │Fine. Hazy. │
- │ 7│ 9│ 1│ 51 38│ 870 820│East. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 8│ 8│ 3│ 47 36│ 962 659│East. North. │Cloudy. │
- │ 9│ 4│ 0│ 46 36│ 932 538│West, North-West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 10│ 8│ 2│ 52 34│ 966 658│West. North. │Dark. C. Hazy.│
- │ 11│ 2│ 0│ 48 31│ 862 452│North. East. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 12│ 5│ 3│ 52 39│1000 598│East. South-East. │C. H. Dark. │
- │ 13│ 12│ 1│ 61 42│ 807 347│East. North. │Fine. Hazy. │
- │ 14│ 10│ 2│ 62 41½│ 904 522│East. North-West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 15│ 19│ 3│ 63 46│ 844 470│North. West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 16│ 7│ 2│ 63 53│ 901 553│West. East. │Cloudy. D. F. │
- │ 17│ 12│ 1│ 71 54│ 801 538│South. East. │Rain. Cloudy. │
- │ 18│ 4│ 1│ 67 52│ 907 516│South-West. North. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 19│ 10│ 1│ 63 53│ 712 516│North. East. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 20│ 11│ 2│ 74 53│ 765 442│East. West. North. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 21│ 6│ 3│ 66 54│ 905 466│West. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 22│ 6│ 3│ 81 63│ 748 449│South. North. West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 23│ 5│ 1│ 80 59│ 774 404│North. East. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 24│ 18│ 2│ 71 57│ 721 421│North-West. South. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 25│ 11│ 2│ 72 58│ 800 472│North-West. East. │Cloudy. Hazy. │
- │ 26│ 8│ 0│ 84 57│ 937 439│West. South-West. │Fine. │
- │ 27│ 10│ 2│ 87 75│ 727 437│East. South-East. │Fine. │
- │ 28│ 13│ 1│ 78 63│ 850 429│East. North. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 29│ 9│ 2│ 86 65│ 660 357│West. South-West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 30│ 15│ 2│ 70 65│ 793 488│West. North-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 31│ 20│ 0│ 69 62│ 855 660│West. North. │Cloudy. │
- │ 32│ 22│ 2│ 70 60│ 793 488│West. North-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 33│ 13│ 1│ 69 62│ 855 575│West. North. │Cloudy. │
- │ 34│ 10│ 1│ 76 60│ 971 635│East. North-East. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 35│ 16│ 5│ 73 61│ 949 598│North. West. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 36│ 12│ 5│ 68 60│ 770 554│West. North. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 37│ 11│ 3│ 69 63│ 971 749│South. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 38│ 19│ 3│ 70 54│ 968 700│South. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 39│ 19│ 2│ 67 52│ 937 717│West. North-East. │Fine. Rain. │
- │ 40│ 10│ 2│ 65 58│ 935 749│West. South-East. │Rain. Cloudy. │
- │ 41│ 13│ 3│ 63 55│ 935 652│West. North. S-East.│Cloudy. │
- │ 42│ 15│ 2│ 63 40│ 937 618│West. West. │Rain. │
- │ 43│ 13│ 3│ 54 37│ 924 627│West. North-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 44│ 15│ 1│ 57 48│ 879 713│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 45│ 10│ 3│ 56 38│ 961 705│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 46│ 14│ 3│ 44 31│1000 557│North. North. │Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 47│ 16│ 4│ 53 36│ 943 781│West. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 48│ 12│ 4│ 62 40│ 968 767│West. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 49│ 14│ 2│ 50 36│1000 790│West. North-East. │Foggy. Cloudy.│
- │ 50│ 11│ 0│ 52 38│1000 762│West. East. │Foggy. │
- │ 51│ 11│ 4│ 51 41│ 967 763│West. South. │Foggy. Cloudy.│
- │ 52│ 9│ 1│ 47 28│ 971 585│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ Total│ 588│ 104│ │ │ │ │
- └──────┴──────┴───────┴─────────┴─────────┴────────────────────┴──────────────┘
-
-
- _Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for
- 1826._
-
- ┌──────┬──────┬───────┬─────────┬─────────┬────────────────────┬──────────────┐
- │Weeks.│Admis-│Deaths.│ Heat. │Moisture.│ Wind. │ Weather. │
- │ │sions.│ │ │ │ │ │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 〃 │ 〃 │ 〃 │Max. Min.│Max. Min.│ 〃 │ 〃 │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 1│ 4│ 0│ 40 33│ 968 794│East. East. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 2│ 10│ 3│ 33 21│ 910 612│North. North. │Hazy. │
- │ 3│ 10│ 1│ 42 17│ 963 745│East. North. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 4│ 9│ 1│ 40 31│1000 783│West. East. │Cloudy. Foggy.│
- │ 5│ 9│ 4│ 50 39│ 966 709│South. East. │Foggy. Cloudy.│
- │ 6│ 15│ 1│ 52 33│1000 702│South. West. │Rain. Fine. │
- │ 7│ 10│ 5│ 52 39│ 968 110│South. South-East. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 8│ 8│ 1│ 52 35│1000 680│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 9│ 7│ 3│ 53 40│ 940 624│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 10│ 7│ 1│ 62 39│ 970 698│West. East. │Fine. │
- │ 11│ 13│ 2│ 52 37│ 963 500│East. North. │Fine. Hazy. │
- │ 12│ 12│ 3│ 57 44│ 87 74│West. North. │Fine. │
- │ 13│ 12│ 2│ 62 56│ 60 76│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 14│ 13│ 1│ 62 58│ 63 81│East. East. │Fine. │
- │ 15│ 9│ 0│ 54 49│ 72 80│West. West. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 16│ 15│ 3│ 56 50│ 61 74│East. North-East. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 17│ 5│ 5│ 58 52│ 59 68│East. East. │Fine. │
- │ 18│ 14│ 0│ 66 56│ 63 69│East. West. │Fine. │
- │ 19│ 10│ 5│ 66 59│ 60 76│East. East. │Rainy. │
- │ 20│ 9│ 1│ 65 59│ 63 68│East. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 21│ 12│ 1│ 73 66│ 60 68│N-East. N-East. │Fine. │
- │ 22│ 18│ 2│ 74 68│ 63 90│West. East. │Fine. │
- │ 23│ 20│ 1│ 74 65│ 80 95│East. North. │Fine. │
- │ 24│ 15│ 1│ 78 74│ 65 86│East. South. │Cloudy. Fine. │
- │ 25│ 14│ 2│ 78 74│ 66 76│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 26│ 14│ 0│ 74 74│ 53 79│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 27│ 17│ 2│ 74 62│ 66 76│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 28│ 14│ 1│ 78 67│ 61 72│North. East. │Fine. │
- │ 29│ 18│ 4│ 78 68│ 59 75│East. North. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 30│ 10│ 3│ 73 49│ 61 92│North. North-East. │Rain. Fine. │
- │ 31│ 19│ 2│ 84 55│ 60 84│East. North-East. │Variable. │
- │ 32│ 16│ 1│ 78 55│ 65 84│North-East. West. │Variable. │
- │ 33│ 20│ 1│ 73 65│ 59 79│West. South-West. │Variable. │
- │ 34│ 15│ 4│ 85 60│ 50 72│West. South-West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 35│ 15│ 2│ 79 57│ 65 75│West. South-West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 36│ 14│ 3│ 73 40│ 69 91│West. South-West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 37│ 19│ 2│ 69 47│ 71 88│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 38│ 19│ 2│ 71 51│ 73 93│East. North-East. │Fine. │
- │ 39│ 15│ 1│ 69 44│ 74 91│East. South-West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 40│ 12│ 3│ 70 41│ 75 88│S-West. S-West. │Foggy. │
- │ 41│ 14│ 1│ 67 42│ 75 89│S-West. S-West. │Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 42│ 14│ 2│ 66 45│ 76 96│South. South-West. │Foggy. Cloudy.│
- │ 43│ 12│ 5│ 69 40│ 80 96│West. North-West. │Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 44│ 17│ 1│ 56 40│ 78 98│West. West. │Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 45│ 10│ 2│ 50 31│ 78 98│West. North-West. │Foggy. │
- │ 46│ 10│ 4│ 53 33│ 82 97│West. North-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 47│ 13│ 1│ 47 38│ 75 93│East. North-East. │Rain. │
- │ 48│ 8│ 1│ 50 30│ 74 93│West. South-West. │Fine. Foggy. │
- │ 49│ 18│ 3│ 54 33│ 82 98│West. North-West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 50│ 16│ 4│ 54 45│ 87 99│S-West. S-West. │Fair. Foggy. │
- │ 51│ 14│ 3│ 49 33│ 85 98│East. North-East. │Foggy. Fair. │
- │ 52│ 11│ 3│ 52 34│ 85 98│N-East. N-East. │Foggy. │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ Total│ 676│ 110│ │ │ │ │
- └──────┴──────┴───────┴─────────┴─────────┴────────────────────┴──────────────┘
-
-
- _Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for
- 1827._
-
- ┌──────┬──────┬───────┬─────────┬─────────┬────────────────────┬──────────────┐
- │Weeks.│Admis-│Deaths.│ Heat. │Moisture.│ Wind. │ Weather. │
- │ │sions.│ │ │ │ │ │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 〃 │ 〃 │ 〃 │Max. Min.│Max. Min.│ 〃 │ 〃 │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 1│ 10│ 1│ 49 18│ 98 74│West. North. │Fair. │
- │ 2│ 7│ 2│ 53 31│ 98 85│West. South-West. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 3│ 14│ 0│ 53 25│ 96 76│West. North-East. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 4│ 8│ 1│ 42 18│ 95 81│West. North-East. │Cloudy. Foggy.│
- │ 5│ 12│ 3│ 46 27│ 98 75│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 6│ 6│ 1│ 41 28│ 93 75│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 7│ 9│ 3│ 40 19│ 87 80│East. North-East. │Fine. │
- │ 8│ 13│ 1│ 40 29│ 89 72│East. North-East. │Fair. Cloudy. │
- │ 9│ 10│ 0│ 50 30│ 98 82│West. South-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 10│ 10│ 1│ 56 32│ 93 78│West. South-West. │Fair. Rain. │
- │ 11│ 12│ 0│ 56 32│ 88 77│West. North-West. │Fair. │
- │ 12│ 4│ 0│ 48 35│ 97 75│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 13│ 10│ 1│ 58 35│ 89 76│West. West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 14│ 2│ 0│ 67 46│ 98 75│West. North-East. │Fine. │
- │ 15│ 8│ 0│ 58 41│ 92 72│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 16│ 19│ 4│ 52 39│ 92 78│East. North-East. │Cloudy.Rain. │
- │ 17│ 6│ 2│ 71 34│ 88 68│Variable. Variable. │Fair. │
- │ 18│ 11│ 1│ 72 44│ 95 79│West. South-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 19│ 14│ 1│ 59 34│ 94 72│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 20│ 16│ 0│ 70 46│ 88 75│East. South-West. │Fair. │
- │ 21│ 12│ 2│ 72 45│ 90 73│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 22│ 21│ 0│ 70 45│ 92 78│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 23│ 9│ 0│ 70 48│ 92 74│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 24│ 23│ 2│ 75 52│ 92 71│East. West. │Fair. │
- │ 25│ 13│ 1│ 74 50│ 87 73│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 26│ 23│ 5│ 72 58│ 98 77│West. West. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 27│ 13│ 1│ 79 55│ 92 74│Variable. Variable. │Fair. │
- │ 28│ 15│ 0│ 80 53│ 82 70│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 29│ 15│ 2│ 76 56│ 82 68│East. East. │Cloudy. │
- │ 30│ 17│ 1│ 84 57│ 92 78│West. West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 31│ 17│ 3│ 80 53│ 84 72│West. West. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 32│ 17│ 2│ 72 50│ 86 74│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 33│ 16│ 2│ 72 54│ 93 74│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 34│ 18│ 5│ 78 52│ 90 75│East. North-East. │Fair. │
- │ 35│ 20│ 2│ 78 53│ 93 78│East. North-East. │Cloudy. Fair. │
- │ 36│ 14│ 6│ 68 51│ 96 80│East. Fair. │Cloudy. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ North-East. │ │
- │ 37│ 17│ 6│ 71 51│ 91 78│East. Fair. │Cloudy. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ North-East. │ │
- │ 38│ 16│ 1│ 64 49│ 91 81│West. Fair. │Cloudy. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ South-West. │ │
- │ 39│ 14│ 0│ 64 52│ 100 87│West. South-East. │Cloudy. │
- │ 40│ 16│ 2│ 61 47│ 100 95│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 41│ 13│ 2│ 64 43│ 98 86│West. West. │Fair. Cloudy. │
- │ 42│ 15│ 2│ 63 57│ 98 85│West. South-East. │Foggy. │
- │ 43│ 16│ 2│ 60 37│ 100 89│S-East. S-West. │Fair. Cloudy. │
- │ 44│ 23│ 2│ 57 39│ 99 78│West. North-West. │Foggy. │
- │ 45│ 13│ 3│ 60 39│ 98 92│West. North-West. │Fair. Cloudy. │
- │ 46│ 5│ 0│ 52 40│ 100 86│East. South-East. │Foggy. │
- │ 47│ 12│ 1│ 45 25│ 100 83│N-West. N-West. │Fair. │
- │ 48│ 15│ 3│ 53 41│ 100 96│West. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 49│ 9│ 0│ 56 36│ 97 80│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 50│ 9│ 2│ 55 38│ 98 86│West. West. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 51│ 9│ 3│ 55 39│ 98 97│West. West. │Rain. │
- │ 52│ 17│ 1│ 52 31│ 98 87│West. South-West. │Foggy. │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ Total│ 676│ 87│ │ │ │ │
- └──────┴──────┴───────┴─────────┴─────────┴────────────────────┴──────────────┘
-
-
- _Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for
- 1828._
-
- ┌──────┬──────┬───────┬─────────┬─────────┬────────────────────┬──────────────┐
- │Weeks.│Admis-│Deaths.│ Heat. │Moisture.│ Wind. │ Weather. │
- │ │sions.│ │ │ │ │ │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 〃 │ 〃 │ 〃 │Max. Min.│Max. Min.│ 〃 │ 〃 │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ 1│ 8│ 3│ 50 33│ 98 96│East. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 2│ 9│ 0│ 47 28│ 99 85│East. South-East. │Cloudy. Snow. │
- │ 3│ 11│ 1│ 56 38│ 99 86│East. North-East. │Rain. Cloudy. │
- │ 4│ 14│ 3│ 53 40│ 98 90│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 5│ 11│ 1│ 54 39│ 96 90│West. West. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 6│ 8│ 2│ 54 28│ 98 90│West. East. │Cloudy. Snow. │
- │ 7│ 11│ 0│ 41 28│ 98 90│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 8│ 13│ 2│ 52 36│ 98 90│East. West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 9│ 7│ 1│ 57 38│ 98 94│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 10│ 11│ 1│ 55 31│ 98 76│East. North-West. │Fair. │
- │ 11│ 18│ 2│ 62 44│ 94 86│West. West. │Fine. │
- │ 12│ 5│ 0│ 64 36│ 98 92│West. West. │Fair. Hail. │
- │ 13│ 13│ 2│ 52 33│ 98 92│East. North-East. │Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 14│ 8│ 3│ 53 35│ 98 82│East. North. │Cloudy. │
- │ 15│ 15│ 1│ 61 38│ 98 95│East. South-West. │Rain. Fine. │
- │ 16│ 14│ 4│ 61 43│ 98 94│West. West. │Rain. │
- │ 17│ 14│ 2│ 65 39│ 97 80│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 18│ 16│ 3│ 68 45│ 98 75│West. East. │Fair. │
- │ 19│ 10│ 0│ 66 43│ 98 80│East. West. │Fair. │
- │ 20│ 16│ 2│ 68 47│ 92 85│East. South-East. │Fair. │
- │ 21│ 8│ 2│ 68 47│ 98 90│East. South-East. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 22│ 8│ 1│ 71 52│ 98 78│West. West. │Fair. │
- │ 23│ 3│ 0│ 70 51│ 94 77│West. West. │Fair. Rain. │
- │ 24│ 13│ 1│ 73 54│ 78 75│N-West. N-West. │Fair. │
- │ 25│ 13│ 1│ 73 56│ 96 75│S-East. S-East. │Rain. Fair. │
- │ 26│ 12│ 1│ 80 55│ 96 79│N-West. N-West. │Fine. │
- │ 27│ 8│ 1│ 79 56│ 100 91│West. West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 28│ 18│ 0│ 77 65│ 74 43│S-West. S-West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 29│ 11│ 1│ 73 55│ 66 48│N-West. N-West. │Cloudy. │
- │ 30│ 24│ 2│ 73 51│ 50 49│N-West. N-West. │Fine. │
- │ 31│ 13│ 0│ 72 66│ 51 49│East. East. │Rain. Fine. │
- │ 32│ 14│ 2│ 74 53│ 50 49│S-East. S-East. │Fine. │
- │ 33│ 18│ 3│ 74 44│ 52 40│West. South-West. │Cloudy. Rain. │
- │ 34│ 12│ 2│ 68 42│ 50 47│S-East. S-East. │Fine. │
- │ 35│ 22│ 1│ 73 56│ 54 50│S-West. S-West. │Foggy. Fine. │
- │ 36│ 11│ 4│ 66 45│ 55 51│West by North. West.│Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 37│ 16│ 1│ 63 48│ 56 51│West. West. │Foggy. Fine. │
- │ 38│ 10│ 3│ 63 39│ 55 50│N-West. N-West. │Foggy. Fine. │
- │ 39│ 17│ 4│ 63 38│ 68 52│East. South-West. │Foggy. Fine. │
- │ 40│ 14│ 4│ 53 39│ 68 55│East. South-East. │Fine. │
- │ 41│ 8│ 0│ 53 26│ 67 55│S-East. S-East. │Fine.Foggy. │
- │ 42│ 13│ 2│ 56 26│ 75 55│S-East. S-East. │Fine. │
- │ 43│ 8│ 1│ 63 42│ 64 55│East. North-West. │Fine. Foggy. │
- │ 44│ 5│ 5│ 54 39│ 68 58│East. North. N-East.│Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 45│ 4│ 0│ 44 35│ 67 53│S-East. South. │Fine. Foggy. │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ S-East. │ │
- │ 46│ 12│ 3│ 54 28│ 74 63│East. South-East. │Rain. Cloudy. │
- │ 47│ 7│ 1│ 56 41│ 68 56│S-West. S-West. │Fine. │
- │ 48│ 13│ 0│ 59 35│ 68 56│West. North-West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 49│ 13│ 1│ 53 38│ 65 64│West. S. South-West.│Foggy. Rain. │
- │ 50│ 10│ 1│ 56 40│ 68 65│West. West. │Fine. Cloudy. │
- │ 51│ 9│ 0│ 57 41│ 65 65│N-West. W. N-West. │Fine. │
- │ 52│ 9│ 0│ 45 36│ 69 65│S-West. S-East. │Foggy. Rain. │
- ├──────┼──────┼───────┼─────────┼─────────┼────────────────────┼──────────────┤
- │ Total│ 597│ 81│ │ │ │ │
- └──────┴──────┴───────┴─────────┴─────────┴────────────────────┴──────────────┘
-
-
-Occupation of Patients, with reference to Susceptibility, for one year.
-
- Servants 150
- Labourers 126
- Shoemakers 18
- Tailors 17
- Fruiterers 13
- Carpenters 10
- Weavers 10
- Bricklayers 8
- Bakers 6
- Dress Makers 6
- Painters 5
- Plasterers 5
- Sailors 5
- Printers 3
- Sawyers 3
- Butchers 3
- Porters 3
- Sweeps 3
- Chair Women 3
- Pot-boys 3
- Shop-boys 3
- Silversmiths 2
- Grocers 2
- Furriers 2
- Curriers 2
- Woodmen 2
- Grooms 2
- Skinners 2
- Fishmongers 2
- Gardeners 2
- Corkcutters 2
- Farmers 2
- Braidmakers 2
- Watchmakers 2
- Cagemakers 1
- Guncapmakers 1
- Blacksmiths 1
- Combmakers 1
- Coppersmiths 1
- Firemen 1
- Distillers 1
- Masons 1
- Cabinetmakers 1
- Milkmen 1
- Saddlers 1
- Ferulemakers 1
- Coachbuilders 1
- Mercers 1
- Bargebuilders 1
- Cheesemongers 1
- Sawmakers 1
- Clockmakers 1
- Upholstresses 1
- Poulterers 1
- Destitute 230
- ———
- Total 679
-
-
- Sex of Patient, with reference to Susceptibility.
-
- ┌────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
- │ 1825. │ 1826. │ 1827. │ 1828. │
- ├────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┤
- │Males 289│Males 325│Males 337│Males 278│
- │Females, 299│Females, 351│Females, 339│Females, 319│
- │ ———│ ———│ ———│ ———│
- │ Total, 588│ Total, 676│ Total, 676│ Total, 597│
- └────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┘
-
-
- Sex of Patient, with reference to Mortality.
-
- ┌────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
- │ 1825. │ 1826. │ 1827. │ 1828. │
- ├────────────┼────────────┼────────────┼────────────┤
- │Males 53│Males 56│Males 48│Males 33│
- │Females, 51│Females, 54│Females, 38│Females, 48│
- │ ———│ ———│ ———│ ———│
- │ Total, 104│ Total, 110│ Total, 86│ Total, 81│
- └────────────┴────────────┴────────────┴────────────┘
-
-
- Locality of Patient, with reference to Susceptibility.
-
- Country Unhealthy. Town Unhealthy. Town Healthy.
-
- Servants 12 31 96
- Labourers 0 88 48
- Destitute 0 43 50
-
-
- Table of Ages, with reference to Susceptibility.
-
- ┌────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
- │ Age, for │ Age, for │ Age, for │ Age, for │
- │ 1825. │ 1826. │ 1827. │ 1828. │
- ├────────┬───┼────────┬───┼────────┬───┼────────┬───┤
- │Under 10│ 42│Under 10│ 27│Under 10│ 25│Under 10│ 31│
- │ 15│ 67│ 15│ 87│ 15│ 70│ 15│ 80│
- │ 20│172│ 20│170│ 20│163│ 20│136│
- │ 25│133│ 25│143│ 25│164│ 25│107│
- │ 30│ 81│ 30│102│ 30│107│ 30│ 84│
- │ 35│ 29│ 35│ 46│ 35│ 35│ 35│ 47│
- │ 40│ 28│ 40│ 37│ 40│ 50│ 40│ 45│
- │ 45│ 10│ 45│ 28│ 45│ 20│ 45│ 21│
- │ 50│ 10│ 50│ 13│ 50│ 13│ 50│ 17│
- │ 55│ 10│ 55│ 7│ 55│ 8│ 55│ 6│
- │ 60│ 1│ 60│ 5│ 60│ 13│ 60│ 14│
- │ 65│ 1│ 65│ 3│ 65│ 2│ 65│ 6│
- │ 70│ 2│ 70│ 3│ 70│ 4│ 70│ 1│
- │ 75│ 1│ 75│ 4│ 75│ 2│ 75│ 2│
- │ 80│ 1│ 80│ 1│ 80│ 0│ 80│ 0│
- │ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│
- │ │———│ │———│ │———│ │———│
- │ Total │588│ Total │676│ Total │676│ Total │597│
- ╘════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╛
-
-
- Table of Ages, with reference to Mortality.
-
- ┌────────────┬────────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
- │ Age, for │ Age, for │ Age, for │ Age, for │
- │ 1825. │ 1826. │ 1827. │ 1828. │
- ├────────┬───┼────────┬───┼────────┬───┼────────┬───┤
- │Under 10│ 3│Under 10│ 1│Under 10│ 5│Under 10│ 4│
- │ 15│ 5│ 15│ 10│ 15│ 5│ 15│ 5│
- │ 20│ 29│ 20│ 35│ 20│ 16│ 20│ 12│
- │ 25│ 25│ 25│ 14│ 25│ 17│ 25│ 11│
- │ 30│ 17│ 30│ 20│ 30│ 18│ 30│ 12│
- │ 35│ 2│ 35│ 3│ 35│ 1│ 35│ 4│
- │ 40│ 7│ 40│ 7│ 40│ 10│ 40│ 7│
- │ 45│ 6│ 45│ 4│ 45│ 5│ 45│ 5│
- │ 50│ 4│ 50│ 5│ 50│ 4│ 50│ 7│
- │ 55│ 3│ 55│ 1│ 55│ 2│ 55│ 1│
- │ 60│ 0│ 60│ 3│ 60│ 1│ 60│ 4│
- │ 65│ 0│ 65│ 2│ 65│ 0│ 65│ 3│
- │ 70│ 2│ 70│ 1│ 70│ 0│ 70│ 0│
- │ 75│ 1│ 75│ 2│ 75│ 2│ 75│ 1│
- │ 80│ 0│ 80│ 2│ 80│ 0│ 80│ 0│
- │ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│ 85│ 0│
- │ │———│ │———│ │———│ │———│
- │ Total │104│ Total │110│ Total │ 86│ Total │ 76│
- ╘════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╧════════╧═══╛
-
-
- _Relation between Date of Attack, Admission and Cure, in 600 Cases._
-
- ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
- │ Admitted on. │ Dismissed on │Duration of Disease.│
- ├────────────────┬───┼────────────────┬───┼────────────────┬───┤
- │1st Day of Fever│ 2│11th Day │ 11│11 Days │ 11│
- │ │ │12 │ 2│12 │ 2│
- │2 │ 6│13 │ 6│13 │ 6│
- │ │ │14 │ 8│14 │ 8│
- │3 │ 29│15 │ 4│15 │ 4│
- │ │ │16 │ 9│16 │ 9│
- │4 │ 47│17 │ 7│17 │ 7│
- │ │ │18 │ 15│18 │ 15│
- │5 │ 54│19 │ 14│19 │ 14│
- │ │ │20 │ 15│20 │ 15│
- │6 │ 43│21 │ 18│21 │ 18│
- │ │ │22 │ 11│22 │ 11│
- │7 │138│23 │ 19│23 │ 19│
- │ │ │24 │ 27│24 │ 27│
- │8 │ 35│25 │ 15│25 │ 15│
- │ │ │26 │ 17│26 │ 17│
- │9 │ 25│27 │ 24│27 │ 24│
- │ │ │28 │ 22│28 │ 22│
- │10 │ 20│29 │ 25│29 │ 25│
- │ │ │30 │ 13│30 │ 13│
- │11 │ 4│31 │ 13│31 │ 13│
- │ │ │32 │ 15│32 │ 15│
- │12 │ 7│33 │ 12│33 │ 19│
- │ │ │34 │ 12│34 │ 12│
- │13 │ 4│35 │ 16│35 │ 16│
- │ │ │36 │ 13│36 │ 13│
- │14 │ 71│37 │ 24│37 │ 24│
- │ │ │38 │ 14│38 │ 14│
- │15 │ 11│39 │ 12│39 │ 12│
- │ │ │40 │ 10│40 │ 10│
- │17 │ 3│41 │ 8│41 │ 8│
- │ │ │42 │ 7│42 │ 7│
- │18 │ 2│43 │ 7│43 │ 7│
- │ │ │44 │ 15│44 │ 15│
- │19 │ 1│45 │ 7│45 │ 7│
- │ │ │46 │ 6│46 │ 6│
- │21 │ 43│47 │ 7│47 │ 7│
- │ │ │48 │ 3│48 │ 3│
- │28 │ 8│49 │ 8│49 │ 8│
- │ │ │50 │ 6│50 │ 6│
- │30 │ 2│51 │ 7│51 │ 7│
- │ │ │52 │ 4│52 │ 4│
- │42 │ 2│53 │ 2│53 │ 2│
- │ │ │54 │ 5│54 │ 5│
- │56 │ 1│55 │ 1│55 │ 1│
- │ │ │56 │ 1│56 │ 1│
- │60 │ 1│57 │ 4│57 │ 4│
- │ │ │58 │ 3│58 │ 3│
- │Unknown │ 21│59 │ 2│59 │ 2│
- │ │ │60 │ 5│60 │ 5│
- │ │ │62 │ 1│62 │ 1│
- │ │ │Beyond 62 │ 24│Beyond 62 │ 24│
- │ │ │Unknown │ 16│Unknown │ 16│
- └────────────────┴───┴────────────────┴───┴────────────────┴───┘
-
-
- Relation between date of Attack, Admission, and Death, for one year,
- comprehending 84 Cases.
-
-
- Admitted on
-
- 3d day of fever 5
- 4 4
- 5 2
- 6 4
- 7 11
- 8 6
- 9 3
- 10 3
- 11 2
- 13 1
- 14 13
- 17 1
- 21 16
- 28 5
- 30 1
- 42 3
- Unknown 4
-
- ──────────────────────────
-
- Died on
-
- 7th day of fever 1
- 8 2
- 9 2
- 10 4
- 11 7
- 12 2
- 13 1
- 14 6
- 15 2
- 16 2
- 17 2
- 18 1
- 19 1
- 20 5
- 21 3
- 22 1
- 23 2
- 24 4
- 25 2
- 26 1
- 27 3
- 28 3
- 29 1
- 30 3
- 31 4
- 32 1
- 33 1
- 35 4
- 36 2
- 37 2
- 40 1
- 41 1
- 42 1
- 60 2
- Unknown 4
-
- ──────────────────────────
-
- Died on
-
- 1st day after admission 4
- 2 5
- 3 11
- 4 8
- 5 5
- 6 8
- 7 5
- 8 2
- 9 1
- 10 5
- 11 4
- 12 4
- 13 1
- 14 7
- 15 1
- 16 3
- 18 1
- 19 2
- 20 1
- 28 1
- 30 1
- 34 2
- 44 1
-
-
- Proportions of Type out of 300 Cases.
-
- Synochus 235
- Typhus Mitior 21
- Typhus Gravior 1
- Scarlatina 40
- Intermittent 1
- Remittent 2
-
-
- Proportions of Internal Characteristic Affection out of 300 Cases.
-
- Cerebral 66
- Thoracic 79
- Abdominal 60
- Mixed 95
-
-
- Proportions of External Accidental Affection out of 300 Cases.
-
- Erysipelatous 11
- Glandular 6
- Cynancheal 5
- Herpetic 3
- Laryngeal 1
- Phlegmatial 1
- Rheumatic 1
- ───────────────────────────────────────
- Miscarriage 7
- Preternatural Cutaneous Sensibility 4
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- PRINTED BY G. HAYDEN, LITTLE COLLEGE STREET, WESTMINSTER.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Observations on the Treatment of Epidemic Fever, &c. By Henry
- Clutterbuck, M.D., p. 3–9.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Sydenham’s Works, p. 1, 2, &c.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Cullen, First Lines, S. 46.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Pathological Observations, Part II. on Continued Fever, &c. By W.
- Stoker, M.D. p. 32.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Ibid. p. 34.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Pathological Observations, &c. pp. 73, 74.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- A Practical Treatise on the Typhus or Adynamic Fever, by John Burne,
- M.D.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Pathological Observations on Continued Fever, &c. p. 110.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Practical Treatise, &c. p. 161.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- A Lecture upon Typhus Fever, by W. R. Clanny, M.D. p. 12.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Ibid., p. 16.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of the Epidemic Fever, by
- Henry Clutterbuck, M.D. p. 5, 6.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- See a paper in the Medico-Chirurgical Review, for 1828, entitled An
- Eclectic Review on Fever.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Broussais’ exposition of his own doctrine in his own words is as
- follows. On doit regarder comme nécessairement affectés, dans une
- maladie, les tissus dont l’irritation est constante durant la vie, et
- qui en offrent toujours des traces après la mort. Or, les phénomènes
- de la sur-excitation des muqueuses, et surtout de la gastrique, ne
- manquent jamais, dans le typhus fébrile, puisque leurs symptômes sont
- identiques avec ceux des gastro-entérites sporadiques; tandis que ceux
- des autres phlegmasies ne s’y montrent qu’accidentellement. Ensuite,
- lorsque les personnes affectées de typhus out le malheur de succomber,
- on trouve toujours ces membranes rouges, brunes ou noires, pendant que
- les autres tissus n’offrent d’alteration que dans certaines
- circonstances accidentelles: done l’irritation des membranes muqueuses
- est inséparable du typhus fébrile.
-
- Les typhus fébriles sont donc des gastro-entérites, ordinairement
- compliquèes de catarrhes pulmonaires; ces deux phlegmasies sont le
- résultat d’un véritable empoisonnement, plus ou moins analogue à celui
- des champignons et des poissons gâtées, et qui en a tous les
- caractères.
-
- Le foie, principal annexe du canal digestif, est irrité
- secondairement, et sa sécrétion est plus ou moins augmentée. Plus le
- miasme est actif, plus cette lésion est marquée le typhus carcéraires
- plus la chaleur est intense, plus l’irritation du foie est
- inflammatoire (la fièvre jaune.)
-
- Le cerveau n’est inflammé primitivement que par l’effet de certaines
- circonstances qui ont fait prédominer l’action dans son tissu; telles
- sont les affections morales, la nostalgie, les chaleurs, etc.; mais il
- souffre toujours beaucoup par sympathie et quelquefois au point que
- son irritation passe au degré de la phlegmasie, et devient aussi grave
- que si elle était primitive.—_Examen. de la Doctrine Medicale, par F.
- J. V. Broussais, p. 112–114._
-
- Il n’y a de difference entre les gastrites qui sont ici dépeintes et
- ces fièvres, que celle qui dépend du degré; car les gastrites aigües
- qu’on ne peut pas arrêter arrivent toujours ou à l’ataxic ou a
- l’adynamic, dont les symptômes ne different pas de ceux du typhus.
- D’ailleurs, la gastrite dont il est ici question est déjà pour les
- ontologists, une fièvre ataxique.—_Histoire des Phlegmasies, par F. J.
- V. Broussais, Vol. III. p. 39._
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of Epidemic Fever, &c.
- pp. 11–12.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Thus Dr. Stoker states that the remedies “may be arranged according to
- their relative importance in the treatment of fever, in the following
- order; viz. In mixed fever, 1. Cleanliness. 2. Ventilation. 3. Cool
- regimen. 4. Plentiful dilution. 5. Purgatives. 6. Topical bleeding. 7.
- Antimonial or James’s Powder. In Typhoid Fever. 1. Yeast or barm. 2.
- Wine. 3. Aperients. 4. Emetics. 5. Blisters. 6. Tepid or cold
- affusion. 7. Peruvian bark.”—_Pathological Observations &c., p. 111._
- In neither of these catalogues is general bleeding mentioned at all:
- in the first, topical bleeding is mentioned, but it is placed the last
- but one in the list, while in the second, allusion even to topical
- bleeding is wholly omitted. And Dr. Clanny states that the first
- proposition relative to the cure is how to restore sanguification, or
- how to afford fresh chyle to the blood; that although in full habits,
- at the commencement of typhus fever, general blood-letting is often
- attended with good effects, yet we should remember that if we take one
- ounce too much, we may thereby prevent sanguification altogether; that
- therefore it is better to have a sufficient quantity of lymphatic
- blood in the system them to run the risk of having too little of the
- pabulum vitæ, for the purpose of carrying on the functions of life,
- and that in fact venesection is not called for in nine cases out of
- ten of typhus fever. Let me caution young practitioners, he adds,
- against the repeated use of the lancet, when the buffy coat shews
- itself, for in many cases, which have come under my notice, I have
- observed the buffy coat to be present after repeated bleedings, AND
- WHICH COULD NOT BE ATTRIBUTED TO ANY OTHER CAUSE THAN
- DEBILITY.—_Lecture on Fever, pp. 21–2–3._
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- It is remarkable that the word which expresses fever, both in the
- Greek and the Latin languages, signifies to burn or to boil, and it is
- probable that this state of the system is denoted in most modern
- languages by some term bearing a similar meaning.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- A Treatise on Fevers, &c. By A. P. Wilson Philip, M.D. p. 10.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Treatise on Fever, &c. By A. P. Wilson Philip, M.D. p. 12.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- Sydenham’s Works, Chap. 3, p. 11.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Sir John Pringle on the Diseases of the Army, p. 66, &c.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- In scarlatina the affection of the skin modifies the febrile symptoms,
- as has just been said, considerably: in small-pox exceedingly. If, on
- this account, any one enamoured of nosological distinctions should
- wish to separate these varieties of disease, it might be done by
- dividing continued fever into—
-
- 1. Continued fever without an eruption;
-
- Synochus mitior, Typhus mitior,
- —— gravior, —— gravior:
-
- 2. Continued fever with an eruption;
-
- Scarlatina, Variola,
- Synochodes, Synochodes,
- Typhodes, Typhodes:
-
- and so on of all the Exanthemata.
-
- Although the eruption may, and without doubt does give rise to some
- peculiar symptoms and so modifies the fever, yet the true character of
- the disease, or _the disease as a subject of medical treatment_,
- depends entirely on the nature, that is in truth on the intensity of
- the fever. If, therefore, the Exanthemata can find no place under the
- genus fever consistently with the principles of nosological
- arrangement, it appears to me that these artificial distinctions ought
- to be abandoned: because it is better to reject nosology, than to
- overlook or to mistake pathology.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of Epidemic Fever, by
- Henry Clutterbuck, M.D. p. 15.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- See pathology—chest cases. John Potter.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- See page 107.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- See page 163, 1.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- See page 163, 2.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- Those morbid appearances which, not being constant in fever, must be
- considered as accidental, are placed in brackets throughout this
- chapter.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- See Case L.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- See page 51. et seq.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Observations on the Diseases of the Army, by Sir John Pringle, Bart.,
- p. 11. et seq.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Observations on the Diseases of the Army, by Sir John Pringle, Bart.,
- p. 36.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- See a Memoir on Contagion, more especially as it respects the Yellow
- Fever, &c., by N. Potter, M.D., Baltimore.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- In pursuing these researches, I hope to have the advantage of the
- co-operation of my friend Dr. Dill.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- It would be trifling, while treating of so momentous a subject as the
- proper management of fever, which requires the prompt, vigorous, and
- yet cautious exhibition of the most powerful remedies, to spend any
- time in discussing the merits of saline, refrigerant, diaphoretic,
- antimonial medicines, and the rest of the apparatus, which
- unfortunately continues to hold the place of direct, honourable, and
- well-earned (if any thing can be well-earned) remuneration to the
- practitioner.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Watchful of the convalescence as experience had taught us it is
- necessary to be after so severe an attack, still he was allowed to put
- himself too forward. When to all appearance recovered, though still
- weak, he undertook a journey of fifty miles, that he might the more
- completely re-establish his health in the country. He had not arrived
- at his journey’s end an hour before he relapsed. He was again bled,
- and the cold dash was applied a second time with success. From the
- commencement to the termination of the disease, 120 pounds of blood
- were abstracted in this case.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- 2. Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as
- printed.
- 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Treatise on Fever, by Thomas Southwood-Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: A Treatise on Fever
-
-Author: Thomas Southwood-Smith
-
-Release Date: October 4, 2019 [EBook #60419]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TREATISE ON FEVER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Chris Curnow, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='large'>A</span><br /> TREATISE ON FEVER.</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>SOUTHWOOD SMITH, M.D.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xsmall'>PHYSICIAN TO THE LONDON FEVER HOSPITAL.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>LONDON:</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>LONGMAN, REES, ORME, BROWN, AND GREEN,</div>
- <div><span class='small'>PATER-NOSTER ROW.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>1830.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>PRINTED BY G. HAYDEN,</div>
- <div><span class='small'>Little College Street, Westminster.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_i'>i</span><span class='small'>TO</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>HIS GRACE</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE DUKE OF SOMERSET,</span></div>
- <div>PRESIDENT;</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>TO</span></div>
- <div>THE VICE-PRESIDENTS,</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>TO</span></div>
- <div>THE TREASURERS,</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>AND TO THE</span></div>
- <div>OTHER GENTLEMEN CONSTITUTING THE COMMITTEE,</div>
- <div class='c003'>Of the London Fever Hospital;</div>
- <div class='c003'>IN TESTIMONY</div>
- <div class='c003'>OF HIS ADMIRATION OF THE DILIGENCE</div>
- <div><span class='small'>WITH WHICH</span></div>
- <div>THEY LABOUR TO PROMOTE THE PROSPERITY,</div>
- <div><span class='small'>AND THE</span></div>
- <div>CARE WITH WHICH THEY WATCH OVER THE INTERESTS OF THIS INSTITUTION;</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>WHICH,</span></div>
- <div>IN THE MAGNITUDE OF THE BENEFITS IT CONFERS,</div>
- <div><span class='small'>NO LESS THAN</span></div>
- <div>IN THE INEXPENSIVENESS OF THE MEANS</div>
- <div><span class='small'>BY WHICH,</span></div>
- <div>THROUGH THEIR ECONOMY, IT IS ENABLED TO SECURE THEM,</div>
- <div class='c003'>IS EQUALLED BY FEW ESTABLISHMENTS,</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>AND</span></div>
- <div>SURPASSED BY NONE;</div>
- <div class='c003'>THIS WORK IS INSCRIBED</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>THE AUTHOR.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The following Work is wholly of a practical
-nature: its object is to ascertain the real
-phenomena of Fever, and the most safe and
-effectual treatment of the disease. It was
-found impossible to include in this volume
-some researches of a statistical nature which
-it was at first intended to incorporate in the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On looking over the account which has
-been given of the phenomena, I find that,
-by an oversight, I have omitted to make
-any mention of the peculiar odour which
-belongs to a fever-patient. It is so characteristic
-that a person, familiar with the disease,
-might in many cases be able to pronounce,
-merely from the odour of the effluvia
-that arises from the body, whether the
-disease were fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>I cannot allow this work to go forth to
-the world, without expressing my obligation
-to Dr. <span class='sc'>Dill</span>, for the great assistance he has
-afforded me in the collection and arrangement
-of the cases which illustrate the symptoms
-and the pathology, and in the construction
-of the tables. And I am happy to avail
-myself of this occasion to bear my testimony
-to the excellent history which is drawn up
-of every case admitted into the house; to
-the completeness of the record which is kept
-of the morbid appearances on inspection; to
-the care which is taken of the sick, in the
-absence of the physicians; and to the able
-and zealous manner in which, as the resident
-medical officer of the Fever Hospital,
-he performs the arduous duties of his office.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>S. S.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>36, New Broad Street</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Dec. 1829.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c008' colspan='2'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c009'><span class='small'>Page.</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Dedication</span></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_i'>i</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Preface</span></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_iii'>iii</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER I.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Further Investigation of Fever necessary</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Facilities afforded by the Fever Hospital for prosecuting the Study</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_5'>5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Antient Doctrines relative to the Nature and Seat of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_7'>7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Hippocrates, Galen, Sydenham</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Modern Doctrines relative to the Nature and Seat of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_13'>13</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cullen, Brown, Stoker, Burne, Clanny, Clutterbuck, Broussais</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Errors common to all these Theorists</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Questions to be solved before Fever can be understood</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Precise Object of Investigation</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_34'>34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Proper Mode of conducting it</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER II.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Varieties of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Common Phenomena</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_42'>42</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Importance of analyzing the Assemblage of the Symptoms, in order to ascertain the Common Phenomena</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_43'>43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Results of the Analysis</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Organs always diseased in Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_48'>48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Functions always deranged in Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_49'>49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Fever not Inflammation</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_50'>50</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Distinction between Fever and Inflammation</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_52'>52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Common Phenomena of Fever exemplified in Plague</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_53'>53</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>in Yellow Fever,</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_54'>54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>in the Varieties of Fever of Great Britain</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_54'>54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Different Varieties produced by different Intensities</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_58'>58</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>Received Classification and Nomenclature defective</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_60'>60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>What is really meant by Genera and Species of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>True Principle of Arrangement</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_71'>71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER III.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of Synochus</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Division into Synochus Mitior and Gravior</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Succession of Phenomena in Synochus Mitior</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_78'>78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Indications afforded of Disease in the Nervous, Circulating, Secreting, and Excreting Systems</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_81'>81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Progress of Disease consists in progressive Increase in the Derangement of these Functions</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_85'>85</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Phenomena of Recovery</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_91'>91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>On what the Transition of Synochus Mitior into Synochus Gravior depends</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Classification according to the different Organs in which the several Affections have their Seat</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_95'>95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Synochus Gravior with Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_96'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>Subacute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_96'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>Acute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_107'>107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Synochus Mitior</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_112'>112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Synochus Gravior with Subacute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_114'>114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Synochus Gravior with Acute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_116'>116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Synochus Gravior with Thoracic Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Thoracic Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_123'>123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Synochus Gravior with Abdominal Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Abdominal Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_137'>137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Synochus Gravior with Mixed Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER IV.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of Typhus</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_148'>148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Division into Typhus Mitior and Gravior</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Typhus Mitior, with Subacute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Cases illustrating Subacute Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_155'>155</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Typhus Mitior, with Thoracic Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_157'>157</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>Typhus Mitior, Cases illustrating Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_159'>159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>With Abdominal Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>With Mixed Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_162'>162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Typhus Gravior</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_162'>162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>In what it really consists</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_162'>162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Dangerous nature of the Error that it consists in Debility</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_164'>164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER V.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of Scarlatina</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Characters by which it is distinguished from Continued Fever without an Eruption</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Division into Scarlatina Synochodes</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_171'>171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>Typhodes</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_172'>172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Events which occasionally occur in Fever, but which form no essential part of it</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_173'>173</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Preternatural Sensibility over the external Surface of the Body; Excoration and Sloughing; Erysipelas; Inflammation, &amp;c. of the Glands; peculiar Affection of the Joints</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_173'>173</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER VI.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of the Pathology of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_176'>176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Importance of connecting the Symptoms with the States of the Organs</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_176'>176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Pathology of Fever comprehends the Morbid Changes that take place in the Solids and Fluids of the Body</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_178'>178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>I. <span class='sc'>General Pathology of the Solids</span></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>External Appearances of the Body after Death</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_180'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Morbid Appearances in the Head</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_181'>181</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>in the Thorax</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_184'>184</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>in the Abdomen</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_187'>187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>I. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within the Head, or Cerebral Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>1. Vascularity of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Membranes, with Gelatinous or slight Serous Effusion</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>2. Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &amp;c. with Effusion of Coagulable Lymph and Formation of Pus</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_204'>204</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>3. Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &amp;c. with copious Serous Effusion</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_210'>210</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>4. Vascularity, &amp;c. with Preternatural Firmness of Brain</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_218'>218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>5. Vascularity, &amp;c. with softening of Brain</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_224'>224</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>General Results established by preceding Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_230'>230</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>II. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within the Chest, or Thoracic Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_235'>235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>III. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within the Abdomen; or Abdominal Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_246'>246</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>General Results established by preceding Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>IV. Cases illustrating the Morbid Changes which take place within the Head, Thorax, and Abdomen, in the same individual, or Mixed Cases</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_291'>291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>General Conclusion</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_322'>322</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>II. <span class='sc'>Pathology of the Fluids in Fever</span></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_328'>328</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER VII.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of the Relation between the Phenomena of Fever; or the Theory of the Disease</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_333'>333</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER VIII.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of the Causes of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_348'>348</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>1. Of the Immediate, or Exciting Cause of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_348'>348</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>2. Of the Remote or Predisposing Causes of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_369'>369</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c010' colspan='3'>CHAPTER IX.</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Of the Treatment of Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_375'>375</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Modification of Treatment required in prominent Cerebral Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_398'>398</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>Thoracic Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_403'>403</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>Abdominal Affection</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_405'>405</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Treatment of Scarlet Fever</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_408'>408</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Treatment during Convalescence</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_418'>418</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Appendix</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_425'>425</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>FEVER, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Further Investigation of Fever necessary: Facilities
-afforded by the Fever Hospital for prosecuting
-the Study. Ancient Doctrines relative to the Nature
-and Seat of Fever. Hippocrates, Galen,
-Sydenham. Modern Doctrines. Cullen, Brown,
-Stoker, Burne, Clanny, Clutterbuck, Broussais.
-Errors common to all these Theorists. Questions
-to be solved before Fever can be understood. Precise
-Object of Investigation: proper mode of conducting
-it.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>On my appointment to the office of Physician to
-the London Fever Hospital, it was stated to me by
-the treasurer that, among the objects contemplated
-by the establishment of this institution, two things
-were conceived to be of paramount importance:
-first, the accumulation of facts by which the true
-nature of fever might be more certainly ascertained,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>and secondly the cautious trial of remedies by which
-a more sure and successful mode of treating this
-fatal disease might be discovered. During my connexion
-with this hospital I have faithfully endeavoured
-to the utmost of my ability to keep these
-objects in view, and I now venture to lay before the
-public the result of my observations, in the hope
-that they may contribute something, however little,
-to the stock of knowledge already accumulated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When we consider how many circumstances connected
-with the origin and the propagation of fever
-are wholly unknown, which if known might have
-a most important influence in preventing its occurrence,
-in arresting its progress or in lessening its
-mortality; when we consider in what profound obscurity
-the very nature of the agents that produce it
-is still involved; when we consider how easy it is
-to swell the long catalogue of its symptoms, but
-how difficult it is to discriminate which, even among
-the most prominent of the train, are the essential
-and which the adventitious, and how still more difficult
-it is to ascertain which are the invariable antecedents
-and which the invariable sequents, or which
-the causes and which the effects; when we consider
-how few comparatively of the external appearances
-have been ascertained to be the sure and certain signs
-of any known condition of the internal organs, and
-how often the existence of several known conditions
-of the organs remains altogether unsuspected until
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>the demonstration of it is afforded by inspection after
-death, and when finally on all these accounts we
-consider how vague the objects must be that are
-aimed at in the treatment, and consequently how
-uncertain, how indiscriminate, how fruitlessly inert,
-how perniciously active, how unsuccessful, how fatal
-that treatment often is, it must be admitted that
-fever still presents to us a vast field, in the culture
-of which the difficulties to be overcome are not
-slight, and the most diligent labour that can be bestowed
-upon it may by no means be attended with
-a sure reward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of many branches of science it is truly observed
-that much time and labour are necessary to establish
-a single important fact; of some parts of
-medical science this is eminently the case, but
-perhaps of none is the observation so just as of
-that which relates to febrile diseases. It is remarkable
-how entirely the most distinguished physicians
-of all ages who have treated of this subject coincide
-in the feeling, that with regard to this important
-class of disease it is impossible in the short life allotted
-to the most aged to do any thing more than
-add a little knowledge to the common stock. If
-there be any foundation for this feeling it can only
-be by every man faithfully endeavouring to contribute
-what he may be able, be the amount ever so
-small, that that stock can speedily become large or
-ever become complete.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>In bringing to this common stock my humble
-mite, that the offering may not be wholly worthless,
-I have confined myself as much as possible to the
-detail of the facts that have been observed, and the
-statement of the results that have been obtained
-from experience. By giving a connected view of
-the phenomena I have hoped that I might possibly
-assist the actual practitioner to form a more adequate
-conception of the disease and guide him to that
-particular remedy which experience shews to be
-best adapted to each of the more important affections
-he is likely to encounter. Out of the means
-furnished for the accomplishment of these objects
-by the receptacle of fever for this great metropolis
-I have endeavoured to select such specimens of the
-disease as will place before him a vivid and faithful
-picture of the most interesting aspects it assumes,
-and such a detail of treatment as will shew what
-particular remedies afford the best chance of success
-in each type and stage, and in the most common
-and therefore the most important modifications they
-present. If I have at all succeeded in my aim he
-will find himself placed in a good measure in the
-same situation with myself; his attention will be
-directed to the same phenomena in the order in
-which they occur in the series, and hence he will
-have the like means of judging of the relations
-which these phenomena bear to each other, as well
-as of the accuracy of the analysis that has been attempted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>of the more complicated, and the soundness
-of the inductions that have been made from a comparison
-of the whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The London Fever Hospital is capable of receiving
-sixty-two patients: in most seasons of the year its
-wards are full: often there are numerous applications
-for admission which cannot be received for want of
-room: there pass through the wards from six to
-seven hundred patients annually. Two physicians
-are attached to the institution under whose care the
-patients are placed alternately in the order in which
-they are admitted: there is one assistant physician
-whose duty it is to perform the office of the ordinary
-physicians when either of these may be incapable
-of attending, and there is besides a medical officer
-resident in the house. A history of each case, containing
-an account of the age, occupation and residence
-of the patient, together with as full a statement
-of the symptoms of the disease and of the order of
-their succession as can be obtained is entered in the
-journal by the resident medical officer. Each of the
-ordinary physicians attends daily and enters in his
-journal a daily report of each of his own cases.
-The resident medical officer goes round the wards
-twice a day, namely, early in the morning and late
-in the evening, to observe if any change requiring
-attention may have taken place in any patient; and
-if any such change be observed by the nurses during
-the interval between these visits they are reported
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>to him by the head nurse without delay; all such
-events with the modification of treatment they may
-have required are entered in the journals. Every
-case that terminates fatally is examined after death,
-and an account of the morbid appearances is entered
-in a book kept for the purpose. In this manner,
-in the progress of years a mass of facts accumulates
-relating to the statistics, the types, the symptoms,
-the causes, the diagnosis, the pathology and the
-treatment of the disease, whether successful or unsuccessful,
-which both on account of the fullness and
-accuracy of the record and of the extent of the period
-it embraces, cannot but be of great value.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I am encouraged in the attempt to make this record,
-as far as it has yet gone, useful to the public
-by observing the feeling that prevails among those
-physicians who have studied fever with the greatest
-diligence, and who have contributed most to our
-knowledge of it, that it is a disease which is still
-little understood and the treatment of which remains
-extremely vague and uncertain. Perhaps there is
-no disease so little understood as the ordinary fever
-of this country and none by the mismanagement of
-which so much life is lost. Dr. Clutterbuck appears
-to me therefore to describe the situation of the
-physician to such an establishment as the Fever
-Hospital, not more candidly than truly when he
-says—“It becomes a duty incumbent on those particularly
-who have been placed in situations favourable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>for observing the disease, to give the result of
-their experience to the public, should it tend, in any
-degree, either to prevention or cure. The enquiry
-is by no means exhausted, considered either in a
-theoretical or practical point of view. There is still
-a want of uniformity of opinion among physicians
-regarding the nature of the present epidemic, as well
-as of fever in general: while, I am sorry to add, in
-practice we are not much better agreed;” and when
-he further adds;—“To ascertain these modifications”
-(that is the modifications which require a modification
-of treatment) “is the great desideratum,
-which nothing but the most cautious observation,
-aided by much time, and the joint efforts of numerous
-individuals, can fully supply.”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The slightest glance at the history of the doctrines
-which have been taught relative to the nature
-and the seat of fever from remote antiquity, and more
-especially a consideration of the variety and even
-the contrariety of the received opinions respecting
-both, in the present day, but too clearly shew that
-if the ancients were in error, there cannot be many
-points with regard to which the moderns are right,
-since there is scarcely one in which they are agreed.
-Further observation and investigation are therefore
-not yet superseded. There is as yet no uniformity
-of opinion among physicians even whether the primary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>seat of the disease be in the fluid or the solid
-parts of which the body is composed. Scarcely is
-the most ancient doctrine respecting it of which we
-have any record, that it consists in a morbid derangement
-of the fluids, and that the excitement which attends
-it is the result of an effort of Nature to expel the
-poison received into or generated within the system,
-obliterated from the imaginations or banished from
-the reasonings of physicians. When indeed we see a
-patient in the latter stage of some of the forms of
-fever with his dark or leaden skin, pouring forth its
-peculiar and fetid exhalation; with his foul tongue,
-his offensive breath, his vitiated and almost putrid
-secretions and excretions, we can understand why
-this doctrine should have taken a firm hold of the
-human mind and should have been able to maintain
-its ground through many centuries. Yet when the
-phenomena came to be observed with the accuracy
-with which we know that they were observed and
-recorded, and examined with the acuteness with
-which we have abundant evidence that some of the
-most powerful minds reasoned upon them, we may
-justly wonder that the order of the events, together
-with their great variety and opposite nature did not
-sooner suggest doubts of the accuracy of the theory
-and give to the inquiries of these celebrated men a
-new direction. But so far was this from being the
-case that when Hippocrates, considering the increased
-heat as the essence of fever, founded his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>division of the varieties of the disease upon this
-principle, whence his <em>causus</em> or burning fever, his
-<em>leipyria</em>, or fever with the parts externally cold and
-internally hot, and his <em>epialus</em>, or mild fever, with
-a simultaneous feeling of heat and cold; when he
-ascribed these different forms of fever to the superabundance
-of one or other of the four humours,
-blood, phlegm, yellow and black bile, and considered
-the disease as the result of a contest on the
-part of Nature to expel the morbid humour, or to
-render it inert or harmless by the process of concoction,
-the mind of Galen so many centuries afterwards,
-was so well satisfied with this hypothesis,
-that his powerful genius contented itself with the
-mere amplification of the conjecture and the addition
-of similar conjectures of his own. Whence
-assigning the different sources by which a morbid
-heat, which he also considers as the essence of fever,
-may be excited in the body, he states “that the
-fevers thus produced are modified by the prevalence
-or putrefaction of one or other of the four humours
-of Hippocrates; that of the three kinds of intermittent
-the quotidian arises from the corruption of
-phlegm, the tertian from that of the yellow and the
-quartan from that of the black bile; that in whatever
-part of the body the heat begins it ultimately
-extends to the heart; that as soon as this happens
-the general commotion of the vessels commences,
-and that in this manner Nature is employed in exerting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>her powers, endeavouring to assimilate the
-good humours to the parts which are to be nourished
-and to expel the bad, but that if at any time
-Nature is unable to expel all the morbid humour either
-from its thickness, its abundance or its tenacity, or
-from some obstruction of the passages, or from her
-own want of power, it will necessarily undergo putrefaction,
-if it remain long in the body, and produce
-the most fatal effects unless it be expelled by
-the process of concoction.” And so many centuries
-after Galen wrote, Sydenham who brought to the
-study of medicine one of the most acute, upright
-and independent minds that ever adorned it, commences
-a work on fever, which for fidelity of observation,
-for graphic description, for accurate discrimination,
-for bold and yet cautious treatment, has been
-justly considered an almost perfect model, with the
-following extraordinary assumptions:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That reason dictates that a disease is nothing else
-than Nature’s endeavour to thrust forth with all her
-might the morbific matter for the health of the patient;
-that seeing it has pleased God, the Governour
-of all things, so to constitute human nature that it
-may be fitted to receive the various impressions that
-come from abroad, it must necessarily be subject to
-many diseases; that these diseases proceed partly
-from particles of air ill agreeing with the body,
-which having once insinuated themselves into it,
-are mixed with the blood, and affect the whole with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>a morbific contagion; and partly from various ferments
-or putrefaction of humours which are detained
-in the body beyond due time, either because it was
-not able to digest them, on account of the incongruity
-of their quality, or to evacuate them on account
-of their bulk; that these circumstances being
-so nearly joined to the human essence that no man
-can clearly free himself from them, Nature provided
-for herself such a method and concatenation of
-symptoms as that she might thereby expel the peccant
-matter, which would otherwise ruin the whole
-fabric; that the plague, for instance, is nothing but
-a complication of symptoms by which Nature casts
-out the malignant particles, by imposthumes in the
-emunctories, or by some other eruptions, that were
-drawn in by the air; that the gout is nothing but
-Nature’s contrivance to purify the blood of old men,
-and to purge the deep parts of the body; that when
-Nature requires the help of a fever, whereby she
-may be able to separate the vitiated particles from
-the blood, or otherwise expel them, either by a
-sweat, a looseness, or some kind of eruption, she
-accomplishes this object in the whole mass of blood,
-and that by a violent motion of the parts; that when
-this object is accomplished suddenly, either by the
-health or death of the patient, the disease is acute;
-when, on the contrary, the matter of the disease is
-of such a nature that it cannot have the assistance
-of a fever for the separation of it; or when this kind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>of matter is fixed to any particular part, which is
-unable to exclude it, or when the blood is vitiated
-by the continual flow of new matter into it, in these
-cases, the matter being very slowly or not at all
-concocted, the diseases which proceed from such
-unconcocted matter are called chronic: that acute
-diseases proceed from a secret and inexplicable alteration
-of the air infecting men’s bodies; that these
-diseases do not at all depend on a peculiar crasis
-of the blood and humours any otherwise than the
-occult influence of the air has imprinted the same
-upon them; that they continue as long as this secret
-constitution of the air and no longer; that they do
-not come at any other time; and that these constitute
-epidemic fevers; that, on the other hand, acute
-diseases arise from this or that particular irregularity
-of particular bodies, which, because they are not
-produced by a general cause, do not therefore invade
-many at once; that this species comes every year,
-and at any time of the year; and that these may be
-called intercurrent or sporadic, because they happen
-at any time during the prevalence of epidemics.<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That conjectures so gratuitous, and so utterly incompatible
-with the structure and functions of the
-animal frame, should at such distant periods of the
-world, under such different conditions of society, and
-in such different states of science so entirely possess
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>and satisfy the minds of three of the most extraordinary
-men that ever illustrated or extended any
-department of science, will appear the less wonderful
-when we consider that the doctrines relative to fever
-which displaced and succeeded these, originated in
-precisely the same error, and vary in their aspect
-only in conformity to the progressive advancement
-of general science. When the structure of the animal
-body became more generally studied; when the
-functions performed by its different organs became
-better understood; when the morbid actions constituting
-or resulting from the derangement of these
-functions became more closely investigated, the influence
-of the nervous system and the effects of
-vascular action, began to form the subjects of investigation,
-and from this period the attention of
-physicians was fixed less upon the fluid than the
-solid parts of the frame. The properties and motions
-of the fluids were now clearly seen to be dependent
-upon the action of the containing solids, and the
-action of the solids to be under the influence and
-control of certain laws peculiar to life. Disease,
-studied under this juster view of the animal economy,
-immediately assumed a new aspect, and theories
-arose so much more consonant to the known operations
-of the living body, so much more explicit in
-their language and intelligible in their nature, that
-the ancient doctrines were at once exploded, and
-the very terms in which they were expressed became
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>suddenly, though, as it now appears, only for a short
-time obsolete.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cullen, building upon the foundation laid by
-Hoffman, rivalling in the number of his pupils,
-and exceeding in the brilliancy of his success, if
-not in the perpetuity of his fame, any name of antiquity,
-achieved with unexampled ease and suddenness
-this great revolution; and in opposition to
-the ancient theories taught, that the first change
-induced in the animal system, by the operation of
-the exciting causes of fever, is a diminution of the
-energy of the brain; that all the powers of the body
-and all the faculties of the mind, that the functions
-of sensation and motion, the processes of respiration,
-circulation, and secretion, all fail or are diminished
-in the general debility; that after a certain time a
-morbid increase of some of these functions, especially
-of the circulation, takes place with an augmentation
-of the heat; that these three states, that of debility,
-of cold, and of heat, bear to each other the relation
-of cause and effect; that the first state is the result
-of the sedative or debilitating influence of contagion,
-marsh miasmata, cold or any other exciting cause,
-and the subsequent states the result of the first;
-that the debility produces all the phenomena of the
-cold stage, and especially a spasmodic constriction
-of the extreme arterial vessels; that this spasm or
-atony of the extreme vessels exists not only on the
-first attack of the cold stage, but remains during the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>whole subsequent course of fever; that the spasm
-of the extreme vessels throws a load of blood on the
-central parts of the circulating system, which proves
-a source of irritation to the heart and arteries, and
-excites them to a greater action; that this increased
-action, the source of the heat and the other phenomena
-which constitute the second or hot stage continues
-till the spasm is relaxed or overcome; and
-that this excitement of spasm for the purpose of
-producing the subsequent reaction is a part of the
-operation of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">vis medicatrix naturæ</span></i>, the innate
-preserving power of the constitution. “Upon the
-whole,” says this celebrated theorist, “our doctrine
-of fever is explicitly this. The remote causes are
-certain sedative powers applied to the nervous system,
-which, diminishing the energy of the brain,
-thereby produce a debility in the whole of the functions,
-and particularly in the action of the extreme
-vessels. Such, however, is at the same time the
-nature of the animal economy, that this debility
-proves an indirect stimulus to the sanguiferous system;
-whence, by the intervention of the cold stage,
-and spasm connected with it, the action of the heart
-and large arteries is increased, and continues so till
-it has had the effect of restoring the energy of the
-brain, of extending this energy to the extreme vessels,
-of restoring therefore their action, and thereby
-especially removing the spasm affecting them: upon
-the removing of which, the excretion of sweat, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>other marks of the relaxation of excretories take
-place.”<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whatever may be thought of the superior power
-of the theory of Brown, the pupil and rival of Cullen,
-to explain the general phenomena of the living
-body, whether in a state of health or of disease, the
-doctrine of the pupil relative to fever, differs in no
-essential respect from that of the master. Like his
-predecessor, Brown attributes all fevers to debility;
-and affirms that the distinctions which physicians
-have made about the differences of fever are without
-foundation; that they are all the same, differing only
-in degree; that the debility during the cold stage
-is the greatest; that of the hot less; that of the
-sweating stage which ends in health for the time, is
-the least of all: hence in a mild degree of the disease,
-as cold is the most hurtful power, its effect is
-gradually taken off by the agreeable heat of the bed
-or of the sun, and the strength thereby gradually
-drawn forth; that the heart and arteries gradually
-excited by the heat acquire vigour, and at last having
-their perspiratory terminations excited by the same
-stimulus, the most hurtful symptom is thereby removed,
-the hot fit produced, and afterwards the same
-process carried on to the breaking out of sweat; that
-the cause of all these diseases, from the simplest
-and mildest intermittent to the gaol fever and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>plague is the same with that of diseases not febrile,
-to wit debility; differing only in this, that it is the
-greatest debility compatible with life, and not long
-compatible with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This very year, from Dublin, from the largest
-hospital for the reception of fever in the British
-Empire, precisely the same doctrine has been put
-forth. “Common epidemic fever,” says Dr. Stoker,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a>
-“especially when contagious, as I have frequently
-asserted when speaking of its pathology and treatment,
-has not appeared to me at any time to be
-essentially inflammatory. Adynamic fever, a denomination
-for typhus fever, which I shall employ, as
-I have hitherto done to express the putrid or malignant
-fever of Sydenham; the slow nervous fever of
-Huxham; the nervous fever of common language;
-the synochus, typhus mitior, and gravior of Cullen;
-the gaol and hospital fever; the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fièvres essentielles</span></i> of
-the French; the epidemic of the Irish writers; the
-contagious of Bateman; the typhus of Dr. Armstrong;
-and the proper idiopathic, or essential fever
-of Dr. Clutterbuck: whether it exists separately or
-independently; or is combined with any of the other
-forms of febrile disease, sporadic or symptomatic.”<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a>
-“Typhoid or adynamic fever I consider to be generally
-symptomatic of morbid changes in the physical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>characters of the blood, and have, as on former occasions,
-stated what those morbid changes are—but I
-have arranged inflammation under the head of symptomatic
-fever, merely because it is more usually connected
-with some change in the structure of parts,
-discoverable after death: on the other hand, typhus
-fever is connected with morbid changes, that <em>primarily</em>
-take place in the fluids, and produce morbid
-actions, and sometimes permanent changes of structure
-in the said parts. These changes too in the
-condition of the blood are distinguishable from those
-which we have stated to occur in inflammation; and
-the morbid actions excited relatively by those
-changes in the blood are also distinct. In inflammatory
-fever on the one hand, increased action, in
-typhoid fevers on the other, debility, is almost the
-immediate consequence. On account of this debility
-being an essential character of typhoid fevers,
-I denominated them adynamic.”<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the close of the last season, in a work,<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a> the
-materials of which have been drawn professedly
-from the London General Hospitals, doctrines so
-similar have been laid down, that Dr. Stoker says
-of it—“the views taken, both of the nature and
-treatment of fever, by Dr. Burne, entirely accord
-with those which may be found stated in my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>Medical Reports from the Fever Hospital, as well
-as in my separate Essays on that subject. And as
-(when speaking of his denomination of fever) I
-have already remarked, this leaves, I think, no
-reasonable doubt of the epidemic fevers of London,
-having lately become more typhoid or adynamic,
-than they had formerly been. It is further satisfactory
-to me to find, that the treatment which I had
-long since adopted and recommended in our typhoid
-fevers has been found suitable to the prevention and
-cure of those in London; and that too in proportion
-as they have acquired more of that form, with
-which I was best acquainted.”<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a> And Dr. Burne
-himself states, “that the adynamic fever has no
-local seat; that its nature is <em>a morbid condition of
-the blood</em>, produced by the operation of the primary
-cause, the respiration of a contaminated or poisoned
-atmosphere: that this morbid blood, acting on the
-brain and nervous system, is of itself sufficient in
-very many instances to bring about the very great
-derangement and imperfect performance of all the
-functions of the organic and of the animal life; which
-great derangement and imperfect performance of all
-the functions constitute the phenomena of adynamic
-fever.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Instead of regarding with these authors a vitiated
-state of the blood as the essence of fever, Dr. Clanny,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>on the contrary, believes its proximate cause to be a
-want of power in the system to form blood. “The
-proximate cause of typhus fever,” he says, “is a cessation
-of chylification, and consequently of sanguification,
-during which time the lymphatics of the
-whole system act with increased vigour, and in this
-manner the lymph taken up by them from the
-system supplies, for the time being, the place of
-the chyle in the blood, and as long as this state
-continues the patient labours under an acute
-disease, heretofore called typhus fever. When the
-chylopoietic viscera resume their functions the disease
-gradually recedes, and health is ultimately restored.”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a>
-“Chylification, like secretion, is a function
-of the brain, which under peculiar circumstances,
-or states of the atmosphere, is impaired, and in
-severe cases is suspended altogether: hence typhus
-fever.”<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such are the leading opinions of those who maintain
-that the seat of fever is in the fluids, in which
-opinions we perceive a return to the old doctrines,
-although in the modern version, it is true they are
-somewhat modified and presented in a somewhat
-more definite shape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But in direct opposition to all such views of fever,
-it is zealously and ably maintained by a large and
-increasing sect, that this malady is strictly a local
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>disease; that it has its primary and essential seat in
-one organ, and that it consists of inflammation of
-that organ. Thus Dr. Clutterbuck, who may be regarded
-as one of the most distinguished advocates
-of this opinion, in one of the best works which has
-ever appeared on the subject, contends that fever
-of every denomination and every degree is the result
-of inflammation; that the appearances which
-have led to the conclusion that it is a general disease
-primarily affecting every function of the body are
-fallacious, and that, when strictly examined, it will
-be found that all general or extensive derangements
-of the system, are referrible to local disease in one
-organ. “Fever, in regard to its effects on the system,”
-he says, “is the most general of all diseases,
-and gives rise during its progress to the greatest
-variety of symptoms. These, contemplated in the
-mass, present nothing but confusion. Like all complicated
-phenomena, they require to be subjected to
-strict analysis; that their order may be traced, and
-their relation to each other and to the exciting cause
-shewn. To the neglect of this may be ascribed the
-error, as I conceive it to be, which has been so
-generally fallen into, of considering fever as an universal
-disease, or one that affects for the first time
-the whole system; no one part being supposed to
-suffer necessarily before the rest. Whereas, when
-the disease is minutely scrutinized, and its first appearance
-accurately noticed (which indeed from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>slightness and consequent neglect of the first symptoms
-is rarely done) it will be found to be strictly a
-<em>topical</em> affection, the general disorder of the system
-being merely <em>secondary</em>, or symptomatic of this.”<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a>
-In another work it is further stated, that all the
-varieties of idiopathic fever, which differ but in
-degree, as well as those which arise from specific
-contagion, as malignant sore throat, scarlet fever,
-small-pox, and so on, arise from one and the same
-affection of one and the same organ, and that that
-affection consists essentially in inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A similar doctrine has for some time been taught
-in France by a man whose disciples have already
-spread over every country in Europe, and are fast
-diffusing themselves over the new world, and whose
-devotion to their master and his system, reminds us
-of days long past, when the attachment of the
-pupil to the sage was as reverential and as enthusiastic
-as that ever paid by true knight to lady-fair in
-the brightest days of chivalry. “Penetrated by the
-sublime views of Bichat as to the sympathies,” say
-M. M. Coutançeau et Rayer, two of the most ardent
-disciples of this school;<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a> “rich in numerous facts
-observed with a rare sagacity, M. Broussais came to
-overturn, from the very foundation, the antique
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>edifice of fevers. In his works as well as in his lectures,
-he has applied himself, for many years, to
-demonstrate, that the fevers which had been called
-essential, were nothing more than local diseases,
-inflammations, nay even gastro-enterites.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These writers go on to state that, according to
-Broussais, all fevers are of the same nature, those
-termed malignant differing from other fevers only
-by the violence and danger of their congestions;
-that all the causes of fever act locally; that, considered
-in a general and abstract manner, fever is invariably
-the result of a <em>primitive or sympathetic
-irritation of the heart</em> through the effect of which
-its contractions are quickened, and that every irritation
-sufficiently intense to produce fever is an
-inflammation.<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>There is thus a perfect accordance in the doctrine
-of these two celebrated and rival theorists, Clutterbuck
-and Broussais, respecting the nature of fever:
-both are agreed that it is an affection of the solids
-of the body and that its essence consists in inflammation:
-both are agreed that that inflammation is
-strictly local, being seated in one organ: but in determining
-what that organ is, there is an entire
-discrepancy in their opinion. According to Dr.
-Clutterbuck the organ universally affected in every
-variety of idiopathic fever is the brain. “Out of
-fifty cases,” he says, “of which I noted down the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>symptoms with the greatest minuteness at the bed-side
-of the sick, generally once and often twice in
-the twenty-four hours, throughout the disease, I
-find that no two of them correspond in the minute
-points though they all agree in the essential one,
-that is, in a manifest affection of the brain and its
-functions; various in degree and probably in extent,
-with numerous but accidental complications, from
-the affection of other organs.”<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a> This affection of
-the brain, consisting of inflammation, it necessarily
-follows, as this author elsewhere states, that fever is
-nothing else than a species of phrenitis, or topical
-inflammation of the brain; that it might, therefore,
-be arranged in the order of phlegmasiæ with pleurisy,
-enteritis, and other symptomatic fevers, but
-that since the term phrenitis has been generally
-applied to a particular form of inflammation of the
-brain and implies delirium, which does not always
-occur in fever, although it is a frequent symptom,
-that of encephalitis would form a proper denomination
-for this entire class of diseases, and might be
-substituted for the term fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Broussais, on the contrary, contends that the primary
-and essential seat of inflammation in fever is
-the mucous membrane of the stomach, or of the
-intestines, or both, but especially the former, and
-that, therefore, the proper designation of it is <em>gastro-enteritis</em>.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>While it had long been conceived that
-inflammation of the digestive organs is the cause of
-certain symptomatic fevers, Broussais maintains that
-the most important discovery (most important because
-so intimately connected with the treatment of
-the disease) that this affection is the cause of all fevers,
-idiopathic as well as symptomatic, and that
-there are in fact no essential fevers, is peculiarly and
-exclusively his own. Thus, according to this theorist,
-all the fevers of authors are connected with
-gastro-enteritis, simple or complicated. “The simultaneous
-or successive inflammation of the stomach
-and small intestines, designated by this term,” says
-M. Rayer, “is of all the phlegmasiæ the most frequent,
-and at the same time that which has been
-oftenest overlooked or mistaken. It is not designated
-in any nosological table. Not long ago gastritis itself
-was generally looked upon as a very rare disease: of
-twenty-eight thousand two hundred and ninety-nine
-sick admitted into the civil hospitals of Paris in 1807,
-six only were designated in the returns as labouring
-under inflammation of the stomach, whilst six thousand
-one hundred and forty-three were treated for
-continued or remittent fevers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The prevailing doctrines relative to the nature and
-seat of fever at present then are two, the direct reverse
-of each other; one, that it is a general disease
-affecting the entire system; that this affection of the
-system consists of debility which is manifested first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>in a loss of energy of the brain, but which rapidly
-extends to every organ and every function, and that
-consequently <em>the absence of any primary local disease</em>,
-ought still to form, as it has so long formed,
-an essential part of the definition: the other, that it
-is in the strictest sense a local disease; that its primary
-seat is invariably fixed in some one organ; that
-the affection itself consists of inflammation; and that
-that inflammation is seated, according to one opinion
-in the brain; according to the other in the
-stomach.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As must necessarily be the case, these different
-and opposite theories are found to have the most
-important influence on the practice recommended
-by their respective authors in the treatment of the
-disease. The advocates of the first deprecate all
-active interference: the grand evil to be contended
-with is debility: the physician can easily weaken,
-but he cannot easily strengthen: he can depress to
-any extent he desires, but he cannot communicate
-power as he wishes. In a malady therefore of which
-the very essence consists in loss of energy the main
-duty of the physician is to husband the strength of
-the patient with the most anxious care, this being
-the chief means, as Cullen expressively termed it, of
-obviating the tendency to death. The important
-inference is, that every kind and every degree of
-depletion that can add to the primary cause of the
-malady, must be abstained from with the utmost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>caution. By the clearest and shortest deduction
-this will necessarily be the result to which every
-mind must come that really believes that debility is
-the essence of fever, while he who admits its inflammatory
-nature must think it criminal to stand idle
-by and allow the most extensive derangements in
-the structure of vital organs to proceed, without even
-an attempt to check them, as long as it is in his
-power to use the lancet or to procure leeches. The
-very order in which the believers in debility enumerate
-the remedies they recommend affords a striking
-illustration of the extent to which their theory influences
-their practice;<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a> while the advocates of inflammation
-state explicitly that the remedy of the
-disease is one, and in point of importance one only,
-namely, the remedy which all admit to be the only
-efficient agent in the treatment of inflammation.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>“Fever to be treated successfully,” says Dr. Clutterbuck,
-“must be treated upon the general principles
-of inflammation; but at the same time with
-the modifications arising out of the peculiar nature
-of the organ affected, and in some degree also the
-nature of the exciting cause. Blood-letting, which
-but a few years ago was looked upon with abhorrence
-in the cure of contagious fever, and the utility
-of which is still far from being generally appreciated,
-is proved by ample testimony to be not only the
-most powerful, but the safest of remedies.” And in
-every variety of fever, and in all its stages, leeches
-are to be applied to the stomach, according to Broussais,
-and scarcely any thing else is to be done except
-enjoining rigid starvation. Emetics, purgatives, bark,
-wine, are all denounced; nothing but leeches and
-“diete absolue:” a costive state of the bowels persisting
-during five or even ten days is a good symptom
-and not to be interfered with.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>That men who exhibit such talent for observation
-and such acute and active powers of the understanding
-as many of these authors exemplify in these very
-works, should, while writing with so much earnestness
-against each other, fall into one and the same
-error, and that an error so palpable, is no flattering
-exhibition of the state of the art of reasoning among
-the members of the medical profession. The degree
-in which the science of mind is neglected in our
-age and country, may it not be justly added? especially
-in our profession—that science upon the
-knowledge of which the conduct of every individual
-mind is so dependent, is truly deplorable. Medicine
-is an inductive science, the cultivator of which is
-peculiarly exposed to the danger of making hasty
-assumptions and of resting in partial views, yet it
-is not deemed necessary that he should be at all
-disciplined in the art of induction, or should be cautioned
-against any sources of fallacy in the practice
-of making inferences. All the partial and imperfect
-views of fever which have now been brought
-before the eye of the reader, originate in one or other
-of the following errors, obvious as they all are:
-either that of assuming as a fact what is merely a
-conjecture; or that of assigning to the genus what
-belongs only to the species; or that of characterising
-the disease by what appertains only to a stage; or
-that of mistaking the effect for the cause. On careful
-examination it will appear that one or other of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>these errors, which are as serious as they are palpable,
-has vitiated in a greater or less degree every
-generalization of fever that has hitherto been attempted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the believers in debility derive their notion
-of the whole disease from the phenomena which occur
-in the first and the last stages only: in these, it is
-true, they may find abundant evidence of debility:
-but then they overlook the intermediate stage in
-which there are generally the most unequivocal indications
-of increased sensibility in the nervous and
-increased action in the vascular systems: in this
-manner they characterise the disease by what appertains
-only to certain stages of it. Again, when they
-contend that debility is not only the essence of fever
-in general, but is really characteristic of every type
-of it, they affirm what is indisputable of fevers in
-particular seasons, in particular climates or in particular
-constitutions; but beyond this their generalization
-cannot be extended: in this manner they
-assign to the genus what belongs only to the species.
-And when Cullen goes on to affirm that the proximate
-cause of all the morbid phenomena is a “spasm
-of the extreme vessels,” he commits the additional
-and more palpable, but not less common error, of
-assigning as an undoubted fact, as a real and ascertained
-occurrence, what is only a conjecture, and for
-which there is not, and for which he does not even
-attempt to adduce the shadow of evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Precisely similar to this is the error of those who
-for the most part belong to the same school, and
-who attribute the essence of fever to a morbid condition
-of the blood. The blood may be diseased in
-fever, but if it be so, these writers do not <em>know</em> it,
-or at least they do not adduce any evidence that
-they are in possession of such knowledge: they do
-not appear so much as to have questioned chemistry;
-at all events, it is certain that they have hitherto
-received no satisfactory answer. There is no evidence
-on record that the alleged determination of
-the blood takes place in every type and every degree
-of fever: and if there were it would still be but
-one event among many, and one that occurs late in
-the series, and therefore could possibly be nothing
-more than an effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In like manner those who maintain that inflammation
-of the brain is the sole cause of fever, assume
-as an established and admitted fact the universal and
-invariable existence of inflammation of the brain in
-this disease. Inflammation of the brain, without
-doubt, is demonstrable of many individual cases, and
-of some whole types: but beyond this there is no
-proof that the generalization can be carried: the
-evidence indeed in regard to many cases is entirely
-against the assumption, and is as complete as negative
-evidence can well be: consequently it must be admitted
-that even this hypothesis, in the present state
-of our knowledge, is founded on the error of assigning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>to the whole genus what belongs only to particular
-species: and it would be trifling with the reader to
-attempt to prove, that this is still more certainly and
-strikingly true with regard to inflammation of the
-mucous membrane of the stomach and intestines—an
-affection which in innumerable cases in which its
-existence is certain, clearly appears on the slightest
-examination of the succession of events, to be an
-effect and not a cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No comprehensive view can be taken of fever, no
-just conclusion can be arrived at relative to its nature
-and seat until it be studied with a consciousness
-of the liability to such errors and a vigilant endeavour
-to avoid them. The present investigation has
-been undertaken with a deep consciousness of the
-danger and a watchful and unremitting care to avoid
-it. Even if the effort prove to be without success,
-the example can scarcely remain without use.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The frequent and formidable disease on the investigation
-of which we are entering, cannot be understood
-until clear and exact answers are obtained
-to the following inquiries. 1. What is the series of
-phenomena which constitutes fever? 2. What are
-the particular phenomena which are common to all
-its varieties and combinations? 3. What is the
-order in which these phenomena occur in the series?
-4. What are the organs, and what are their states, upon
-which these phenomena depend? 5. What are
-the external signs of these internal states, or what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>are the indications by which their existence may
-be known? 6. What is the external noxious agent
-or agents, or the exciting cause or causes of the disease?
-7. What is the particular remedy, or the
-particular combination of remedies which is best
-adapted to each state of each organ? When these
-questions can be clearly and perfectly answered,
-and not till then, we shall know the disease and its
-treatment. In order to make any real progress in
-this knowledge we must therefore prosecute these
-inquiries. It appears to me that we are already in
-possession of ascertained facts, adequate to answer
-with a high degree of certainty, though perhaps not
-with absolute certainty, several of these questions.
-In keeping these inquiries steadily before our view
-in our investigation there will be this great advantage,
-that it will enable us clearly to perceive what
-we really know and what still remains to be ascertained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The phenomena which constitute fever, like those
-which belong to all the processes of nature, consist
-of a certain number of events. The events which
-take place in this disease are before our eyes: they
-are abundantly familiar to us all: no one man indeed
-has seen all the forms of fever which exist,
-nor observed all the symptoms of those species
-which he has witnessed, but accurate records are to
-be obtained of them all: records upon which we
-have this assurance that we may rely, that all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>important events in this disease are so obvious and
-striking, and indeed force themselves so powerfully
-and constantly upon the notice, that there can be
-little danger that any one of consequence should be
-overlooked. Accordingly medical writings abound
-with the most minute, and, as far as can be judged,
-accurate histories of the symptoms which accompany
-all sorts of fevers, whether epidemic or sporadic.
-It is not in the observation of symptoms
-that the danger of error lies, because these are matters
-of sense, but the danger arises from a different
-source. Supposing, for example, that all the important
-events which accompany all the important
-varieties of fever have been ascertained, and that
-thus our first inquiry relative to the series of phenomena
-which constitutes the disease, is answered,
-still as many of these events are observed to be
-often absent, while it cannot be doubted that fever
-is nevertheless present, we must necessarily enquire
-in the next place, what is that particular combination
-of events which is <em>essential</em> to the constitution
-of the disease, an enquiry which embraces the second
-question proposed for consideration, namely,
-what are the particular phenomena which are common
-to all the varieties of fever? Now in singling
-out this particular series of events from the great
-mass, we are liable to several sources of error. In
-the first place, we may stop too soon in our enumeration;
-in the second place, we may mistake the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>adventitious for the essential and the essential for
-the adventitious, and in the third place, we may
-overlook the real place which some particular event
-holds in the series, and so may suppose that to be
-antecedent which was truly sequent, and consequently
-assign that as a cause which is only an
-effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first thing to be done then is to ascertain the
-concourse of symptoms, and the second, to determine
-the order in which they occur: when these
-two points have been made out, what is essential and
-what adventitious, as well as what is the cause and
-what the effect, become at once clear and certain.
-But the difficulty lies in discerning amidst the infinite
-diversity and contrariety of symptoms which
-the different modifications of fever present, when
-we may safely assure ourselves that we are in possession
-of all the essential phenomena. Our guide
-is <em>invariableness</em> of concurrence. If we can ascertain
-that a certain number of events <em>invariably</em> take
-place in every form and every degree of fever, these
-events will give us the particular phenomena which
-are common to all the varieties of the disease. If
-we can further ascertain that these events <em>invariably</em>
-concur in a certain order, we shall have discovered
-what events bear to each other the relation of cause
-and effect. And the establishment of this relation
-of events, this constant connexion with each other,
-this uniform antecedence and sequence appears to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>me to be the only theory after which it is consistent
-with the principles of sound philosophy to search.
-If I have endeavoured to establish this connexion,
-and have thus ventured, as I conceive, in a strictly
-philosophical sense to propose a theory, in doing so,
-I have carefully restricted myself to the attempt to
-deduce a legitimate conclusion from facts previously
-ascertained. It does appear to me that these three
-points, namely, the common phenomena, the invariableness
-of their concurrence, and their mutual relation
-are satisfactorily established. Whether I
-shall be able to communicate this conviction to the
-reader I do not know: but I hope he will at least
-coincide with me in opinion that this mode of investigating
-the disease affords us the best chance of
-arriving at satisfactory results.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whatever be the phenomena of fever they depend
-upon certain states of the organs. Whatever be the
-noxious agents or the exciting causes of the disease,
-and however they operate, they can induce the
-disease only by bringing about a certain condition
-in a certain number of organs, the individual events
-constituting the disease being nothing but certain
-changes in these organs. It is therefore of paramount
-importance to ascertain what the organs are
-which are implicated; what the conditions are which
-are induced in them; what organ sustains the first
-assault and what organs are attacked in succession.
-The pathology about to be laid before the reader
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>will demonstrate the first two points: the establishment
-of the last two will be attempted by an examination
-of the history of the cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Without doubt the life or death of the patient
-depends upon these conditions of the organs. In a
-practical point of view therefore, this is the kind
-of knowledge with which it is of the greatest importance
-that the practitioner should be familiar.
-Some of these conditions are indicated by certain
-signs during life: some of these indications are
-obscure, and may be easily overlooked or mistaken
-by those who have not acquired an accurate and
-extensive acquaintance with the disease. On the
-other hand, there are external appearances which
-are extremely apt to suggest a false notion of the
-state of the internal organs. These fallacious appearances
-are sure to lead those whom they deceive
-into a mistaken, often into a mortal practice.
-Certain conditions of vital organs, if allowed to remain
-long, will terminate in fatal changes of structure.
-Certain remedies, if applied in due season
-and with due vigour, are capable of removing those
-conditions. Life therefore must sometimes depend
-upon the power of making this diagnosis with accuracy.
-Of some of these conditions, the diagnostic
-marks are clear and certain; those which indicate
-other conditions, in the present state of our knowledge,
-are obscure and uncertain. I have thought
-no labour too great to put the reader in possession
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>of all that I have been able to ascertain with regard
-to this most important part of the subject. In the
-attempt to communicate this information, I am conscious
-that I may incur the charge of tediousness,
-on account of the number of repetitions which occur,
-and which I have allowed to remain because I could
-see no means of removing them without sacrificing
-clearness to brevity. Elegance and conciseness, in a
-work of this nature, ought not for a moment to be
-considered if they endanger its practical usefulness.
-A knowledge of the condition of the internal organs,
-in fever, can alone guide us to a rational and successful
-treatment of this most dangerous disease.
-It is only by examining the body after death that
-we can acquire this information: it is only by observing
-the symptoms during life and comparing
-them with the morbid appearances after death, that
-we can discover the signs which indicate the existence
-of these states. For these reasons I have not
-hesitated to give numerous cases and to detail many
-dissections. If after the study of these cases and
-dissections the practitioner be enabled at the bed-side
-of the fever patient to discover with greater
-precision and certainty than heretofore the condition
-of the brain—the condition of the lungs—the condition
-of the intestines, he will not think the time
-he has devoted to the investigation ill spent, nor
-shall I think myself without reward for the labour
-it has cost me to draw up the record. It is only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>when from external appearances we are able to see
-what is going on within each of the great cavities
-of the body, as clearly as we should do if their walls
-were transparent, that our interference can be sure
-of doing good, or secure from doing mischief: it is
-this kind and degree of knowledge alone which can
-teach us both when to act and what to do; and
-what is of almost equal importance, when to stop
-and to attempt nothing; and if the perusal of this
-work should contribute in any measure to the attainment
-of this knowledge, I shall not have laboured
-wholly in vain, “to add something to the treasury
-of physic.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Varieties of Fever. Common Phenomena. Importance
-of this Analysis. Results of the Analysis.
-Organs always diseased in Fever: Functions always
-deranged in Fever. Fever not Inflammation:
-Distinction between these two States of
-Disease. Common Phenomena of Fever exemplified
-in Plague, in Yellow Fever, in the Varieties
-of the Fever of our own Country. Different
-Varieties produced by different Intensities of
-the same Affections. Received Classification and
-Nomenclature defective. What is really meant
-by Genera and Species of Fever. True Principle
-of Arrangement.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Fever is a genus consisting of several species, and
-each species presents many varieties. The external
-characters of these varieties and the internal states
-upon which they depend, are so opposite, that no two
-diseases in any two parts of the catalogue of nosology
-present a more diversified appearance, or require
-a more varied treatment, than may be the
-case with two different types of fever. The fever of
-one country is not the same as the fever of any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>other country; in the same country, the fever of
-one season is not the same as the fever of any other
-season; and even the fever of the same season is
-not the same in any two individuals. Many of the
-circumstances which constitute these varieties in the
-fevers of different seasons and of individual persons,
-are slight and trivial; but some of them are of the
-greatest possible importance, and those diversities,
-especially, which distinguish the fevers of different
-climates, are intimately connected with the causes,
-whatever they be, which render the disease mild or
-severe, and, consequently, comparatively innoxious
-or fearfully mortal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Something there is, however, which, amidst this
-astonishing diversity, preserves the identity of the
-disease so completely and so obviously, that there
-never has existed any dispute about that identity,
-under any aspect which it has hitherto been observed
-to assume; so that all physicians, without
-exception, unhesitatingly accord the name of fever
-to the mildest form of the common fever of this
-country, to the yellow fever of the West Indies, and
-to the plague of Constantinople and of Egypt. Bring
-three persons, each exhibiting an exquisite specimen
-of one of these several forms of the disease into the
-same ward of an hospital, the external aspect presented
-by each would be so different, that an unprofessional
-observer would probably be able to
-discover in these modifications of the same malady
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>no common property: yet there is no physician
-who would not, in each case, instantly pronounce
-the disease to be fever. There must, therefore,
-be something that establishes the identity of the
-disease under this diversity of aspect. What is that
-something? Whatever it be, it must be common to
-all the varieties of fever. Thus we are led at once
-to the second inquiry which we proposed to keep
-before us in this investigation, namely, what are
-the particular phenomena which are common to all
-the varieties and combinations of the disease?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The importance of making this analysis has been
-felt by every person who has directed his attention
-to this subject from the remotest antiquity down to
-the present time. That it is not as easy to be made
-as the necessity of it is plainly to be perceived is
-abundantly attested by the want of success which
-has hitherto attended the efforts to perform it of the
-acutest minds, and the acutest minds, the pride and
-boast of our science have applied themselves to the
-task. Notwithstanding their labours however, the
-analysis made by Hippocrates has been received
-through succeeding ages with little variation, and
-continues to be received even in modern times with
-only slight modification. And yet that reflecting
-men of every age have not been satisfied with resolving
-all the essential phenomena of fever into heat,
-although they have all consented to designate the disease
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>by some term expressive of that property,<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a> is
-attested by proofs no less striking than instructive.
-We are informed by Van Swieten, that Boerhaave
-collected with much labour from a great variety of
-authors all the symptoms which they had observed
-in different fevers: that from these he threw out
-such as did not appear in all fevers, and that finding
-himself obliged to exclude one after another, he was
-at length greatly surprised to find the catalogue
-so short; it being ultimately reduced to three;
-namely shivering, frequent pulse, heat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is a sufficient and an interesting proof that
-this illustrious physician saw the importance of
-making the analysis in question; it shews also, that
-his ingenuity suggested probably the best mode of
-conducting it which a philosopher sitting in his
-study could devise; and the only proper mode of
-conducting it the circumstances of his age and
-country did not place within his reach. Accordingly
-his success did not equal his labour: for out of the
-three phenomena which he fixes upon as those that
-are common to all the varieties of the disease there
-is not one which is invariably found in any type
-of it; while in innumerable cases the combination
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>of the three is not found. Shivering does not occur
-in some of the worst forms of the malady; and
-where it does, it is confined to the commencement
-of the attack, or to that of its exacerbations. The
-pulse, instead of being always more frequent than
-natural, in some of the most formidable aspects
-assumed by the disease, has been observed to be as
-low as forty or even thirty in the minute, and, from
-the beginning to the termination of the attack, the
-heat in some cases is below the natural standard, as
-it generally is in the commencement of the cold
-stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the catalogue of Boerhaave, Cullen makes the
-following additions:—“languor, lassitude and other
-signs of debility, together with derangement of the
-functions, particularly a want of vigor in the limbs
-without any primary local affection.” This extension
-of the catalogue adds in no respect to the excellence
-of the generalization. It has all the vices which a
-definition can possess. The characters are not present
-in all cases; the very opposite are strikingly
-prominent in many, while the last, “without any
-primary local affection,” has so direct a tendency to
-mislead the mind, and positively to prevent it from
-observing the real phenomena of the disease, that it
-may well be questioned, whether the introduction
-of this single phrase into the definition of fever,
-has not been the occasion of far more practical
-mischief than has been compensated by any good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>that has been accomplished, or ever can be accomplished
-by all the rest of the nosology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the last attempt to improve the definition of
-fever with which I am acquainted, Dr. Wilson Philip
-says, “If we lay aside Dr. Cullen’s term pyrexia,
-(which it must be borne in mind is precisely Boerhaave’s
-brief catalogue) we shall considerably lessen
-the difficulty of giving such a definition of idiopathic
-fevers as shall apply to all cases. They may be
-defined as follows. Languor, lassitude, and other
-signs of debility, followed by a frequent pulse, and
-increased heat, without any primary local affection.”<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a>
-Inasmuch as this definition contains fewer words
-than that proposed by Cullen, it may be liable to
-fewer objections, but it is less faulty only because it
-is shorter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This total failure of men, all of them of unquestionable
-acuteness, and some of them of splendid
-genius, in their attempts to discover the common
-phenomena of fever, affords a strong presumption
-that they have not pursued their object in the right
-path. Without doubt, before it is possible to succeed
-in any scientific investigation, it is necessary to
-form a distinct conception of the object of inquiry.
-Fever is not an entity, not a being possessing a peculiar
-nature; and the object of investigating it, is
-not to discover in what such nature consists, or what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>it is that constitutes its essence: but fever is a series
-of events, and the object of inquiry is to discover
-what the events are; what the events are that invariably
-concur in the series; and in what order they
-constantly succeed each other. When we have discovered
-this, we have ascertained all that we can
-ever know of what is termed the nature of fever, as
-it is this, and only this, that we can ever know of
-any object or process. Every natural object consists
-either of one single substance, or of several
-substances united; and our knowledge of that object
-is complete when we have ascertained what that
-single substance is; or what all the separate substances
-are that combine to form it. Every natural
-process consists of a number of events, and our
-knowledge of that process is complete when we
-have ascertained the events themselves, the order of
-their succession, and the events to which they give
-occasion. We can make no real progress in knowledge
-unless we keep steadily in view the kind of
-information which it is possible to acquire, and
-which it is to our purpose to seek; and dispossess
-our minds of the phantoms which have so long enthralled
-and abused them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In relation to our present subject then, the first
-object of enquiry is, what are the events which invariably
-concur in fever?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where shall we look for the events? Not in the
-symptoms. Symptoms are not events: they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>only indications of events: symptoms depend upon
-states of organs: they are the external and visible
-signs of internal, and, for the most part, as long as
-life continues, invisible conditions. It is then to
-the state of the organs that we must look for the
-events of which we are in search.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Are there any states of any organs that always
-exist in fever? Are the states constant? Are the
-organs affected constant; and can both be ascertained?
-If this can be truly answered in the affirmative;
-if it can be proved that there are certain
-conditions of certain organs which invariably exist
-in fever, in every type, in every degree, in every
-stage of it, we shall have arrived at a satisfactory
-conclusion relative to the first part of our inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The evidence is as complete as observation during
-life and inspection after death can make it, that a
-morbid change does take place in a certain number
-of organs in every case of fever, from the most trivial
-intermittent to the most alarming continued
-fever, from the mildest plague to the most malignant
-typhus: that at the two extremes of this scale,
-and at all the intermediate gradations of it, there
-are certain organs which are always affected, and
-that the affection in all is similar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The identity of the organs is inferred from the
-indications they give of disordered function during
-life: the identity of the affection is inferred from
-the similarity of morbid appearances which they
-exhibit on examination after death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>The organs affected are those which constitute
-the nervous system; those which constitute the
-circulating system, and those which constitute the
-systems of secretion and excretion. The spinal cord
-and the brain; the heart and the arteries, especially
-their capillary extremities; the secreting and the
-excreting organs, which in fact are composed, essentially,
-of the capillary extremities of the arteries;
-the secreting and the excreting extremities of these
-arteries, especially as they terminate in the external
-skin, and in the mucous membranes, which form
-the internal skin, this is the chain of diseased organs:
-derangement in the nervous and sensorial
-functions: derangement in the circulating function:
-derangement in the secretory and excretory functions,
-this is the circle of morbid actions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There never was a case of fever in which all these
-organs and affections were not more or less in a
-morbid state: there never was a concurrence of this
-morbid state, in this complete circle of organs, without
-fever. The events which <em>invariably</em> concur in
-fever, then, are a certain deviation from the healthy
-state in the nervous and the sensorial functions; a
-certain deviation from the healthy state in the
-circulating function; a certain deviation from the
-healthy state in the functions of secretion and excretion.
-A deviation from the healthy state in one
-circle of actions will not present the phenomena of
-fever; a deviation from the healthy state in two
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>circles of action will not present the phenomena of
-fever: there must be a deviation in the three circles
-before fever can exist. Such then are the common
-phenomena of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For obvious reasons the detail of the proof that
-these several events really and invariably take place,
-must be postponed until the phenomena themselves
-have been stated, or what is termed the history
-of the disease has been given.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it is not the invariable concurrence of a particular
-number of events that is alone sufficient to
-constitute fever: to this must be added invariableness
-of concurrence in a particular order. As will
-be shewn in the proper place, there is complete
-and irresistible evidence that these events do occur
-in one invariable order. Derangement in the functions
-of secretion and excretion never comes first in
-the series: derangement in the nervous and sensorial
-functions never comes last in the series: derangement
-in the function of the circulation never comes
-either the first or the last in the series, but is always
-the second in succession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The order of events then is first, derangement in
-the nervous and sensorial functions; this is the invariable
-antecedent: secondly, derangement in the
-circulating function; this is the invariable sequent:
-and thirdly, derangement in the secreting and excreting
-functions; this is the last result in the succession
-of morbid changes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>Supposing the matter of fact to be as is here
-stated, and the proof that it is so will be adduced
-hereafter, it is clear that we are in possession of
-the true characters of fever. We know the events:
-we know the order in which they occur: we know
-therefore what it is that constitutes the disease, and
-we know consequently what it is by which it is
-distinguished from every other malady. No other
-disease exhibits the same train of phenomena in the
-same order of succession. In inflammation some
-of the phenomena are the same: but the order in
-which they concur is not the same; and this affords
-a clear and universally applicable mark of distinction
-between fever and inflammation. In inflammation
-there is similar derangement in the secreting
-and excreting functions: there is also sometimes
-similar derangement in the circulating function:
-but the derangement in the nervous and sensorial
-functions is seldom if ever similar: the derangement
-that does take place in these latter functions, while
-it is apparently different in kind, is certainly and
-invariably different in the order of its occurrence.
-In pneumonia, in enteritis, in hepatitis, the spinal
-cord and the brain are <em>never</em> the organs in which
-the <em>first</em> indications of disease appear: the earliest
-indications of disease that can be discovered have
-their seat in the affected organ itself: it is only after
-the disease has made some progress that other organs
-and functions are involved; and apparently, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>last to be involved, and certainly the least to suffer,
-is the nervous system.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We can now then answer the questions so often
-asked—are fever and inflammation the same? and
-if not the same in what do they differ? Fever and
-inflammation are not the same, because the term
-fever is appropriated to the designation of a certain
-number of events which occur in a certain series:
-the term inflammation, on the other hand, expresses
-another series of events, each event composing this
-train, succeeding each other in a different order:
-and the difference between the two series of events
-is precisely this difference in their individual phenomena
-and in their order of succession. What the
-physical and the physiological condition of the organs
-is, as contrasted with their condition in the
-state of health, has not yet been made out with regard
-either to fever or to inflammation: in the present
-state of our knowledge, therefore, we can neither
-affirm nor deny any thing respecting either the
-identity or the difference of that physical and physiological
-condition of the organs in these two classes
-of disease. What inflammation is beyond the series
-of events we are able to observe we do not know:
-what fever is beyond the series of events we are
-able to observe we do not know: we compare the
-events and we see that they differ: and since the
-use of names is to mark and to express differences,
-it is right to distinguish these different events by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>different terms. But though in the present state
-of our knowledge we are not justified in considering
-fever and inflammation to be the same, yet the
-close, perhaps the constant connexion between them,
-is a fact of the utmost importance to be known, and
-requires to be incessantly before the view of the
-practitioner. And of this we shall have but too
-abundant evidence in the sequel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Supposing the proofs hereafter to be adduced to
-be conclusive, that the events in fever and their
-order really are what has now been stated, how
-clearly and beautifully does this view of the disease
-enable us to recognize one and the same malady
-through all the modifications it undergoes, and therefore
-through the countless aspects it assumes. Out
-of the system of organs that are always affected in
-fever some may be more and some may be less diseased;
-and it is easy to see how, from this diversity
-alone, the utmost variety may arise in the external
-characters of the disease. Thus, at one time, the
-spinal cord and the brain may be intensely affected:
-consequently the patient may be seized with violent
-pains in the limbs; with ferocious head-ache; with
-early delirium, which may rapidly increase to such
-a degree of violence as to require restraint: or, on
-the contrary, all the muscles of voluntary motion
-may be seized instantaneously with such a loss of
-energy that they may truly be said to be paralyzed:
-at the same time the sensorial faculties may be overwhelmed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>almost as completely as they are in apoplexy:
-thus may be formed one type of fever: and
-such a concourse of symptoms is actually found to
-exist: it ushers in the plague when it first stalks
-into a devoted city to sweep away its thousands and
-its tens of thousands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At another time the disease may seize with peculiar
-violence upon the organs of secretion, and especially
-upon those which belong to the digestive
-apparatus: hence the liver may suddenly pour forth
-an immense flow of bile, so vitiated in quality as
-to irritate and inflame whatever it touches, and so
-abundant in quantity as rapidly to diffuse itself over
-every part of the body, and to tinge almost every
-tissue and every fluid: at the same time the stomach
-and intestines may be involved in such acute disease
-that the powers of life may be exhausted in a few
-hours by incessant vomiting and unconquerable
-purging: thus may be formed another type of fever,
-and such a concourse of symptoms actually
-occurs in the yellow fever of the West Indies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now we may witness a severe though a less violent
-affection of the spinal cord and the brain than
-occurs in plague. There may be present great pain
-in the back and limbs; intense head-ache; early
-and violent delirium; a burning skin; a quick and
-strong pulse; urgent thirst, and constipated bowels:
-or, on the contrary, there may be not pain of the
-head, but giddiness; not delirium, but stupor; not a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>burning hot, but a moderately warm or a cool skin;
-not a frequent and strong, but a frequent and feeble
-pulse. In either case we have a fair specimen of
-the common fever of our own country, the first
-forming the variety which may be termed acute,
-the second subacute cerebral.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now again we may witness a concurrence of
-symptoms very similar to the latter in the commencement
-of the attack, only that there is from
-the beginning greater prostration of strength; and a
-rapid increase in the derangement of the nervous and
-sensorial functions: together with a brown and dry
-tongue; a tender abdomen, and dark and offensive
-stools: thus may be formed another type of fever to
-which is commonly assigned the name of typhus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In each of these cases the most urgent symptoms
-have their seat only in one set of the organs that
-compose the circle which we have said to be involved;
-but in every case all the other organs included
-in that circle are as really, though not as
-intensely diseased. When the spinal cord and the
-brain are so violently affected that the patient appears
-to be struck with paralysis or apoplexy, the
-attention is not strongly drawn to the state of the
-mucous membrane of the digestive apparatus; to
-the nature of the secretions and excretions of which
-it is the source; to the temperature of the system, or
-to the condition of the circulation: because the affection
-of the nervous system being overwhelming,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>and all the other affections being comparatively
-trifling, it is natural that the former should, in a
-manner, absorb the mind of the observer; yet, if the
-skin, the pulse, the tongue, the evacuations are examined,
-all will be found to be in a morbid state,
-and that morbid state will bear a certain proportion
-to the affection of the nervous system.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In like manner when the organs of the digestive
-apparatus form the strong hold of the disease, the
-morbid condition of the spinal cord and brain, and
-the altered action of the heart and arteries, may
-attract less notice; but that morbid condition will
-be not the less real, and will contribute its portion
-of disease to the general derangement of the system,
-not the less certainly because the indications of its
-existence may be less obtrusive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And in the milder forms which the fever of our
-own country presents, in the most intense cerebral
-affection with which we ever meet, there will always
-be present unequivocal indications of deranged function
-both in the heart and arteries, and in the organs
-of secretion and excretion: while in cases in which
-the brain may be tolerably clear; in which there
-may be little or no headache; little or no pain in
-the limbs; no delirium; in which the disease may
-be chiefly seated in the mucous membrane of the
-stomach and intestines, and the prominent symptoms
-be, pain of the epigastrium, tenderness on pressure
-over the whole abdomen, a red tongue, and frequent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>stools, still if we examine the state of the pulse, if
-we look at the quality and the distribution of the
-nervous influence, if we observe the operations of
-the sensorial faculties, we shall find these functions
-to be as truly, though not as intensely deranged as
-if the full force of the disease were spent upon the
-organs in which these functions have their seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, although all these organs are invariably
-affected in every case of fever, yet in no two cases
-are all these organs affected in the same degree.
-Sometimes one system is more affected than another;
-sometimes one organ of one system, and these different
-degrees of affection, in these different systems,
-are variously combined and modified. How
-great then must necessarily be the diversity of symptoms
-presented by the different forms of fever!
-How incalculable are the varieties that result from
-difference of intensity alone. One degree of affection
-of the brain, for example, will occasion violent
-headache, constant watchfulness, great restlessness,
-a peculiar expression of the eye, and intolerance of
-light; in another there will be no headache, or none
-of which the patient will complain; there will be
-sleep though it be disturbed and unrefreshing; there
-will be no peculiar expression of the eye, and no
-intolerance of light. By one degree of affection
-the sensibility will be rendered preternaturally intense;
-by another it will be totally obliterated: one
-will produce violent delirium, another, only slight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>wandering, or unrefreshing slumber: one, violence
-requiring restraint; another, profound coma. In
-the circulating system the symptoms will alike
-vary. One degree will produce a quick, strong and
-hard pulse; another, a quick, small and feeble pulse;
-another, a slow and intermittent pulse. A similar
-diversity will be found in the temperature of the
-body: in one, the heat will be little changed; in
-another, it will be below the natural standard; in a
-third, it will be intense, and the organs of secretion
-and excretion will equally vary in the extent of their
-morbid changes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, from one and the same affection of one and
-the same organ, not only different but opposite
-symptoms will be produced in all the organs involved
-in what we may call the febrile circle. When to
-this variety are added diversities occasioned by various
-stages of the diseased processes that are going on in
-the system; by the previous state of the organs
-affected; by the reaction of the affected organs one
-upon another, producing innumerable and ever varying
-combinations of different intensities of affection, in
-different sets of organs; and by the treatment to which
-the whole have been subjected, we cannot wonder
-if the symptoms of fever appear to be countless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That no two cases of fever can ever be precisely
-the same, and that it must be vain to seek for the
-common phenomena of the disease in the external
-symptoms, must now be obvious: and why success
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>can never attend the search after these common
-phenomena in such symptoms as “shivering, frequent
-pulse, heat,” must be equally manifest. These
-as well as all other symptoms depend upon the state
-of the organs. But we have seen that in one degree
-of the same affection of the same series of organs there
-may be shivering; excited pulse; burning heat; while
-in another degree there may be no shivering, a slow
-pulse and a cold skin: so that from one and the same
-affection, differing only in the degree of its intensity,
-the symptoms may not only vary but be directly opposite.
-The proper object of pursuit in all these enquiries,
-therefore, is the real nature of the affection,
-and the symptoms are of consequence only as they
-are indications of the existence of that affection.
-Symptoms are not <em>the</em> thing in which observation
-should terminate, but signs of the thing without the
-knowledge of which, in every individual case that
-may come under his care, the practitioner ought
-never to be at rest, and to the discovery of which
-they serve as guides.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is then in the organs alone that we can find a
-perfect uniformity: but their condition is as fixed
-and invariable as the return of day and night. All
-the operations of nature are uniform. When, in any
-case, we have succeeded in discovering what the
-operation is, we see that it never varies. The same
-causes, under the same circumstances, always produce
-the same effects. The causes of fever, whatever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>they be, under the same circumstances, always
-produce the same conditions of the organs. In
-proportion as we ascertain with clearness and precision
-what these conditions are, we observe that
-they recur in all cases with the most undeviating
-regularity, and when our knowledge of them shall
-have become complete, it is probable that we shall
-find that they are as constant in their return as that
-of the sun after its setting, and that they no more
-change in their nature or progress than the sun deviates
-from its path.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The all important thing for the practitioner to
-know, then, it can never be too often repeated,
-is what these conditions are. It is greatly to be
-regretted that we do not know with precision the
-condition of the most important organs in the intense
-fevers of other climates. The condition of the
-most important organs in the various types of fever
-as they occur in our own country, we do now know
-with precision, and the main object of the present
-work is to give an account of these conditions, and
-of the signs which denote them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is found that particular conditions of particular
-sets of organs give rise to certain groups of symptoms:
-these groups of symptoms have been supposed
-to form different genera and species, and have
-received specific names. Were the nomenclature of
-these genera and species of fever perfect, the name
-would in each case be expressive of the condition of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>the organs upon which the assemblage of symptoms
-it denotes depends, and perhaps in some greatly
-advanced state of our science, when these conditions
-have been perfectly ascertained and have become
-perfectly familiar, an approximation to this desirable
-classification and naming may be attempted with
-success. The state of our knowledge, however,
-enables no one to undertake the task at present, and
-in the mean time the slightest glance at the divisions
-which have been attempted of this class of diseases,
-is but too sufficient to shew the total absence of that
-kind of information, which, if there be any truth in
-the preceding observations, it is alone of value to
-possess.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus febrile diseases are commonly divided into
-idiopathic and symptomatic—a division which is
-liable to the fundamental objection that the diseases
-included under the second section are not fevers but
-inflammations. There are no fevers but idiopathic
-fevers. It has been shewn that fever differs from
-inflammation both in the individual phenomena
-forming the train that constitutes the disease, and
-in the order in which the several phenomena succeed
-each other. There are, it is true, individual
-phenomena common to both; but since the series
-as well as the order in which the several phenomena
-stand in the series are different, to call both by the
-same name can only produce confusion and misconception.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>Of true or idiopathic fevers two great divisions
-are made; one comprehending intermittent and the
-other continued fevers: a division founded on the
-occurrence of the trains of the phenomena in an
-interrupted or in an uninterrupted series. Intermittent
-fever is further divided into intermittent and
-remittent, the interruption in the series being said to
-be complete in the one and incomplete in the other.
-In continued fever, on the other hand, the trains of
-phenomena are supposed to proceed in a perfectly uninterrupted
-series, whence the name continued. The
-single fact suggested to the mind of the practitioner
-by this classification is in the highest degree trivial.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the particular groups of symptoms which have
-been brought together under the great class, continued
-fever, it is impossible to discover any kind of
-principle which has led to the formation of the distinct
-assemblages that have been made, or to their
-nomenclature when thus collected. Synocha, typhus,
-synochus, are the three genera which modern
-nosology, in the power and pride of its strength,
-has put forth as at once distinctive and exhaustive
-of this class of disease. The aggregate phenomena
-constituting synocha, form just that particular series
-which is common to some forms of fever and to all
-acute inflammations: namely, “Calor plurimum
-auctus, pulsus frequens, validus, et durus, urina
-rubra, sensorii functiones parum turbatæ.” The
-train of symptoms thus brought together do not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>alone form any variety of fever. The second group
-of symptoms forming typhus—“morbus contagiosus,
-calor parum auctus, pulsus parvus, debilis, plerumque
-frequens, urina parum mutata, sensorii functiones
-plurimum turbatæ, vires multum imminutæ:”
-and the third, forming synochus,—“morbus contagiosus,
-febris ex synocha et typho composita; initio
-synocha, progressu, et versus finem, typhus,” independently
-of their being brought together and named
-according to no known or even assigned principle,
-are liable to the further and the fatal objection, that
-they do not even occur in nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even Dr. Wilson Philip, who labours to reconcile
-to nature and to improve in accuracy and comprehensiveness
-these classifications and definitions, expressly
-admits that a simple synocha or typhus is
-a fever which we rarely, if ever meet with: for that
-however high the inflammatory symptoms at an
-early period may be, those of typhus always, at least
-in this country, sooner or later supervene; and that
-however well marked the symptoms of typhus may
-be in the progress of fever, in almost every case, the
-first symptoms are more or less inflammatory; that
-the fevers mentioned by authors, under the names
-synochus and typhus, are in fact no other than
-varieties of the synochus; that when the symptoms
-of debility predominate, the fever has been termed
-typhus; that when, on the contrary, the inflammatory
-symptoms are most remarkable, and present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>through the greater part of the disease, it has been
-called synocha.<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Again, while according to this received arrangement
-a train of symptoms, every one of which is
-found in acute inflammation, is made a distinct
-genus of fever, numerous diseases, each forming an
-exquisite specimen of fever, are totally excluded from
-the order, and placed at a considerable distance in
-the nosology. Because scarlatina is a fever attended
-with a peculiar eruption on the skin; because rubeola
-is a fever attended with an eruption on the skin also
-peculiar; because variola is a fever attended with
-another peculiar eruption, and urticaria with another,
-these diseases are not made varieties of fever, but,
-designated by the term exanthemata, are formed
-into a separate order: while, on the other hand,
-fevers attended with petechiæ, with papulæ, with
-aphthæ, with vesicles, are accounted fevers, and accordingly
-are termed petechial, miliary, aphthous,
-erysipelatous, vesicular fevers; whence synochus petechialis,
-synochus miliaris, synochus aphthosus,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Without doubt is right that these varieties of
-disease should be discriminated and named; but this
-mode of classifying them has a necessary tendency
-to divert the mind from dwelling on those essential
-circumstances which make all of them mere varieties
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>of one great disease; and to fix it upon those
-comparatively unimportant though obvious circumstances
-which simply modify the malady without in
-the least affecting its identity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has already been stated that the grouping of
-the symptoms, or, in other words, the formation of
-the species of fever cannot be scientifically or usefully
-accomplished until we have arrived at a perfect
-knowledge of the condition of the organs upon which
-the trains depend; and that our knowledge of these
-conditions is so imperfect, especially with regard to
-many of the species, that this classification cannot
-possibly be made at present. It is not even known
-whether the condition of the organs in intermittent
-be the same as it is in continued fever. The mere
-periodicity in the recurrence of the febrile paroxysms
-by which this class of disease is at present characterised,
-is an exceedingly unsatisfactory principle of
-distinction, unless we at the same time knew the
-state of the system upon which that periodicity depends.
-The alternate transition of intermittent into
-remittent and continued, and of continued and remittent
-into intermittent fever, of which the history
-of epidemics affords so many striking examples, and
-of which Sydenham, Pringle, and all the older writers
-have recorded so many interesting accounts, as
-events which they themselves daily witnessed, seems
-to shew that there can be nothing amounting to
-a generic difference between these several diseases.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>The type, as far as we have the means of judging,
-appears to be determined entirely by the intensity
-of the disease. An intermittent increasing in violence
-and malignity changes into a remittent or a
-continued fever, and a continued or remittent, diminishing
-in violence and malignity, often assumes the
-form of intermittent. Speaking of the epidemic constitution
-of the years from 1661 to 1664, Sydenham
-states that, in the year 1661, the autumnal intermittents
-which had prevailed for some years broke forth
-afresh, especially obstinate tertians; that increasing
-daily until August, at which time they raged fiercely
-and became extremely mortal, in many places seizing
-whole families, and destroying great numbers, decreased
-by degrees until October; and, disappearing
-at the approach of Winter, were succeeded by a continued
-fever, which differed from the Autumnal intermittent
-only in being continued, while the former
-returned in paroxysms: that both invaded almost
-alike; that those who violently laboured of either
-vomited; that in both the skin was dry; the tongue
-black, the thirst urgent, and that, at their declination,
-the morbific matter in both was readily exterminated
-by sweats. “It was manifest,” he adds, “that this
-fever belonged to the family of intermittents, because
-it rarely appeared in the Spring: it was a sort
-of compendium of the intermittents; and, on the
-contrary, every fit of the intermittent seemed to be
-a compendium of this fever; so that the difference
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>chiefly consists in this, namely, that the continued
-fever once begun, perfects its effervescence with the
-same degree of heat; but the intermittents perform
-their business by parts, and at several times.”<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In like manner, Pringle, among many other examples
-of the fact, which, indeed, he states to be of
-constant occurrence, gives an account of an epidemic
-that prevailed in the army of the Netherlands, and
-which in its worst form assumed the appearance of an
-ardent fever. He states that the men were suddenly
-seized with violent head-ache, and frequently with
-delirium: that, if sensible, they complained also of
-grievous pain in the back and loins; intense thirst;
-burning heat; great sickness and oppression at the
-stomach, sometimes with vomiting of bile, sometimes
-with evacuation of bile by stool, accompanied
-with tenesmus and pains in the back: that this
-fever generally remitted from the beginning upon
-bleeding and purging: that if these precautions
-were omitted, the fever went on in almost a continued
-form, and that its tendency to putrefaction was
-so great, that while many had spots and blotches,
-some had mortifications, which were almost always
-fatal: that this fever continued to rage throughout
-August; that it began to abate with the heat in the
-middle of September; that from this period its violence
-diminished, and the number attacked gradually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>decreased; and that now “the remissions
-became more free, so that insensibly, with the coolness
-of the weather, this raging fever dwindled into
-a regular intermittent, and entirely ceased upon the
-approach of Winter.”<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What that condition of the system is, which, in
-forms of fever that are thus mutually convertible,
-causes one to persist in an uninterrupted series, another
-to remit, and another, after disappearing for a
-time, to recur in distinct and regular paroxysms, is
-wholly unknown. Sydenham, indeed, cuts the knot
-and removes the difficulty at once. Speaking of the
-return of the fits in intermittent, he replies to the
-inquirer into their cause,—“I would fain know why
-a horse comes to his growth in seven years and a
-man at twenty-one; or why some plants flower in
-May and some in June. I am persuaded that the
-progress of nature is as certain and regular in this case
-as in any other, and that the matter of a quartan and
-tertian ague is subject to Nature’s laws and governed
-by them, as well as any other bodies whatever.”
-The regularity of nature in the production of disease,
-no less than in the maintenance of health, cannot
-be doubted: but the point in question is not clearly
-one of those ultimate facts, into the reason of which
-it is wholly vain for the human mind to inquire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hitherto, however, no one appears to have hazarded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>even a conjecture as to the cause of this
-striking difference between these two forms of disease;
-and pathology, as has just been observed, has
-afforded no clear light to enable us to determine
-whether the febrile circle of organs is similarly affected
-in both. Examinations of fatal cases have
-been made; but none on that large scale and with
-that accuracy which alone can render them of any
-value. I have endeavoured to ascertain the morbid
-appearances in the spinal cord and the brain, and in
-the mucous membrane of the respiratory and digestive
-apparatus, from those who have been long engaged
-in extensive practice in districts in which
-ague prevails: but I have been able to obtain no
-satisfactory answer, excepting that intermittent does
-not kill! Greatly as the severity of intermittent is
-without doubt diminished, in the present age, yet
-we cannot receive such an account without blessing
-the bark of the seventeenth and the skill of the
-nineteenth century!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A similar want of knowledge exists relative to the
-condition of the organs in most of the Exanthemata.
-To supply that want in regard to the various forms
-of fever that prevail in this metropolis, which, there
-is good reason to believe, differ but little from the
-types that appear in other parts of the country,
-is one of the chief objects for which this work is
-undertaken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not the object of the present volume to treat of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>intermittent or of remittent fever, but only of that
-class which, in ordinary medical language, is termed
-continued. Of the apparently endless varieties of
-disease comprehended under the term continued
-fever, it is found that certain forms occur in this
-country with great constancy. Each particular assemblage
-of symptoms occurring in these different
-forms is said, in ordinary language, to constitute a
-type or species. Each type or species depends on
-a particular condition of the circle of organs that
-has been described. The causes that concur to
-produce this particular condition of this series of organs,
-will be treated of in their proper place. But
-these assemblages of symptoms never occur without
-being accompanied by these particular conditions of
-the organs; and these conditions of the organs are
-never found without having been connected with
-these assemblages of symptoms. In all the forms
-of fever hitherto observed this condition of the organs
-is found to be absolutely the same: it never
-differs in any thing but intensity; of this the evidence
-is complete and irresistible: the direct and
-legitimate inference is, that all these different forms
-of fever differ in nothing excepting in the intensity
-of the affection. Were the terms genera, species,
-variety, merely used as short expressions to denote
-this fact; to point out and to name different degrees
-of the same malady, degrees which it is important
-to discriminate, because they require material modifications
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>of treatment, a clear and precise meaning
-would be affixed to these words: in nature there
-would be foundation for the distinction they imply:
-in practice there might be convenience in their use.
-But the nosological distinctions at present inseparably
-associated with these terms, appear to me to
-be either so vague and unmeaning, or when they
-cease to be indistinct, to excite notions so false and
-pernicious, that I think it right to abandon the use
-of them altogether. The more we investigate the
-subject, the more satisfied we shall become that
-continued fever is one disease and only one, however
-varied, or even opposite, the aspect it may
-present; but that it differs in intensity in every different
-case, and that this and this alone is the cause
-of the different forms it assumes. Many of these
-diversities it would be frivolous to distinguish: some
-of them, on the other hand, it is of the highest importance
-to discriminate. For all useful and practical
-purposes, it is necessary only to arrange the
-different assemblages of symptoms into two great
-classes, the one comprehending the mild and the
-other the severe forms of the disease. All the forms
-that continued fever can assume, and all the individual
-cases that can occur under either, must be mild
-or severe, and, therefore, must readily find its place
-under one or other of these divisions. The only
-real difference in the disease being a difference in
-degree, it is proper that the principle of the division,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>by which the varieties it presents are classified,
-should be founded on this, the only true distinction
-of which it admits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is difficult to frame, and still more difficult to
-bring into use, new terms; and there is nearly equal
-inconvenience in using old terms in a new sense:
-but if the new meaning affixed to an old term be
-clearly intimated and rigidly adhered to, it is, perhaps,
-upon the whole, productive of less evil to adopt
-the old, thus determining and limiting the signification,
-than to propose a nomenclature entirely novel.
-For this reason, and only for this reason, I propose
-to adopt two words, borrowed from the nosology of
-Cullen, and in common use. These words are here
-employed merely to express differences of degree
-relative to one and the same disease. The mild
-degree may be denoted by the term synochus:
-throughout this work, this term will be used to express
-the milder form of fever; that is, its ordinary
-or common form, or that which it is found most frequently
-to present in this metropolis, and, I may
-add, in this country. The severer form, on the
-other hand, may be designated by the term typhus.
-Each will be found to present a distinct assemblage
-of symptoms; each will be found to depend upon a
-particular condition of certain organs; each will be
-found to require a peculiar treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For the purpose of distinguishing further important
-differences, that is, differences which bear an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>important relation to practice, it will be convenient
-to divide each of these two great classes into two
-minor sections. Thus, synochus may be divided
-into synochus mitior and synochus gravior; and typhus
-into typhus mitior and typhus gravior. This
-will afford convenient and ample means of throwing
-into distinct groups all the varieties of fever that
-occur in this country, which it can be of any practical
-importance to distinguish.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This mode of viewing fever as one great and extensive
-malady never differing in nature, but in every
-two cases differing in intensity, and giving rise by
-these differences in intensity to various forms of disease,
-thus affords a principle of arrangement applicable
-to all those various forms, which, while it is at
-once simple and comprehensive, is at the same time
-in the highest degree practical. It directly leads the
-mind to the observation of the real, the important
-differences that exist or that may arise; those differences
-which must influence and guide the treatment,
-if it be not altogether blind, and in the worst sense
-of the term empirical. This principle might easily
-be extended, and I think with advantage, so as
-to comprehend the exanthemata, and all the forms
-of fever which have hitherto been known to exist,
-or which can arise. Scarlet fever, for example, is
-continued fever attended with a peculiar eruption
-upon the skin: at one time it occurs in a mild, at
-another in an exceedingly severe form: the assemblage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>of symptoms in the first are precisely those
-which it is intended to comprehend under the term
-synochus: the assemblage of symptoms in the second
-are those which are designated by the term
-typhus: thus scarlet fever exhibits at one time the
-synochoid, and at another the typhoid type; the
-first being what is commonly termed scarlatina benigna,
-the second scarlatina maligna; and each type
-is capable of existing in two degrees of severity, one
-of which may be conveniently distinguished by the
-term mitior, and the other by that of gravior.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In like manner small-pox is a fever attended with
-a peculiar eruption upon the skin, which eruption
-modifies the disease in a very remarkable manner,
-and gives it a history and progress peculiarly its
-own; but it is as much a genuine fever as typhus,
-and ought no more to be taken out of this class on
-account of the eruption upon the skin, than scarlatina,
-which likewise modifies, in a very considerable
-degree, the whole train of febrile symptoms,
-and is attended with a peculiar condition of some
-exceedingly important internal organs. Small-pox,
-like all the diseases of this class, occurs in two
-widely different forms; the one mild, the other intensely
-severe: in the first the concourse of symptoms
-are precisely those of the synochoid, in the
-second of the typhoid type.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a> And the same I am
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>satisfied is true of the plague, of the yellow fever,
-and of all the different forms which this great disease,
-of many aspects and names, but of one uniform and
-unchanging nature, presents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These distinctions and names then, though it were
-easy to raise objections against them, may serve for
-all useful and practical purposes. They tend to
-impress upon the mind the great fact that all the
-modifications of the disease are still only modifications,
-and do not affect the identity of its nature;
-and they afford convenient sections under which to
-detail the symptoms that attend and discriminate the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>important diversities in degree as they present themselves
-in practice; to exhibit the condition of the
-organs upon which those diversities depend, and to
-explain the treatment which experience teaches to
-be appropriate to these several states.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The present work will be restricted to the consideration
-of the modifications of fever which we have
-proposed to designate by the terms synochus, typhus,
-and scarlatina.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of Synochus: Division into Synochus Mitior and
-Gravior. Succession of Phenomena in Synochus
-Mitior. Indications afforded of Disease in the
-Nervous, Circulating, and Excreting Systems.
-Progress of Disease consisting in progressive
-Increase in the Derangement of these Functions.
-Phenomena of Recovery. On what the Transition
-of Synochus Mitior into Synochus Gravior
-depends. Classification according to the different
-Organs in which the several Affections have their
-Seat. Hence Synochus Gravior with Cerebral
-Affection—Subacute—Acute: with Thoracic
-Affection: with Abdominal Affection: with
-Mixed Affection.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It has been stated that, for the purpose of forming
-into distinct groups certain assemblages of symptoms
-which it is important to distinguish, because they
-bear an important relation to practice, it will be
-convenient to divide the synochus, the term by which
-we propose to designate the common fever of this
-country, as it presents itself in its mild aspect, into
-two sections, namely, synochus mitior and synochus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>gravior. For reasons already assigned, it will likewise
-be important, in treating of these different modifications
-of fever, to notice in each both the phenomena
-which form the assemblage, and the order
-in which they succeed each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On careful examination it will be found that the
-first symptom which denotes the commencement of
-the ordinary fever of this country, in its mildest form
-(synochus mitior), is a loss of mental energy. This
-is by no means the first symptom which attracts
-attention: it is commonly overlooked for some time,
-and excites little notice until it has become distressing.
-Patients in general are incapable of analyzing
-their sensations or of determining the order of their
-succession; but if medical men, who are but too subject
-to be attacked with this disease, will take the
-trouble to reflect on the order of events as they occurred
-to themselves, they will probably be satisfied,
-after the most attentive consideration, that the first
-indication of disease they felt was a want of power
-to conduct their ordinary mental operations with ease
-and vigour. Such at least, perhaps I may be permitted
-to mention, was the fact in my own case; for,
-having suffered a severe attack of fever, I have a
-distinct and vivid recollection of the dulness, confusion,
-and want of mental energy which I experienced
-for a considerable time before I was conscious of any
-corporeal debility.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This affection of the mind consists particularly in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>indistinctness and consequent confusion in the trains
-of ideas; in inability to attend to their relations;
-and, as a necessary result, in the loss of power to
-think clearly. The individual feels that he is not
-in a state to form a sound judgment on any subject
-upon which he may be called to decide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Closely connected with this mental weakness is
-the loss of energy in the muscles of voluntary motion.
-Lassitude is the result. The patient cannot
-move with his usual vigour, nor even sit without the
-feeling of weariness. The debility thus seizing upon
-both body and mind, sometimes occurs in each so
-nearly simultaneously that, it must be owned, it is
-difficult to determine in which it appears first.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The next symptom in the order of succession is
-still more characteristic: it consists in an uneasy
-sensation which is quite peculiar to this state of the
-system. No description can convey any idea of it to
-one who has not felt it; and to him who has felt it
-the word fever recalls this uneasy feeling so instantaneously
-and vividly that I apprehend most unprofessional
-persons conceive it is this very feeling that
-constitutes the essence of the disease. It is much
-more distressing than pain: the mere restlessness
-which accompanies and which forms so large a part
-of it, any one would gladly exchange for intense
-pain. In all diseases it is this which makes the
-sufferer on his midnight pillow exclaim, “oh! that
-it were morning!” and in the day, “would that it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>were night!” Though it is so frequent in its occurrence,
-and so peculiar in its nature, yet I am not
-aware that it has received any distinct name: it may
-be called, until a better is suggested, febrile uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is seldom that these symptoms exist long before
-positive pain is felt. With very few exceptions
-pain is first felt in the back or loins and then in the
-limbs. It is rare that this symptom is absent in the
-commencement of this form of fever, and it often
-occasions more uneasiness to the patient than any
-thing else during the first stage of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already a remarkable change is commonly visible
-in the countenance. Its expression is that of
-dejection: it is often strikingly similar to that of a
-very weak person suffering from fatigue. The colour
-of the face is pallid, and the features are somewhat
-shrunk; but its general aspect is so peculiar and
-characteristic that an experienced eye can distinguish
-the disease even at this early period, and without
-asking a single question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The skin partakes in a remarkable degree of the
-debility which so early shows itself in the muscles
-of locomotion. This is indicated in a striking manner
-by its increased sensitiveness to the physical
-agents by which it is surrounded, and by its inability
-to resist their influence. Ordinary degrees of
-temperature produce a sensation of cold which is
-sometimes intolerable: chilliness is felt even in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>heated room, or in a warm bed: hence the sensation
-of cold, sometimes increasing to shivering, which
-has been considered one of the most constant signs
-of fever. But this feeling of chilliness by no means
-depends on external temperature: it is increased by
-cold, but it exists in spite of an elevated temperature:
-it arises from an internal cause, and is not to
-be counteracted by external heat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the patient experiences the sensation of
-cold, there is no diminution of the quantity of caloric
-in the system. The thermometer applied to
-any part of the body commonly rises as high as in
-the state of health, and the skin, touched by the
-hand of another person, communicates not the feeling
-of cold, but often, on the contrary, that of preternatural
-heat. There is no positive abstraction of
-caloric from the body nor any failure in the process,
-whatever it be, by which animal heat is generated;
-there is only altered sensation, in consequence of derangement
-in the function of the skin. In this form
-of fever, the chilliness in many cases never amounts
-to shivering; in others, there is an attack of well-marked
-rigor, and in others, again, there is either
-no feeling of cold, or it is so slight that it escapes
-observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The symptoms now enumerated are all clearly referrible
-to derangement of the function of the spinal
-cord and brain. There is as yet no affection of any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>other organ obviously or, at least, much developed.
-The circulating system, it is true, is just beginning to
-be affected. The pulse is no longer perfectly natural.
-It is more languid than in the state of health;
-sometimes it is also quicker: at other times it is
-slower; now and then it is scarcely changed in frequency,
-but its action is invariably weaker than in
-its sound state.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the same time the respiration is affected in a
-corresponding degree: it is shorter and quicker than
-natural; the chest does not expand so freely, and
-compensation seems to be sought in an additional
-number of respirations. Oftentimes neither the pulse
-nor the respiration appears to be much altered, if the
-patient remain perfectly still; but if he rise and walk
-across the room, the pulse instantly becomes rapid,
-and the respiration is quickened almost to panting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The transition from the affection of the nervous
-and sensorial to that of the circulating and the respiratory
-systems is thus clear and striking. Physiology
-teaches us how closely these systems are
-connected, and how mutually they are dependent one
-upon the other, the closest observers and the ablest
-experimentalists candidly confessing that they are
-scarcely able to determine which is the least dependent,
-or the action of which is the least necessary to
-the others performance of its functions. The nervous
-system being first deranged, it is thus consonant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>to what we know of the healthy function of the animal
-economy, that the circulating and the respiratory
-systems should be the next to suffer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How long the nervous system may continue thus
-deranged, before any other organs are involved, excepting
-the circulating and the respiratory, to the
-extent just stated, is uncertain. There can be no
-doubt that in this mild form of fever, the range of
-the duration of this isolated state of disorder, if we
-may so express it, is from a few hours to several
-days. The rapidity or the slowness with which
-other systems of organs become involved seems to
-depend very much upon the acuteness of the attack.
-In general, the more acute the fever, the more rapidly
-the individual phenomena succeed each other,
-and the entire series becomes complete. But this is
-not, and it is important to bear in mind that it is
-not invariably the case: for experience teaches us
-that the severity and danger of the disease are not
-diminished by the slowness of its approach; and
-that cases occur, which are slow in forming, and
-which do not for awhile excite alarm, that ultimately
-become truly formidable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has been stated that the circulation languishes
-with the diminished energy in the sensorial faculties,
-and the loss of power in the muscles of locomotion.
-After awhile, the pulse which was feebler than natural
-becomes more full, more strong, and generally more
-quick than in a sound state; and now the skin, which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>was cold, becomes preternaturally hot. The previous
-cold consisted, for the most part, of altered
-sensation, there being little or no loss of caloric:
-but the feeling of heat, on the contrary, is the result
-of an actual increase of temperature; for the heat in
-the interior of the body, as well as on the surface,
-rises in some cases several degrees, as is ascertained
-by the thermometer; the range of increase being
-from the natural standard 98° to 105°, beyond which
-it is seldom found to augment in this form of fever.
-The heat is at first not uniform over the entire surface
-of the body: it often happens that some parts
-are cold while others are burning hot. The heat is
-oftentimes particularly intense over the forehead, or
-over the back part of the head, or over the whole
-scalp, while the cheeks are commonly flushed. All
-these symptoms denote a morbid condition in the
-action of the heart and arteries. Since the generation
-of animal heat is so intimately connected with
-the circulating and the respiratory functions, it is
-probable that the increase of temperature is the result
-of some morbid action of the capillary vessels
-belonging to these systems. What the disordered
-action of these vessels is, which produces increase
-of temperature, we do not know, because we do not
-know what their natural action is which produces
-the temperature of health: but the object of scientific
-observation is in some degree accomplished,
-when it is ascertained that one condition of these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>functions is invariably connected with a morbidly-diminished
-temperature; another with a morbidly-augmented
-temperature; and another with the temperature
-of health.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Immediately the circulation is thus excited, the
-functions of secretion and excretion become deranged.
-The mouth is now dry and parched; the
-tongue begins to be covered with fur; thirst comes
-on; the secretion of the liver, probably also of the
-pancreas, and certainly of the mucous membrane
-lining the whole alimentary canal, is vitiated, as is
-proved by the unnatural quantity, colour, and fetor
-of the evacuations; the urine likewise is altered in
-appearance, and the skin is not more remarkable
-for the sense of heat, than for that of dryness and
-harshness which it communicates to the touch. With
-the excitement of the pulse and the increase of the
-heat, the pain in the back and limbs and the general
-febrile uneasiness are much augmented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At this period, then, the fever is fully formed;
-the series of morbid phenomena is complete: any
-thing more that happens is referrible to degree and
-to duration, and must be the result of one or other
-of these circumstances, or of their combined operation.
-And we now see that the organs affected,
-constitute precisely that system of organs which has
-been described as forming the febrile circle: that the
-symptoms which denote the fever are just the symptoms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>which indicate a derangement in the several
-functions performed by these organs; and that the
-order in which they become successively involved is
-exactly that which has been assigned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As soon as the preternatural heat comes on, pain
-begins to be felt in the head. Dr. Clutterbuck, in
-describing the general character of the ordinary fever
-of London states<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a> that “the <em>first</em> symptom almost
-invariably complained of is more or less of uneasiness
-of the head.” If by uneasiness he meant pain, there
-is, if there be any truth in the preceding observations,
-a long train of symptoms to intervene before
-this symptom occurs. That it does ultimately occur
-is certain: but commonly its place in the series is
-much later than is here assigned: it is disordered
-function of the brain, indicated by loss of mental
-energy, that appears to form the first symptom in
-this morbid train.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pain, when it does come, is sometimes slight
-at first, and occasionally it remains slight throughout
-the disease; at other times it is pretty severe. Cases
-sometimes occur, in which, instead of pain, there is
-only a sense of giddiness, and now and then the uneasy
-feeling is described as that of lightness: or, on
-the contrary, as that of heaviness or weight. But
-whether the feeling be pain, and that pain be slight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>or severe, or whether it be giddiness, or lightness,
-or heaviness, it indicates a similar condition of the
-organ, and requires a similar treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With the accession of pain of the head there is a
-manifest increase in the disturbance of the sensorial
-functions. The inability to think, to compare, to
-reason, to judge, great as it was at the commencement,
-is now much greater. Instead of being more
-dull, there are certain states of the mind which now
-become more acute and vigilant even than in health.
-Sensation itself, at this period, is invariably acuter
-than natural, as is indicated in all the organs of sense.
-The eye cannot well bear the light: there are few
-cases in which the full glare of day does not excite
-uneasiness, while in many the ordinary light of a
-room cannot be borne: in these cases the opening
-between the eye-lids is frequently observed to be
-contracted, as if from an involuntary effort to exclude
-a portion of that stimulus which in health
-excites no inconvenience, and this state of the eye-lids
-assists in giving to the eye its dull and heavy
-expression, so characteristic of fever. The increase
-of sensibility in the organ of hearing is equally striking.
-Sounds which were not noticed during health
-become acutely and even distressingly sensible, while
-accustomed noises, such as that of a crowded street,
-are always painful and often intolerable. The skin,
-considered as an organ of touch, is in a like morbid
-state. An impression barely sufficient in the state
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>of health to produce sensation excites the feeling of
-tenderness, and alternations of temperature, which in
-ordinary states are scarcely perceptible, are painful.
-The senses of taste and smell, on the contrary, are
-nearly obliterated, owing to the altered condition of
-the membranes upon which the sensitive nerves are
-distributed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the earliest attack of the disease the sleep is
-disturbed and unrefreshing; now scarcely any is obtained;
-the febrile uneasiness will not allow of repose;
-the patient cannot remain in any position long,
-incessantly shifting his place, never eluding his pain.
-At this stage the sense of uneasiness in the limbs,
-oftentimes the severity of the pain over the whole
-body, is peculiarly distressing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With this progressive increase in the affection of
-the spinal cord and the brain, the derangement in
-the circulating system is proportionally augmented.
-The pulse is invariably altered, both in frequency and
-character. Generally it rises to 90, sometimes to
-100; but in this form of fever it seldom exceeds this
-number; and occasionally it never rises above 80.
-The stroke of the pulse is usually stronger and fuller
-than natural, though it commonly retains its softness,
-and does not impress the finger with that sensation
-of sharpness which is characteristic of ordinary inflammation.
-Occasionally, however, a degree of
-sharpness may be perceived in it, and it is not easily
-compressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>The thin white fur which already had begun to
-appear on the tongue progressively increases in extent
-and thickness. The colour of the fur usually
-changes, as the disease advances, from a dirty-white
-to an ash-colour; but in this form of the disease the
-tongue always remains moist, and never becomes
-brown. This state of the tongue is almost always
-accompanied with thirst, but it is never urgent.
-There is always a loss of appetite. The bowels are
-generally constipated, and the secretions of the whole
-alimentary canal are vitiated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus we perceive that the progress of the disease
-consists in increasing mental and corporeal weakness;
-increasing pain in the back, loins, and limbs;
-increasing heat of skin, acceleration of pulse, and
-general febrile uneasiness, together with the occurrence
-of pain in the head, and progressive derangement
-in the functions of secretion and excretion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fever in this mild form is now at its height.
-It remains stationary, or at least with very little
-change for an indefinite period, generally for some
-days. The cerebral affection does not increase beyond
-what has been described: there are no greater
-indications of disease in the respiratory organs, and
-the mucous membrane of the stomach and intestines
-does not denote any progressive advancement in
-disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the most remarkable circumstances connected
-with the ordinary fever of this country, in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>present day, is the uninterrupted and perfect continuity
-of its phenomena. As long as the febrile
-state remains, nothing deserving the name of a remission
-is in general to be perceived. Occasionally,
-it is true, a slight increase in the symptoms may be
-observed towards evening, especially in the heat of
-the skin; but even this is not common, and it is
-scarcely ever great enough to deserve the distinction
-of being called an exacerbation. Much less is
-there any regularity in the accession and decline of
-such excitement. In the great majority of cases not
-the slightest approach to an exacerbation and a remission
-can be distinguished from the commencement
-to the termination of the disease. Yet the
-older writers speak of these events as if they were
-as palpable as the paroxysms of intermittent and
-as constant as the return of morning and evening.
-There cannot therefore be a doubt that the character
-of the ordinary fever of this metropolis is greatly
-changed from the character of that which prevailed
-two centuries ago; and the circumstances which
-have contributed to produce this change will be considered
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the great majority of patients in whom the
-symptoms continue thus moderate, the disease disappears
-about the end of the second week; that is,
-they are convalescent at that period; but it usually
-requires eight or ten days longer before they have
-regained sufficient strength to leave the hospital.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Sometimes, although there is no greater severity in
-the symptoms, the disease is more protracted, and
-the recovery is not complete until the fourth or even
-the fifth week. Beyond this period it is very rare
-for this form of the disease to be protracted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Almost all who are attacked with the malady in
-this, its mildest form, recover: but now and then it
-happens that the symptoms go on with this degree of
-moderation until about the end of the second week.
-Then at the period when it is usual for convalescence
-to take place there is no perceptible improvement;
-the patients seem even to grow weaker; they lie
-more prostrate in the bed, and they are soon incapable
-of moving; still they complain of no pain or
-uneasiness, and it is not easy to detect any trace of
-disease in any organ; yet it is but too evident that
-they grow worse, and ultimately they sink exhausted.
-In these cases, on examination after death, it is commonly
-found that disease has been preying on some
-vital organs, although its presence could not be detected
-during life; and this termination of the milder
-type of fever rarely happens, excepting in aged persons,
-whose constitutions have been enfeebled by previous
-diseases, or worn out by the various causes
-which depress and exhaust the powers of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With an occasional exception of this kind the
-disease in this form always terminates favourably;
-and the first indication of returning health is remarkably
-uniform: it is almost always marked by longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>and more tranquil sleep. Instead of that restlessness
-which is so characteristic of fever, and which forms
-the most distressing part of it, the patient is observed
-to lie more still, and on waking for the first time from
-an undisturbed slumber, he often spontaneously says
-that he feels better. Better he may well feel, for
-his febrile uneasiness is gone; the load that oppressed
-him is shaken off; he is a new being. The
-pain of the head and of the limbs is so much diminished
-that often he cannot help expressing his
-thankfulness at the change. The countenance becomes
-more animated; its natural expression returns;
-the tongue begins to clean; and after this state of the
-system has continued for two or three days, the appetite
-returns. While these favourable changes are
-going on, the pulse usually sinks about ten beats
-below its highest point at the height of the fever;
-it is not uncommon, however, for it to remain
-quick during the entire period of convalescence; and
-for some considerable time it is easily excited on any
-movement of the body, or any emotion of mind. In
-some cases, on the contrary, when the attack has
-been very mild, it sinks considerably below the natural
-standard, and is intermittent, a sign which I have
-uniformly observed to be attended with a sure and
-steady convalescence. In the mean time the appetite
-becomes keener than natural; the strength gradually
-improves; and in a short time the patient is
-restored to his usual health and vigour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>What the condition of the brain and of the organs
-correlatively affected is, in these the mildest cases,
-we do not positively know, because we have no opportunity
-of inspecting them, their favourable termination
-being nearly without exception. But the
-more all the phenomena are considered in their entire
-series, in the order of their succession, in the
-uniformity, nay, even in the exclusiveness of their
-seat, as well as in the unchanging sameness of their
-effects, the more clear the evidence will appear of
-the soundness of the induction, that the condition of
-all the organs in all the types of fever is the same in
-nature, although there be no two cases of any type
-perfectly the same either in the degree of the affection
-or in the stage of the morbid process which it
-excites. If this induction be really just, we must
-conceive that, in the synochus mitior, while the
-morbid affection of the organs is slight, the diseased
-process which it sets up in them stops before it produces
-any change in their structure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However this may be, and to leave for the present
-all matter of inference, and to keep strictly to
-the matter of fact, we do positively know that the
-mild forms of fever become severe in consequence of
-the supervention of inflammation in certain organs.
-Perfectly unknown as the nature of the primitive
-febrile affection at present is, yet that in the progress
-of the disease it does ultimately pass into inflammation
-is a fact, the evidence of which it is impossible to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>resist; although the same observation which teaches
-us this most important truth, teaches us also that the
-inflammatory action is always considerably modified
-by the febrile state. How it is so modified, and to
-what extent, we shall consider hereafter. I have spent
-much consideration and some labour in the effort
-to combine the symptoms which attend these severer
-forms of the disease with the ascertained conditions
-of the organs upon which such symptoms depend.
-But since it is of paramount importance that the
-events which actually take place should be known,
-and that the order in which they succeed each other
-should be stated with clearness and exactness; and
-since I have been able by no method that I could
-think of to combine the pathology with the history
-without breaking too much the continuity of the
-latter, I have been under the necessity of separating
-these two most intimately connected subjects, and of
-treating of them under distinct sections. In giving
-the history of the events, I have detailed them strictly,
-as far as I am acquainted with them, in the order in
-which they occur: and I have endeavoured to arrange
-the cases that constitute the pathology in such
-a manner, that they shall closely correspond to these
-events, and clearly illustrate the order of their succession.
-If I have succeeded according to my wish,
-the reader in studying the cases will be reminded, as
-he proceeds, of the successive stages of the history,
-and if he again revert to the history, after having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>studied the pathology, he will be reminded of the
-morbid appearances in the organs which are there
-described. To afford a clear perception of the connexion
-between the successive events, as indicated
-by the symptoms during life, and the progressive
-changes of structure in various organs, as demonstrated
-by inspection after death; and thus to establish
-a strong and indissoluble association in the
-mind between the morbid condition and its sign, are
-the objects at which I have aimed. If I have succeeded,
-I shall have accomplished one of the chief
-objects of my undertaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The transition of a mild case of fever into a
-severe one, or the progress of a case severe from
-the commencement, is accompanied with, or depends
-upon, as will abundantly appear hereafter,
-certain changes that take place in certain organs.
-These changes occur with great regularity; the organs
-in which they take place are always the same;
-and the symptoms by which they are denoted are
-uniform. The organs affected are the spinal cord,
-the brain, the membranes of both, the mucous membrane
-of the lungs, and the mucous membrane of the
-intestines. For the reason just assigned the nature
-of these affections cannot be described in this place,
-but must be postponed to that part of the work which
-treats of the pathology. Since however the symptoms
-are nothing but the signs of these conditions,
-and the history of the succession of the former, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>nothing but an account of the indications of the successive
-changes that take place in the latter, all the
-important symptoms must necessarily have their seat
-in the head, in the thorax, and in the abdomen.
-Mixed and blended as they appear in the different
-cases which the practitioner is called upon to treat,
-nothing can appear more complex or more variable:
-when analyzed, nothing is more remarkable than their
-simplicity and their uniformity. In order to perform
-that analysis with exactness, and to render it really
-instructive, these symptoms must be contemplated
-as they arise in the affected organs. These organs,
-as we have seen, are the cerebral, the thoracic, and
-the abdominal; the symptoms therefore divide themselves
-into cerebral, thoracic, and abdominal: there
-is, indeed, a fourth order, in which all the organs
-appear to be equally involved; in which the general
-affection is intense, and which therefore may be appropriately
-termed mixed. We shall see that cases
-of this kind constitute by far the most dangerous
-form of the disease.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>I. <span class='sc'>Synochus Gravior with Cerebral Affection</span>,</h3>
-<p class='c014'>occurs under two degrees of intensity: when the cerebral
-affection is moderate, it may be termed subacute;
-when great, acute.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. <em>Synochus with Subacute Cerebral Affection</em>,
-may be attended for several days with no symptom
-which has not been already enumerated in the account
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>of the mildest form of the disease. The accession
-is the same as in synochus mitior: the progress
-up to a certain period is also the same. But
-at the time when the pain of the head diminishes in
-the latter, it increases in the former. Still the pain
-is often not severe. He who looks for intense pain,
-and suspects no cerebral affection, unless accompanied
-with this symptom, will be surprised by what
-will appear to him the sudden occurrence of new
-symptoms, such as are immediately to be stated,
-which will at length open his eyes to the danger of
-the case, and excite his wonder, which it is not unfrequent
-to hear expressed, that an affection hitherto
-so mild, should, without any previous warning, become
-so formidable, and show but too manifestly
-that it is beyond control, and will certainly proceed
-to a fatal termination. The warning was given, but
-the sign was not understood. The descriptions of
-disease are commonly taken from its most acute
-form; and it was long the practice to derive them
-from this form alone, and the consequences were
-truly fatal. Even with the best care that can be
-taken in drawing up the history, these descriptions
-are exceedingly apt to become ideal, and not real
-entities: to consist of a collection of all the circumstances
-that exist in all cases, and not of that particular
-combination only which is found in any one
-case: and thus to be not the portrait of any individual,
-but a fancy picture bearing a general resemblance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>to all individuals without being the true
-likeness of any. The consequence is, that at the
-bed-side of the sick the original from which the
-picture is supposed to be taken is not to be seen, and
-the practitioner remains in doubt, if he do not fall into
-error. Error serious and fatal many have fallen into,
-and, on this very account, still continue to fall into,
-with regard to the existence of cerebral disease in
-fever. Abundant evidence will be given in the pathology,
-that it is not uncommon for the most unequivocal
-and extensive changes of structure to take
-place in the brain and its membranes without severe
-pain having ever been felt. Pain, however, though
-it be not great, is almost always present. It is seldom
-that the pain extends over the whole head;
-the patient generally points to some particular part
-where it is peculiarly felt. In the majority of cases
-the seat of the pain is either in the forehead, or at
-the temples, or over the eyes; but occasionally it is
-in the occiput, and extends down the neck, and in
-these instances it is often severe between the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now and then no pain whatever is felt. Question
-the patient as much as you please, and he will tell you
-that he never has felt any pain. In this case giddiness
-is the substitute. Giddiness in the commencement,
-and in the early stage of fever, is as certain a
-sign of cerebral affection as pain. Striking illustrations
-of this are afforded by several cases detailed in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>the pathology; by consulting which, the reader will
-see that precisely the same morbid changes take
-place in the structure of the brain, although nothing
-but giddiness be complained of, as occur in those
-which are attended with the acutest pain. The practitioner
-will therefore fall into a fatal error who is
-seduced into security because pain is absent; and
-who neglects the remedies proper for inflammation
-of the brain, because the patient complains only of
-giddiness. If giddiness be combined with pain, or
-alternate with it, which is not uncommon, the giddiness
-being slight if the pain be severe, and the pain
-being slight if the giddiness be distressing, it indicates
-a more severe affection than if either exist alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. In the majority of cases, as long as the pain
-continues, the heat of the skin remains considerably
-above the natural standard. But often the heat over
-the general surface of the body is not great. Commonly,
-however, it is hotter than natural over the
-head, and it is hottest wherever the seat of the pain
-be fixed: so that the contrast is often striking between
-the temperature over the forehead or at the
-occiput, and the heat of the body in general.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. The dull and heavy expression of the eye is
-greater than in the milder form of fever. The conjunctiva
-generally becomes brighter and more glistening
-than natural: though instead of this the vessels
-are often more numerous and more turgid than
-usual, and give it the appearance which is termed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“muddled.” The eye at the same time is commonly
-preternaturally sensible, and cannot bear a strong
-light, although sometimes no complaint is made if
-the curtains of the bed be withdrawn, or the window-blind
-be drawn up.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. There is usually a corresponding increase in
-the general sensibility; and what is remarkable, this
-is quite as much indicated by the increased sensibility
-to sound as to light. A loud noise is invariably
-distressing to the patient, and a continuance of
-it greatly aggravates all the symptoms. Exposure
-to a glare of light and a loud noise, would alone
-rapidly change a slight into the severest cerebral
-affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The expression of the countenance is now very
-peculiar: it cannot be described, but the experienced
-eye can seldom fail to recognize it. It is indicative
-of suffering without the strength to bear it: it is not
-anxious; that expression does not come on until
-a later period. The face is sometimes flushed, but
-it is often pallid, which does but add to the peculiar
-character of its expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. As long as the pain of the head, the giddiness,
-and the increased sensibility continue, there is invariably
-a want of sleep. The degree of sleeplessness
-is not always in proportion to the head-ache or
-to the other symptoms; but while the latter are present,
-the former is never absent. That condition of
-the brain upon which sleep depends appears to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>easily disturbed by a great variety of causes; but
-whatever be capable of affrighting this heavenly visitant,
-“tired Nature’s sweet restorer,” whether in the
-mansion, the palace, or the prison, and whether from
-the bed of healthful slumber or from the couch of
-sickness, nothing so effectually and so constantly
-banishes it as that febrile uneasiness of which we
-have already spoken; and which, instead of declining,
-as in the milder form of fever, now increases in
-strength and activity, and will scarcely allow the
-restless body to remain in one position for a moment.
-He who has felt its influence in this stage and degree
-of fever, will admit that there is nothing comparable
-to the wretchedness it produces, except it be the
-sweetness of the first waking moment after the first
-tranquil slumber of returning health.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6. And now, sometimes closing this train of symptoms,
-but more frequently being the first harbinger
-of another, delirium appears. Delirium is usually
-first observed when any slight sound rouses the patient
-from that disturbed slumber which is the only
-substitute allowed for sleep. The delirium is seldom
-violent or long-continued, but, when present,
-is like the talking of a person during sleep in a disturbed
-dream. This symptom, however, is by no
-means invariably present, and when it does come, it
-often postpones its visit to a somewhat later period.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7. The pulse, during all this time, may not be
-much quicker than in the mild form; and the state
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>of the tongue and of the evacuations does not materially
-differ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such is the train of symptoms when the brain becomes
-prominently affected. These symptoms continue
-without intermission, and with little change,
-for several days. The period of their duration,
-when only in this degree of violence, is commonly
-from eight to ten days: when their character is still
-milder or more subacute, or when they have been
-mitigated by appropriate remedies, it may be protracted
-fifteen days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>About this period a remarkable change takes
-place; an entirely new train of symptoms supervenes,
-which is different, and which, indeed, presents
-a striking contrast, according as the patient is destined
-for life or death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If it be for life, that sleep, of the long absence of
-which we have already spoken, returns; and nothing
-can more truly express its character than its familiar
-name, “balmy;” and healing is its influence. From
-two or three hours of such slumber, the patient awakens
-a new being. Not that the change is at first
-striking to an inexperienced eye; but there is no
-fever nurse who does not recognize it in a moment,
-and it is not long before the patient tells you that
-he feels it. The febrile uneasiness is now much diminished:
-the headache is greatly relieved; and the
-skin is cooler and softer. The pulse may not yet be
-altered, or it may be a few beats slower than before,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>but there is almost always already an improved appearance
-in the tongue, which shews a beginning
-disposition to clean. These favourable changes
-gradually increase. If the sleep the next night be
-longer and more refreshing, which it generally is,
-on the following morning a decided improvement is
-visible in the countenance. The eye is clearer and
-more lively, and the expression of the countenance
-is more natural. The skin continues cooler and
-softer; the tongue is still cleaner, and the pulse,
-perhaps, slower by a beat or two; and from this
-period, if no untoward event happen, the convalescence
-proceeds just as has been described in the
-return of health in the milder form of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If, on the contrary, the case proceed unfavourably,
-a totally new train of symptoms at this period sets in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. In the first place, the pain of the head obviously,
-and sometimes strikingly, diminishes. Often
-it disappears altogether, or, if any uneasiness
-remain, it is rather a sense of dullness and heaviness
-than pain. In like manner the giddiness, if that
-were urgent, is no longer perceptible: but it is remarkable
-that the pain in the back and loins not
-unfrequently continues for some time after the headache
-has disappeared: but, ultimately, that also
-ceases. The period at which this important change
-takes place depends upon the severity of the attack,
-and is materially influenced by the activity or inertness
-of the treatment. In the subacute form, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>usually takes place about the tenth day from the
-commencement of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Simultaneously with the disappearance of the
-head-ache, there is a remarkable diminution of the
-sensibility. The mind is duller and more heavy.
-The patient may still be roused to answer with tolerable
-coherence if spoken to; but when left to
-himself he is confused and stupid. The eyes now
-become injected: often suffused; and the heaviness
-and dullness of their expression is increased.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. It is at this time that delirium, if it appear at
-all, most commonly comes on. The increasing insensibility,
-if not attended with decided delirium, is
-almost always accompanied with moaning or incoherent
-muttering, especially during the short and
-interrupted slumbers which form the substitute for
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. Striking as these changes are in the functions
-of the spinal cord and brain, those which take place
-in the number and character of the pulse are no less
-important. Even in cases the most decidedly subacute,
-it is seldom that it does not rise ten beats, so
-that if before it were 90, it will now be 100, and it
-is always weaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. Now, too, signs of disease in the chest and abdomen
-are almost always to be distinguished. A
-case purely cerebral, from the commencement to the
-termination of the disease, is rarely to be met with.
-If there be not cough, there is almost always a short
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>and hurried respiration, and more or fewer of the
-indications of abdominal affection hereafter to be
-stated. Even in cases the most purely cerebral the
-tongue always becomes more loaded and often dry;
-and it is strikingly characteristic of the state of the
-nervous system, that while the tongue becomes dry,
-the thirst diminishes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus far it is possible that the disease may proceed
-towards a fatal termination without proving
-mortal. It is not often that its course is turned
-back or stayed after it has made this progress;
-but still such an event is sometimes witnessed.
-When it does occur, the amendment, both in its
-origin and progress, is very similar to that of the
-favourable change which has already been described.
-More tranquil and longer-continued sleep is almost
-always the earliest sign that, in this severe struggle,
-life has obtained the victory. If, on awaking from
-such sleep, there be less delirium, were delirium
-present, or greater tranquillity, were the restlessness
-urgent; and if there be <em>any</em> increase, although
-slight, in the sensibility, or any improvement in the
-expression of the countenance, hope may be entertained
-that that victory will be won; and hope may
-become assurance, if the tongue which had been
-loaded become clean at the edges, or the dry tongue
-become moist. Even under apparently the most
-desperate circumstances, if these three symptoms
-concur, a favourable prognosis may be pronounced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>with tolerable certainty. Two or three days <em>may</em>
-elapse after their occurrence, before any remarkable
-change is observable in the pulse; but it is seldom
-that they continue twenty-four hours before the
-pulse falls at least ten beats. Now and then, on
-leaving a patient in the evening with a pulse at 120,
-we are surprised and delighted to find it in the
-morning as low as 100. When the pulse has thus
-fallen towards the natural standard, when the tongue
-has begun to clean, and when the skin has become
-cool and soft, however desperate his condition but
-a few days before, the patient may be said to be
-convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But though this favourable change is sometimes
-witnessed, yet, from the point at which we left off
-the description of the progress to a fatal termination,
-the too common history is, increasing restlessness
-and sleeplessness; insensibility lapsing into coma;
-further acceleration of the pulse; greater dryness of
-the tongue and decreasing strength, until, at length,
-the powers of life receiving less and less supply from
-the great systems in which they have their seat,
-become completely exhausted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who have been placed in situations which
-have afforded them opportunities of witnessing much
-of the disease will, I trust, acknowledge that the
-account now given is an accurate narrative of the
-symptoms that occur, and of the order in which
-they succeed, in the great majority of cases. Upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>what conditions of what organs they depend will be
-illustrated in the pathology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sometimes to these, other trains of symptoms are
-added—namely, muscular tremor, frequent and sudden
-screaming; rolling of the head upon the pillow;
-constant tossing of the hands about; picking at the
-bed-clothes or other surrounding objects; partial
-paralysis of the upper eyelid, so that one or both of
-the eyes remain half or almost wholly closed; the
-ball of the eye unsteady or constantly rolling; the
-expression of the eye and countenance at one time
-wild and anxious, at another fatuous; squinting; the
-respiration now slow and laborious, now exceedingly
-rapid; the pulse either slow, full and regular, or
-slow and intermittent, or so quick that it cannot be
-counted, or these states succeeding each other or
-alternating with each other at short intervals; convulsions;
-involuntary and unconscious stools—all
-these symptoms are never found combined in any
-one case; but certain assemblages of them occur
-with some degree of constancy, and depend upon
-certain conditions of the brain and spinal cord.
-Since, however, the description of these conditions
-cannot be given here, the further account of the
-signs which denote them must be postponed until
-we treat of the pathology of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. <em>Synochus Gravior with Acute Cerebral Affection.</em>—Such
-is the history of the synochus gravior
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>with cerebral affection in its subacute form. When
-its attack is the most acute, the history is precisely
-the same, excepting that the symptoms are more severe,
-and their progress quicker. The head-ache is
-much more intense; the giddiness is more violent; the
-sensibility is excessive; the least noise is intolerable;
-the slightest motion either of the head or of the body
-aggravates all the symptoms; the eye is muddy, and
-very soon becomes injected, and is perfectly intolerant
-of light; the pain in the back, loins, and limbs, is
-nearly as great as it is in the head. The skin is intensely
-hot, and sometimes impresses the hand with
-the sense of pungency; but though every where thus
-hot and dry, its temperature is peculiarly great over
-the scalp, so that if the head be shaved, and wet
-clothes applied, they are quite dry in a minute or two.
-The febrile uneasiness is excessive; the patient can
-scarcely remain a moment in the same posture, and
-he is wholly without sleep. The pulse at one time
-is strong, full, bounding, and not easily compressed,
-but even in this acute form it is almost always soft;
-at least it is very different from the hardness characteristic
-of an acute attack of pure phrenitis; at another
-time it is oppressed, the stroke giving an impression
-directly opposite to that produced by the
-free and bounding pulse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But one of the most remarkable modifications of
-the pulse, one that is characteristic of an exceedingly
-acute attack of cerebral disease, and one with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>the import of which it is of the highest consequence
-to the life of the patient that the practitioner should
-be perfectly acquainted the moment he meets with
-it, is the slow and intermitting pulse. Whenever,
-in the onset of fever, a patient is found with intense
-head-ache or intense pain in the back and
-loins, and <em>a slow pulse</em>, the physician ought to be
-greatly alarmed at the severity of the symptoms that
-are to follow, and if he do not take the most active
-measures to break the violence of the disease at this
-early period, it will be beyond all control in a day
-or two, and the patient will be dead before the fever
-is well formed in milder cases. The affection of
-the brain is sometimes so violent and sudden that
-the pulse is not only slow, but intermitting, and the
-respiration is suspirious. Frequent and deep sighing
-is not uncommon in severe cerebral cases, and
-it is highly characteristic of intense cerebral affection;
-but in such a violent attack as that of which
-we are now speaking, the suspirious breathing, even
-in the very commencement of the disease, is so great
-that it cannot be overlooked. This happened in the
-case of my friend Dr. Dill, whom I saw a few hours
-after the commencement of an attack of one of these
-intense forms of fever. I saw him in the afternoon
-at a public meeting. I met him an hour afterwards
-at his own apartment. He was still going about
-engaged in his ordinary occupations; but his countenance
-was pale as death; his eye was dull and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>heavy; his mind was confused, and as it seemed to
-him paralysed; he had other sensations, which were
-new to him, and which were most distressing; <em>but
-he had no pain</em>: at that time there was not the
-slightest pain either in his head or his back or loins:
-there was only that general and undefined uneasiness
-which gave to him sufficient warning of what was
-coming, as the slow and labouring pulse, coupled
-with the uneasy sensations of which he complained,
-and the peculiar aspect of his countenance, afforded
-to me an abundant confirmation that his apprehensions
-were just. He was bled immediately to the extent
-of twenty ounces: the blood then drawn was not
-sizy: he passed a wretched night. I saw him early
-the following morning: he had now intense headache;
-his eye was already injected; his skin was not
-hot but burning; his respiration was suspirious; almost
-every breath was a sigh, and his pulse was <em>still
-slower</em> than on the preceding evening, and was now
-<em>intermittent</em>: blood being drawn to a large extent,
-the crassamentum was now buffed and cupped; but
-the detail of the progress of this instructive case must
-be postponed until we speak of the treatment of fever,
-because it is still more illustrative of the effects produced
-by the vigorous application of the appropriate
-remedies than of the peculiarity of the symptoms
-which usher in the attack. It may suffice for the
-present to observe that this case affords not only a
-striking example of the concurrence of these peculiar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>symptoms, but also a decisive proof that pain of the
-head is far from being the <em>first</em> symptom that occurs
-even in the most intense cerebral attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these acute forms of the disease, if the proper
-remedies be not vigorously employed, the pain ceases
-<em>within the fourth day</em>; it rarely extends beyond the
-fifth; the pain passes into insensibility; delirium
-comes on, sometimes so violent as to require restraint,
-but delirium is by no means an invariable
-concomitant of the other symptoms, even when
-these are the most violent: when it is present it is
-almost always rapidly followed by muscular tremors,
-and these by subsultus tendinum, which now and
-then usher in general convulsions; but this last event
-is rare, and I have never yet seen convulsions unaccompanied
-with a particular condition of the brain
-hereafter to be described. Sometimes the muscular
-tremors succeed immediately to the transition of the
-pain into insensibility, while the insensibility rapidly
-increases to stupor, and that to profound coma.
-The breathing is occasionally as stertorous as it is
-in apoplexy, but this is also rare, and when it does
-occur, is probably dependent on a peculiar condition
-of the brain hereafter to be pointed out. Together
-with these there is a concurrence of a greater or a
-lesser number of the symptoms enumerated at page
-107, but the particular combinations that are found
-most usually to accompany particular conditions of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>the brain, it will be most instructive to state in connexion
-with the pathology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In synochus with acute cerebral disease there is
-less indication of thoracic and abdominal affection
-than in the subacute form, because the intensity of
-the cerebral disease obscures the signs of derangement
-in the other organs; but the signs of their
-derangement are never absent, although they are
-less obtrusive, and they trace in indelible characters
-proofs of their activity in the ravages they commit
-upon their structures in which they have their seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such is the course of synochus under different
-degrees of violence. When it is combined with subacute
-cerebral affection, that course is usually terminated
-in from three to six weeks; when with
-acute cerebral affection, in from seven to ten days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As an illustration of each form of the disease,
-as it is commonly met with in practice, I subjoin the
-following cases.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case I.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Colebert</span>, æt. 28, admitted into the Fever
-Hospital August 1, 1828.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Attacked five days ago with chilliness, alternating
-with heat, pains of limbs, head-ache, and sense of
-weakness. At present complains of pain of head,
-with slight giddiness; pains of limbs, especially of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>back and lower extremities; skin moderately warm;
-tongue loaded with white fur; much thirst; three
-stools; respiration natural; no cough, no uneasiness
-in chest; no epigastric or abdominal tenderness on
-full pressure; pulse 96, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Skin natural; pain of head gone; pain of
-back and limbs continues; slept better; tongue
-more clean; three stools; pulse 102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of head not returned; pain of limbs
-better; tongue still cleaning; three stools; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of limbs gone; tongue nearly clean;
-two stools; pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case II.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George Walker</span>, aged 17. Admitted May 5th,
-1828.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Six days ago seized with shivering, succeeded by
-heat, loss of strength, and pain of head. At present
-complains especially of head-ache; ardent thirst;
-no pain of chest; no cough; no pain of abdomen,
-back, or extremities; skin cool; face natural; tongue,
-except at the point, covered with a thick dirty fur;
-much thirst; no appetite; sleeps badly; bowels
-costive, having had no stool for the last three days;
-pulse 98, of good strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Heat of skin nearly natural; pain of head
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>almost gone; no pain of limbs; tongue still much
-loaded; some thirst; three stools; pulse 72; slept
-much better.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Tongue much less loaded; less thirst; five
-stools; pulse 60.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Return of head-ache, and, on the day following,
-the tongue again became white; but these
-symptoms disappeared the succeeding day, and, on
-the 27th, he was dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These two cases afford fair specimens of the combination
-of symptoms, and of the degree of their severity,
-in the synochus of London, as it occurs in
-its mildest form.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case III.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Emma Gladish.</span> Admitted into the hospital on
-the 12th day of fever. Attack commenced with
-usual symptoms. The pain in the head, which had
-been severe for some time, had entirely subsided on
-the day of her admission. The mind was now quite
-indistinct; she could scarcely answer any question
-that was put to her; the eyes were dull and heavy;
-she had no sleep; there was great restlessness, and
-occasionally wandering delirium; there was no tenderness
-of abdomen; the tongue was red, furred
-and dry; the stools were passed in bed; the pulse
-105, of good power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>13th. Sleep rather more tranquil; less wandering;
-mind a little more distinct; stools still passed in
-bed; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Much noise through the night; occasionally
-started out of disturbed sleep with screaming; tongue
-red, glazed and dry; stools passed in bed; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Rather more sleep; talkative delirium;
-tongue somewhat cleaner; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Longer and more tranquil sleep; mind more
-distinct; expression of eyes still dull and heavy;
-tongue more clean, more moist; stools only partly
-passed in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. More sleep than on the preceding night;
-mind still more distinct; complains to-day of some
-tenderness of abdomen on pressure; tongue nearly
-clean; two stools no longer passed in bed; pulse
-fallen to 72.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Slept well; mind clearer; eyes more animated;
-expression of countenance brighter; other
-symptoms the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Continues to improve; skin cool, soft, and
-moist; pulse 78.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Convalescent; but the convalescence was
-slow and tedious, as it almost always is after so severe
-an attack of cerebral disease; she was dismissed
-cured on the 40th day from the commencement of
-the attack. The reports of the 15th, 16th, and 17th
-days illustrate very clearly and strikingly the changes
-which have already been stated to indicate recovery.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span><span class='sc'>Case IV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Price</span>, æt. 26, servant; admitted on
-11th day of disease. Attacked with ordinary symptoms
-of fever: at present complains of very severe
-head-ache; face flushed; intolerance of light; some
-deafness; mind confused during night; visions of
-various kinds, such as “waves of the sea rolling,”
-appear occasionally before her with great vividness;
-had been on sea four days before she became ill;
-skin warm; sense of general soreness; abdomen
-rather hard, but not tender; tongue furred, rather
-red; much thirst; no appetite; scarcely any sleep,
-and, when she does, dreams of a frightful nature
-interrupt her rest; pulse 114, <em>intermittent</em>, of good
-power, but easily compressed; bowels constipated.
-C. C. ad ℥xviij. nuchæ. Abradat. Capillitium. Lot.
-Gelid. cap. Haust. Sennæ Sal. c. m.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. More sensible since cupping; mind still
-confused; occasional wandering; scarcely any sleep;
-pulse 124, sharp, yet easily compressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Quiet night, with considerable sleep; head
-giddy and slightly painful; respiration hurried, apparently
-cerebral; pupils active; tongue dry; much
-thirst; pulse 123. Empl. Lyttæ cap.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Much screaming; great restlessness during
-night; complains much of head-ache; pupils active;
-urine copious, but passed in bed; all the stools
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>passed in bed; pulse 108, easily compressed; has
-visions before her almost constantly; head very hot.
-Four leeches have been applied to the temples this
-morning without relief. Affus. Frigid. cap. ℞. Hydrar.
-Submuriat. gr. ij. Pulv. Scillæ, gr. j. Pulv.
-Antimon. gr. iij. M. sumat 4tâ q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. No screaming; head less painful, especially
-when in half-erect posture; mind quite sensible now,
-but much wandering occasionally; pulse 120, feeble;
-five stools passed in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No material change until this day; sleep
-now greatly improved; mind much more itself;
-tongue beginning to clean; pulse 93; ptyalism.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Ptyalism continues; feels greatly better;
-appetite returning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From this period she continued to improve, although
-with several threatenings of relapse; the
-convalescence was slow and precarious, but she ultimately
-left the hospital quite well, though not
-until the 60th day from the commencement of the
-fever.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case V.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Sullivan</span>, æt. 36. Admitted on 14th day
-of disease; complaint commenced with shivering;
-pains in the limbs; severe head-ache. Complains
-now of violent pain of the head; face pallid; expression
-depressed; scarcely any sleep; abdomen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>tender on pressure; only one stool for eleven days;
-tongue foul and dry; pulse 81, not strong; complains,
-also, of pain under right mamma, preventing
-inspiration and decubitus. V.S. ad ℥xij. Lotio Gelida
-cap. Abrad. Capillitium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Blood with firm buff; pain of head not
-at all relieved; pain of back, sides, and abdomen
-severe; no delirium; no sleep; pulse 78, pretty
-strong. Hirudines viij. temporibus. Pt. Med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Pain of head much relieved; slept very
-much better; pulse 66, full and strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Pain of head returned, exceedingly severe
-over the fore-part; pulse 66, full and strong. C.C.
-ad ℥xij. nuchæ. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. Ol. Ricini
-c. m.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Pain of head gone; countenance more natural;
-tongue more clean and moist; pulse 76, more
-soft. Pt. Med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Pain of head returned; mind confused;
-pulse 60, strong and full. C.C. ad ℥viij. nuchæ.
-Pt. Med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Pain of head gone; mind confused; pulse
-66, pretty strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Pain of head returned, but in a slighter degree;
-mind more confused and dull; scarcely any
-sleep; tongue more foul; pulse 72, soft. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No longer conscious of pain; mind quite
-indistinct; lies prostrate on the back perfectly helpless;
-incapable of turning on the side; occasional
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>retching; some tenderness of abdomen on pressure;
-pulse 72, strong and full.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Much restlessness; aspect of countenance
-greatly depressed; stools passed in bed; pulse 75.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Perfectly senseless; almost constant moaning;
-extreme restlessness; difficult deglutition; pulse
-120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Not spoken since last report; lies prostrate
-on back; eyes half open and injected; pulse 102,
-feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If the reader can doubt of the condition of the
-brain in this case, he is requested to turn to the pathology,
-where the morbid appearances on dissection
-are detailed. Slowness of the pulse, with severe and
-obstinate pain in the head, attended with confusion
-of mind, is always a highly dangerous-symptom: it
-invariably denotes intense cerebral disease. Whenever
-there is such a struggle, as this case exhibits,
-between the physician and the disease, the disease
-is sure to conquer. For if the physician, terrified
-at the name or the duration of the malady, while
-he resolve to use the lancet, hesitate to employ it to
-the extent of subduing the disease by the first bleedings,
-the patient is lost. The partial relief afforded
-by partial measures is most delusive. The malady
-speedily recovers its lost strength: the patient never
-does. There is no practitioner who is capable of
-being taught by experience that can reflect on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>history and progress of such a case as this, on the
-temporary relief afforded by such treatment, on its
-ultimate failure, and on the appearances presented
-on dissection, without regretting that more blood
-was not taken on the 15th and 16th days, and
-without at the same time resolving, that the aid
-he offers in future, under similar circumstances, shall
-be more decisive. The diminution of the pain of
-the head on the 22d, accompanied with increasing
-confusion and dullness, with a tongue growing more
-and more foul, and with a pulse only at 72, might
-well excite alarm; and accordingly, on the following
-day, the case was utterly without hope.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'><span class='sc'>II. Synochus Gravior with Thoracic Affection.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>There is probably no case of fever, however slight,
-in which the mucous membrane of the bronchi remains
-in a perfectly sound state. A certain affection
-of this membrane, the nature of which will be stated
-hereafter, appears to be peculiar, to fever, and there
-is reason to believe that the acutest thoracic affection
-which is at the same time truly febrile, differs
-from the mildest case of fever, in which there may
-be no visible sign of any thoracic disease whatever,
-only in the degree in which this organ is affected.
-Sometimes it happens, however, that this membrane
-is implicated in a more than ordinary degree; and
-when it is so, it gives rise to peculiar symptoms, constituting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>the case thoracic. The severity of these
-thoracic, is not always in proportion to the severity of
-the febrile symptoms, in like manner as there may
-be the most intense febrile symptoms, without any
-indication of thoracic disease: but whenever the
-thoracic symptoms are sufficiently intense to become
-prominent, and especially when they occur early or
-attend on the commencement of fever, they invariably
-and very considerably aggravate the general
-febrile symptoms. In these prominent thoracic
-affections, then, two things happen; first, the symptoms
-properly constituting the febrile train are modified,
-and, secondly, new symptoms are added to
-this train, namely, those which indicate derangement
-in the respiratory organs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new and peculiar symptoms to which a moderately
-acute and an early thoracic affection gives
-rise, are the following; namely—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pain in the chest, sometimes severe, sometimes
-only slight; sense of stricture or dyspnœa; inability
-to expand the chest by a full inspiration without
-pain or uneasiness; cough frequently aggravating
-the pain; sometimes dry, sometimes accompanied
-with frothy mucous expectoration. Respiration
-sometimes slow and heavy, at other times, on the
-contrary, short and quick; never natural: perhaps
-the physician may detect thoracic disease in the
-more obscure, and measure its extent in the more
-obvious cases, by observing the manner in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>the patient breathes, better than by any other single
-means. The altered respiration is very frequently
-accompanied with that peculiar noise in breathing
-which is termed “mucous rattle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pulse, in the commencement of this open and
-decided chest affection, may not be above 80 or 90;
-it is hardly ever sharp; it is generally weak; now
-and then it is full and of good strength; but whatever
-other character it may possess it is almost
-always soft. In a few days, as the disease advances,
-it uniformly rises in frequency and becomes weaker.
-Towards the end of the disease it is almost always
-hurried and feeble, although cases occasionally occur
-in which it is observed at this period to become suddenly
-slow and intermittent. The tongue is usually
-foul; commonly moist; but, in severe affections and
-in their advanced stage, it sometimes becomes dry.
-The skin is often moderately warm, but it is never
-intensely hot: it is much more common for it to be
-cool, and to be of a more dusky colour than natural.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such are the usual conditions of the respiratory
-and circulating systems and of the tongue, the great
-index of the state of the mucous membrane of the
-alimentary canal, when the thoracic affection increases
-so as to become prominent and acute. The
-manner in which it influences the cerebral affection
-is commonly by hastening the period at which the
-pain of the head lapses into confusion and stupor.
-Early insensibility, assuming the form of a muddled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>or exceedingly confused state of mind, is a very constant
-symptom of more than ordinary thoracic affection.
-Accordingly, the delirium which succeeds or
-which accompanies this state is always low muttering
-talkativeness, or incoherent wandering, rather
-than violent delirium, which last is seldom, if ever,
-found in combination with severe thoracic disease.
-The pathological condition of the lung perfectly accounts
-for this modification of the condition of the
-brain, as will be shewn hereafter.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case VI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following case not only shews the insidious
-manner in which thoracic disease may come on and
-the severe form it may ultimately assume; but also,
-the extent of disease from which it is possible that
-recovery may take place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Dillon</span>, æt. 20; destitute. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever: attack came on with the ordinary
-symptoms: at present, no pain of chest; some
-cough, with copious expectoration; no pain or tenderness
-of abdomen; tongue not much loaded, but
-dry; much thirst; no appetite; bowels freely open
-from medicine; no pain of head; some giddiness;
-no sleep; skin warm; face flushed; pulse 102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pectoral and cerebral symptoms the same;
-bowels purged; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Only slight cough; pain of head; more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>giddiness; no sleep; eyes preternaturally bright and
-glistening; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Only slight cough; pain of head much
-relieved; slept better; tongue more clean; four
-stools; pulse 120, strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. No pain of chest; cough much increased;
-now very frequent and accompanied with copious
-expectoration; pulse 136.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Cough more frequent; expectoration purulent
-and mixed with blood; pulse 126.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Expectorates a larger quantity of purulent
-matter, mixed with a larger proportion of blood;
-pulse 102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Pectoral symptoms unchanged; strength extremely
-depressed; countenance pallid; skin cool;
-three stools partly passed in bed; pulse 84; mind
-confused; almost constant moaning; extensive
-sloughing ulcers on sacrum and hips.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Pectoral symptoms the same; powers extremely
-depressed; three stools passed in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. No change in the cough or the expectoration;
-lies quite prostrate and appears to be sinking;
-four stools passed in bed; pulse 72, rather less feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Cough rather diminished; expectoration
-unchanged; four stools passed in bed; pulse 84,
-extremely weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. No change, excepting that the pulse (78)
-is rather more strong, and she is scarcely so prostrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>26th. Skin again hot; tongue again red and dry;
-no sleep; some delirium; pulse 84, of more strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Skin more cool; tongue less red and more
-moist; pulse 66; some return of appetite.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Cough much diminished; expectorates less;
-tongue moist, clean, and nearly of natural colour;
-pulse 72, stronger; countenance more animated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Cough nearly gone; expectoration much
-diminished; tongue clean; one stool; countenance
-improving; strength increasing; wishes for meat;
-two ounces were allowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>40th. Sloughs on sacrum and ilium doing well;
-pulse 90, of more power; still noisy during sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From this period she continued slowly, although
-gradually, to gain strength, and was dismissed from
-the hospital on the 57th day, <em>cured</em>.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case VII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Angelica Fidgett</span>, æt. 29, married. Admitted
-on the 16th day of fever. Before admission affected
-with cold, shivering, sense of faintness, pain of head,
-uneasiness of chest, and cough. On admission, pain
-of chest increased by deep inspiration and by cough;
-cough frequent; pain of the head already subsided:
-there remain only a sense of weight over the eyes,
-the expression of which is dull, heavy, and vacant;
-frequent moaning; no pain of the abdomen on full
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>pressure; pulse 129; tongue foul, moist; skin hot;
-face flushed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Respiration slow and laborious; cough;
-completely comatose; eyes suffused; pulse 120, full,
-soft; face flushed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Respiration continues very laborious; mind
-exceedingly indistinct; much restlessness; pulse
-116, still softer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Examined with the stethoscope: the bronchial
-roll and crepitus were very distinctly and generally
-heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. The respiration continues extremely laborious;
-frequent cough, without expectoration; low,
-rambling delirium; pulse 112, weak; tongue foul,
-moist; general powers greatly depressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. All the symptoms aggravated. Died on the
-24th day of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As thoracic affection may exist in any degree of
-intensity, so it may indicate itself at any period of
-the disease: but while sufficiently intense to destroy
-the structure of the organs in which it has its seat,
-yet it sometimes gives no indication of its presence,
-or none until the approach of death. In these cases,
-the cerebral affection is still more intense than the
-thoracic, and the manifestation of the symptoms
-proper to the lung is prevented by the predominance
-of disease in the brain. Of this, the following
-case affords a striking example.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span><span class='sc'>Case VIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Potter</span>, æt 21. Admitted on the 15th
-day of fever. Before admission was affected with
-the usual febrile symptoms, accompanied with severe
-pain of the head and giddiness. On admission,
-the pain of the head was nearly gone; there remained
-considerable vertigo, with some pain in the
-loins and joints; the mind was exceedingly indistinct,
-and there was little or no sleep; pulse 80, soft;
-no indication of pectoral affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Symptoms the same; in addition, the abdomen
-was now tender on full pressure and retracted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No change observable until this day; no
-indication of thoracic affection had hitherto been
-apparent from the commencement of the disease;
-but, on the morning of the 24th day of fever, dyspnœa
-suddenly came on, which was attended with a
-great degree of restlessness; there was also some
-soreness of throat, but only a slight degree of redness
-and tumefaction were visible on inspection:
-with these symptoms he sunk rapidly, and expired
-in the afternoon.<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><span class='sc'>III. Synochus Gravior with Abdominal Affection.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>One of the organs always involved in disease, in
-a greater or less degree, in fever, is the mucous
-membrane of the stomach and intestines. In synochus
-mitior the affection of this organ appears to be
-slight, and to pass away without producing any
-change in its structure. But that it is really diseased
-even in the mildest case, we have sufficient evidence
-in the invariable derangement which takes place in
-the functions of the organ throughout its whole
-course, from the mouth to the anus; and in the
-constant vitiation of its secretions and excretions.
-In the severer forms of fever, on the other hand, in
-the great majority of cases, the affection of the abdomen
-becomes prominent, and whenever it does so
-it aggravates all the other febrile symptoms, and
-adds greatly to the danger of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Abdominal affection exists under two forms in
-fever, each of which is attended with distinct and
-peculiar symptoms. It may be severe from the
-commencement, and give early and obvious indications
-of its existence; or it may come on at some
-subsequent stage of the disease, and then, although
-the affection be equally severe, the symptoms which
-denote it are materially different.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. If the abdominal affection be severe from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>commencement, in addition to the ordinary symptoms
-of fever, there will be present nausea, sometimes
-retching, and at other times vomiting. It is
-usual for authors to enumerate these events among
-the ordinary occurrences of fever; but in a case
-decidedly cerebral, or in a case decidedly thoracic,
-they are seldom present. Whenever they occur in
-the commencement of fever they are the certain
-signs of an abdominal affection more severe than
-ordinary; and it will be of the utmost advantage to
-the patient should the practitioner be aware of this,
-because it will teach him at once where the main
-force of the disease is probably to be concentrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. At this early period the bowels are commonly
-constipated, and on inquiry it will be found that
-they have been so for some days previously to the
-attack of fever; but in a day or two after the commencement
-of this attack they fall into the opposite
-state and are looser than natural. The concurrence
-of nausea, retching, vomiting, and purging in the
-commencement of fever is a certain proof that severe
-abdominal affection is present, and if not actively
-treated and effectually checked at this early stage,
-it will soon render the case formidable, if not hopeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. When the abdominal affection is thus early
-and open, it is often attended with another symptom
-which seldom fails to attract attention, namely, pain.
-Pain of the abdomen, attended with purging, completes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>the train of local symptoms that occurs at this
-early period, in the most exquisitely marked cases.
-It is well worthy of observation, however, that pain
-is by no means an invariable attendant on the other
-symptoms, even when the latter are very severe.
-Whether in these cases the affection of the nervous
-system be already so great as to lessen the sensibility
-of the organ, or whatever else may be the cause of
-it, the fact is certain, and it is one of great practical
-importance, that pain of the abdomen is not to be
-expected even in severe abdominal affection; and
-that though pain may attend upon the affection, yet
-the affection is often present without pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. Pain of the abdomen upon pressure, and especially
-upon pressure in the epigastrium, is much less
-seldom absent than pain of which the patient spontaneously
-complains.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. Pain, though it may usher in the abdominal
-affection, and may even be severe for the first few
-days, diminishes after a certain time and then ceases
-altogether, so that it is extremely rare, after the
-tenth day of fever, for instance, for the patient to
-complain of pain of the abdomen, even when the
-abdominal affection is the most intense. Such an
-event may happen, perhaps when the cerebral affection
-is more than commonly slight, but it is an exceedingly
-rare occurrence, and my attention has been
-particularly drawn to this circumstance from reflecting
-on the uniformity of the answers which I have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>obtained from patients obviously labouring under
-abdominal affection, on my first visit to them in the
-wards of the hospital. Having commonly been ill
-from ten to fourteen days, the abdominal affection
-may by this time be fully developed: on asking them
-whether they feel any pain in the abdomen, the
-answer almost invariably received is, “no.” Press
-gently upon the abdomen, press especially upon the
-epigastrium, often even in these very cases not the
-slightest touch can be borne. After pressure has
-once been made, the patient will frequently do all
-he can with his hand to prevent its being made a
-second time. So acutely sensible is he of pain on
-the least pressure, though wholly unconscious of pain
-when left to himself. Even when there is not this
-great degree of tenderness, pain can generally be
-produced by full pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is thus a remarkable coincidence between
-the progress of the symptoms in the abdomen and
-in the head. We have seen that however intense
-the cerebral affection, the pain of the head which
-accompanies it diminishes after a certain time, and
-in a day or two after it has begun to diminish, ceases
-altogether. In like manner the pain which ushers
-in an acute abdominal affection diminishes after a
-certain time, and soon wholly disappears. After this
-period, therefore, we should have no more indications
-of abdominal than we have of cerebral pain
-were the intestines, like the brain, enclosed in a bony
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>case. When an organ can be touched, it gives us
-an additional and an invaluable means of ascertaining
-its morbid condition: and this is one reason why
-that condition is commonly so much more certainly
-known in surgical than in medical diseases. What
-the result would be, could we press the brain as we
-can the abdomen, after its sensibility is so much diminished
-as to cease to occasion pain, we do not
-know; but it would be a bad use indeed to make of
-the additional means afforded us of ascertaining the
-condition of the intestines, were we to allow the additional
-information we thus gain, to obscure our
-perception of the perfect analogy there is in the
-progress of both affections. We know that, as the
-disease advances in both, the pain ceases; but, in
-the one case, we have the means of ascertaining that
-there still remains preternatural tenderness on pressure,
-as in ordinary inflammation, which we are without
-the means of discovering in the other: still the
-important practical fact afforded by the history of
-both is the same, that disease having reached a
-certain point, the pain diminishes; and having advanced
-still further entirely disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6. While the pain lessens or ceases as the abdominal
-affection advances, the purging, on the other
-hand, continues, often it increases. Purging, succeeding
-to constipation and to pain, and remaining
-after the subsidence of the pain, affords an infallible
-indication of abdominal disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>7. Together with these decisive signs, which
-alone are abundantly sufficient to enable us to ascertain
-the presence of the affection, we have an additional
-and an exceedingly valuable guide in the
-peculiar state of the tongue. In these abdominal
-cases, the tongue is preternaturally red. Sometimes
-this increased redness is of a bright and vivid colour,
-and pervades the whole tongue; at others, it is confined
-to the edges or to the tip, and it is usually remarkably
-apparent in the latter. While thus vividly
-red, the body is often loaded with fur; the colour
-of the fur is often of a dirty-white or greyish colour;
-but, perhaps, while the edges and the tip are thus
-intensely red, the most usual colour observed on its
-body is that of a dirty yellow. In these cases, the
-papillæ appear much enlarged, and are seen prominent
-through the fur, vividly red. In this condition
-of the tongue it always remains moist for some time,
-and it is not attended with urgent thirst; but, as the
-intestinal disease advances, the tongue gradually
-becomes less vividly red and more dry, and as these
-changes go on, the lips and teeth often become
-sordid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Instead of being from the commencement of a
-vivid redness, the colour of the tongue, in other
-cases, is of a darker and duller tint; there is less
-fur upon the body, and that which covers it is of a
-dirtier and darker tinge; this state of the tongue is
-always attended with greater thirst: it is apt to become
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>more and sooner dry, and, at the same time,
-the lips and teeth become more and sooner sordid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8. In the kind and degree of abdominal affection
-of which we are now treating, the abdomen is sometimes
-harder than natural, but it often remains nearly
-as soft as in health through the greater part of the
-disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9. Of the conditions of the pulse in this affection
-it is important to take particular notice, on account
-of the total absence of any striking or <em>apparently</em>
-distinctive character. It is neither remarkably slow
-nor very quick; neither unusually hard, nor strong,
-nor sharp, nor weak, nor intermittent, nor in any
-degree irregular; its common range is from 80 to
-100, beyond which it seldom rises in the acutest
-cases, until near the termination of the disease; and
-it is generally soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10. Whenever, then, there is a combination of
-the preceding symptoms, with a pulse about 90, it
-may be inferred with great certainty, that disease is
-going on in the intestines. But, as the pain of the
-abdomen ceases at a certain period, while the purging
-continues, so, at a still more advanced stage of
-the disease, the purging also disappears, and the
-stools return to a more natural condition. Cessation
-of pain, and an apparent return to healthy secretion
-and excretion, may seem to indicate a highly favourable
-change in the disease, and, <em>if accompanied
-with corresponding amendment in the other symptoms</em>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>they may, indeed, be hailed as signs of returning
-health; but if they occur <em>without</em> a favourable
-change in the general symptoms, they do not indicate
-a return to health, but merely the transition of
-one diseased process into another. What that succession
-of diseased processes is will be stated hereafter:
-at present it is sufficient to observe that, without
-corresponding improvement in other organs, the
-cessation of purging is a sign not of returning health,
-but of advancing disease. And so common is the
-cessation of purging, <em>without amendment</em>, at an advanced
-stage of abdominal affection, that in a large
-proportion of the patients who are received into the
-Fever Hospital, it has ceased before their admission.
-On the examination of a patient, for the first time,
-who has been ill from a fortnight to three weeks,
-it will be stated that the stools are regular, yet if
-strict inquiry be made, it will often be found that
-at an earlier stage of the disease from four to five
-stools, sometimes from eight to ten, were passed in
-the twenty-four hours without any purgative medicine
-having been taken. With regard to the state of
-the evacuations in this affection, then, the succession
-of events is first constipation, then purging, and next
-the cessation of purging and the return of the stools
-to a more natural character.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The preceding signs of abdominal affection are so
-obvious that they can scarcely fail to lead to the
-detection of the disease; but the second form under
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>which it exists is attended with much less striking
-symptoms. It requires great attention and daily examination
-to discover its presence, and to trace its
-progress. It steals along its fatal course with a step
-as silent as it is sure; and the destruction that marks
-its track is oftentimes alike unfelt by its victim and
-undiscovered by his most watchful guardian. It does
-not attack until the sensibility is already greatly
-diminished in consequence of the progress of cerebral
-disease. No pain is therefore felt, and the only
-indication by which it can be detected is tenderness
-of the abdomen on pressure. But even the fullest
-pressure, although it generally excite some uneasiness,
-sometimes produces none whatever. There is often
-no purging; for when the affection comes on thus
-late, though the bowels may sometimes be loose, yet
-they are frequently even constipated. The tongue
-is generally red at the edges and the tip, loaded with
-dirty grey or yellow fur, and sometimes dry. The
-pulse at this advanced period is generally 120.
-Without doubt this affection greatly aggravates the
-severity of the fever, and increases the danger of the
-patient, although we have no means of measuring
-the extent to which it does so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On recovering from this state, for recovery does
-sometimes take place, the first indication of improvement
-commonly appears in the tongue, which shews
-a disposition to clean; and what is remarkable, the
-favourable sign which accompanies this improved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>condition of the tongue is <em>increased tenderness of
-the abdomen on pressure</em>. Not that disease in the
-intestine is increasing, but disease in the brain is
-lessening, and therefore the patient is now sensible
-to a stimulus which before produced not the slightest
-impression. If on the following days the tongue
-continue to clear; if it grow less red; if at the
-same time the pulse fall, the sleep return, the sensibility
-increase, and the countenance become more
-animated, the patient may be considered as convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not very common, but it does sometimes happen,
-that a few hours before death the sensibility of
-the abdomen suddenly increases, and the tenderness
-on pressure becomes exquisite. This remarkable
-change is sometimes attended with vomiting, sometimes
-with hiccup, and is accompanied with extreme
-restlessness, and a highly excited pulse, while the
-expression of the countenance is at one time anxious
-and at another wild, and in this state the patient
-dies in a few hours. On what change in the intestines
-this depends will be explained in the pathology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As illustrations of these different modifications of
-abdominal affection the following cases are subjoined.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case IX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Eleanor House</span>, æt. 18, silk-winder. Before admission
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>attacked with nausea, vomiting, together
-with the ordinary symptoms of fever. On admission,
-being the 8th day of the disease, severe pain of abdomen,
-which is greatly increased on pressure:
-tongue very red at the point, loaded with fur,
-through which the papillæ are prominent, moist;
-urgent thirst; no appetite; bowels said to be natural;
-some uneasiness of chest; respiration hurried;
-cannot lie with ease on either side; voice hoarse and
-feeble; no soreness of throat; no head-ache; no
-sleep; skin warm; face flushed; pulse 100, of some
-power, but easily compressed. V.S. ad ℥xvj. Ol.
-Ricini, ʒiij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hora 3tia, p. m. Blood with thick and firm buff;
-symptoms both of abdominal and thoracic disease
-diminished. Vespere versus vel eras mane, rep. V.S.
-ad ℥xvj. si opus sit. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. haustus
-Sennæ Sal. c. m.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Bled last evening with much relief; proportion
-of coagulum of blood last drawn great, and covered
-with firm buff. Much pain in the epigastrium
-and over the whole abdomen independently of pressure,
-but greatly aggravated by slight pressure;
-tongue less loaded, less red, moist; much thirst;
-pulse 108, sharp, small, easily compressed: Rep.
-V.S. ad ℥xvj.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. “Feels greatly better;” pain of epigastrium
-gone; none of abdomen when not pressed; full
-pressure much more easily borne; tongue unchanged;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>thirst; vomiting; four stools; pulse 108, of the
-same character.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Pain not diminished on pressure; nausea,
-vomiting, rejection of a large quantity of green fluid;
-pulse 118.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Says she is quite free from pain of the abdomen;
-bears pressure without flinching; no vomiting
-since last report; four stools; tongue clean
-and moist; pulse 99; sleeps better, but the mind is
-dull and confused: wandering delirium through the
-night; some muscular tremor; skin cool; face
-flushed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Pain of abdomen returned; mind confused;
-delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Says she is without pain, but feels oppressed;
-pulse 96; slept better; no delirium; face more animated;
-skin warm; no flushing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Had been steadily improving until this day,
-when the pain of the abdomen returned, which is
-again tender on pressure; tongue clean; one stool;
-pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Pain much relieved since the application
-of six leeches to the abdomen, followed by a large
-poultice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Pain gone: only slight tenderness: pulse
-96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. Pain and tenderness again returned; tongue
-more red; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33d. Six leeches were applied last evening without
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>the slightest relief of the pain or tenderness; tongue
-red: pulse 96, more weak and soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>34th. Tenderness considerably diminished; tongue
-less red; countenance again improved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Still less tenderness than yesterday; bears
-pressure much better; tongue nearly natural; two
-stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>39th. Improving every day; no pain of abdomen;
-no tenderness on fullest pressure; bowels quite soft;
-tongue natural; four stools; pulse 72; appetite
-good: strength increasing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44th. No return of uneasiness; continues to gain
-strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>57th. Since last report has been daily improving,
-and is now quite well. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case X.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Raven</span>, æt. 17. Admitted on the 22d day
-of fever; no pain of the abdomen appears to have
-been complained of from the commencement of the
-attack; at present no tenderness on the fullest pressure;
-some distention; tongue covered with yellow
-fur, moist; bowels loose; pulse 110, sharp; only
-slight pain in the head; more pain in the limbs;
-mind dull, confused; deaf.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No pain of abdomen on fullest pressure;
-tongue the same; only two stools; pulse 124; voice
-hoarse, feeble; respiration hurried; skin dark, almost
-livid; mind much more confused; delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>25th. No material change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Insensibility increased to coma; features
-shrunk; one stool passed in bed; pulse 128; skin
-livid, cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Moribund; died the following day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On examination after death (see pathology) extensive
-disease was found in the intestines, although,
-if the purging on the day of admission be excepted,
-not the slightest indication of it was given during
-life.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George English</span>, æt. 25, carpenter. Admitted on
-the 29th day of fever, with a great degree of tenderness
-of the abdomen, extending especially over the
-hypogastric region; bowels said to be regular; pulse
-90, of good strength; yet complains much of sense
-of debility.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Pain of the abdomen continues, especially
-over the region of the bladder; urine passed in good
-quantity and freely; three stools; pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. Tumour has appeared over the region of the
-bladder, unattended with pain; three stools; pulse
-76.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33d. Hypogastrium still tumid, but without pain;
-other symptoms the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>43d. No material change until this day, when he
-was suddenly seized with exceedingly acute pain in
-the region of the bladder; extreme tenderness on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>pressure; great restlessness, and great anxiety; vomiting
-of a yellow-coloured fluid; two stools; pulse 84,
-extremely feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These acute symptoms mark the very hour when
-the event occurred which caused them.—See Pathology.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>IV. <span class='sc'>Synochus Gravior with Mixed Affection.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>Since it has been repeatedly stated in the preceding
-pages that, in every case of fever, the brain, the lungs,
-and the abdomen are diseased, it may appear objectionable
-to call any particular class of cases mixed,
-because, according to the very nature of fever, all
-must be of this character. But for the same reason
-that we have designated one class of cases cerebral,
-another thoracic, and a third abdominal, namely, to
-mark prominence and intensity of affection, it is right
-to distinguish a fourth, in which all the three systems
-of organs are simultaneously affected with an
-equal, or nearly an equal degree of intensity. The
-term mixed is therefore by no means employed to
-intimate that the cases not comprehended under it
-are unmixed, but merely to point out a fact of great
-practical importance, that cases do occur which are
-neither in an exquisite degree cerebral, nor thoracic,
-nor abdominal, but which, at one and the same time,
-afford the most exquisite specimens of all the three.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>From this account of the sense in which the term
-is employed, it must be obvious that it will include
-the severest cases that can occur. If a patient be
-affected with intense cerebral disease he may be in
-great danger; but if he be affected with an equally
-intense thoracic disease his danger must be doubled:
-and if to this be added an equally intense abdominal
-disease it must be trebled. And accordingly these
-are just the cases which bid defiance to the most
-skilful and vigorous measures which the medical art
-can employ to control them; which seize upon their
-victim with a force which no human agency can resist
-nor counteract; which in malignant epidemics
-destroy life in a few hours or in a single hour, and
-in ordinary seasons in a few days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whenever a severe case occurs without exhibiting
-any striking prominence of affection in any organ,
-and when on examining the organs there are found
-indications of severe affection in all of them, that
-case is sure to become formidable, and the patient
-and his physician have reason to congratulate each
-other if it do not prove fatal. When prominence
-of affection in any one organ is absent, because all
-the organs are intensely affected, it constitutes the
-most formidable case that can occur. And though
-this kind of case be but too common, yet after all
-it does not appear to happen as often as it really
-takes place. Examination after death discloses what
-was unknown during life. The brain, the lungs, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>abdomen are often found to be most extensively
-diseased, while the indications of disease were confined,
-perhaps, to the brain and the abdomen, or to
-the brain and the lungs. Without doubt, the spinal
-cord and the brain are the grand and original seats
-of disease; the others are subsequent and consequent,
-and the principal masks the subordinate. It
-is when a great number of cases are brought together,
-and placed in juxta position, that we are
-impressed, and it is only then that we are duly impressed,
-with the great proportion of those in which
-the course of disease is as noiseless as it is destructive;
-in which its stroke destroys, without its being possible
-to tell where it falls; in which the physician
-sees that his patient must die, but in which the
-anatomist, after the event has happened, can alone
-pronounce why it was so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whatever be the number of organs simultaneously
-affected, the nature of the affection in each is always
-the same, and is not in the slightest degree changed
-by the complication. Disease in the brain is the
-same, whether the brain alone be prominently affected,
-or the brain and the intestines, or the brain,
-the intestines and the lungs. Each organ is liable
-to its own specific disease, and that disease goes on
-with the utmost regularity, whether it be the sole
-organ so far diseased as to suffer a change in its
-structure, or whether many be simultaneously affected
-in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>In like manner the symptoms, when any symptoms
-are present, are essentially the same, whether
-the disease exist alone, or whether it be complicated
-with several others. The symptoms of inflammation
-of the brain are the same, whether cerebral inflammation
-alone be present, or whether it be complicated
-with inflammation and ulceration of the mucous
-membrane of the intestines. And the symptoms
-of inflammation and ulceration of the mucous
-membrane of the intestines are the same, when any
-symptoms are present, whether these affections exist
-alone, or whether they are complicated with cerebral
-inflammation. The occasional absence of symptoms
-in the subordinate organs, overwhelmed by the preponderance
-of affection in the principal, is a proof
-that they are subordinate. It would, therefore, be
-useless to detail the symptoms which occur in the
-mixed cases, since they must only be a repetition of
-those which have been already enumerated. Their
-concurrence in individual complications, and the modifications
-they undergo from such particular combinations,
-will be best understood from the study of
-the cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An examination of large averages clearly shews,
-what would scarcely have been expected, and what
-is by no means generally understood, that these
-mixed cases, instead of being rare, are even frequent.
-It seems to me to be impossible to study
-the pathology of those which will now be laid before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>the reader, without perceiving that the opinion
-that the seat of fever is invariably fixed in some
-<em>one</em> organ, is founded in partial, and, therefore, imperfect
-views; and I earnestly solicit the attention
-of those who have hitherto contended for the strict
-locality of that seat, to these very interesting and
-instructive cases. It was by slow degrees, and
-after the study of the symptoms as they occur in
-all varieties, and, if I may so speak, shades of type,
-<em>in connexion with the morbid changes apparent after
-death</em>, that I was able to make out, what I have so
-often stated to be, the true circle of organs upon
-which this disease always seizes and always preys,
-and which it often irreparably destroys. In some of
-these mixed cases, we see marks of irreparable destruction
-in this entire series of organs; and in every
-one we see extensive disease in all of them. Coupling,
-then, as we ought always to couple, these ascertainable
-and ascertained conditions of the organs
-in the fatal cases, with the symptoms of derangement
-manifested by these organs in <em>all</em> cases, whether
-fatal or not, a body of evidence presents itself, which
-appears to me to be irresistible, to justify the conclusion
-that the local seat of fever is at least coextensive
-with these organs. A repetition of my
-own conviction cannot, I know, produce conviction
-in others; I, therefore, again entreat attention to
-the facts which have produced conviction in me.
-And in order that the cases to which I am so anxious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>to direct the attention of the pathological student,
-may afford him all the information they are capable
-of communicating, at the least expense of labour to
-him, they have been arranged in succession, according
-as dissection shews that, while all the organs are
-deeply involved, the ravages of disease are most extensive
-in the organs of the head, or of the thorax,
-or of the abdomen. The simplest and mildest affections
-are placed first; the more complicated and
-severe, as nearly as possible, in the order of their
-complication and severity; while, in the rapid
-sketch that is drawn of the symptoms, those which
-relate to the organ most severely diseased are placed
-first; and the succession is detailed in order, according
-as they appear to be antecedents or sequents; or as
-they are observed to combine to form a train or series.
-Since cases abundantly illustrating, in this
-manner, every variety of complication, are given
-in the pathology, it is unnecessary to add any
-here.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of Typhus: Division into Mitior and Gravior,
-and into Cerebral, Thoracic, and Abdominal.
-Typhus Mitior, with Subacute Cerebral Affection;
-with Acute Cerebral Affection; with
-Thoracic Affection; with Abdominal Affection.
-Typhus Gravior: in what it really consists:
-dangerous Nature of the Error that it consists
-in Debility.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The appearance of a person labouring under typhus
-is so different from that of a person affected
-with synochus, that no one ignorant of the disease,
-who saw these two patients for the first time, would
-believe that both were afflicted with one and the
-same malady. And yet dissection after death demonstrates,
-that the physical condition of the organs
-is precisely the same in both; and careful
-examination of the symptoms during life, shews that
-they are really identical, both in their nature and
-their succession, however, at first view, they may
-appear to differ. The difference between these two
-diseases arises entirely from a difference in intensity:
-still this difference produces a very important modification
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>in the character of the disease; important,
-because it materially affects both the safety of the
-patient, and the nature of the remedies that are best
-adapted to rescue him from his danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Typhus, like synochus, presents itself under two
-degrees of intensity, which, like those of the latter,
-may be conveniently designated by the terms mitior
-and gravior. All the important symptoms which
-belong to both are found in the same cavities, and
-relate to the same organs, as in synochus, and, therefore,
-must in like manner be divided into cerebral,
-thoracic, and abdominal.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>I. <span class='sc'>Typhus Mitior, with Cerebral Affection.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>Cerebral affection in typhus, as in synochus, presents
-itself under two degrees of intensity, which
-may be distinguished by the same terms as in the
-latter, the subacute and the acute.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>1. <em>Typhus Mitior with Subacute Cerebral Affection.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>The symptoms which denote this affection in typhus,
-are perfectly similar to those which have been
-stated to characterise it in synochus, but they undergo
-certain modifications, the true nature of which
-appears to me to have been greatly mistaken, and,
-after the most careful attention which I have been
-able to give the subject, the mistake seems to me
-to be of so much magnitude, that I think whosoever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>shall effectually correct it, will do the greatest possible
-service to medicine, and, through it, to his fellow
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. There can be no question that, from the very
-first commencement of the attack, as well as through
-the whole course of the disease, the prostration of
-strength, both physical and mental, is greater in typhus
-than it is in synochus. This greater loss of
-energy is indicated by every sign that can be conceived
-to denote it. The loss of power in the muscles
-which support and move the body is oftentimes
-so complete, as to be most alarming to the patient
-and his friends; while the contrast between the vigor
-and the torpor of the mind, in the course only
-of a few hours, is most striking. From the full and
-active exercise of its faculties, it becomes, in that
-short space of time, quite incapable of performing
-any intellectual operation. It is confused and stupid,
-always in a greater degree than in synochus, and
-sometimes to such a degree, even on the very first
-day of the attack, as to excite the utmost apprehension
-in every one around the patient who takes any
-interest in his fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. The chilliness is, upon the whole, greater and
-longer-continued than in synochus: yet there is less
-constantly shivering, and the heat, when it succeeds
-this state of chilliness, is seldom as great as in the
-latter; while there are cases in which the heat never
-exceeds the natural standard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>3. The febrile uneasiness is greater; the restlessness
-is incessant; the face is pallid; the features are
-shrunk; the expression of the countenance is most
-peculiar; it is strikingly indicative of weakness and
-suffering; the experienced eye can tell at a single
-glance, even at this early period, to which of the
-two types that countenance belongs. The pulse is
-always weaker and more rapid than in the corresponding
-stage in synochus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. There are cases in which the pain of the head
-is equally severe as in synochus: but this may be
-justly considered as rare. In general it is less acute.
-Dullness, confusion, stupor, giddiness, are more
-common than severe pain, and are often the substitutes
-for it. Though some degree of pain be generally
-present, yet it is by no means uncommon for
-one or more of these sensations to occupy its place
-completely. Question the patient as much as you
-please, and he will tell you that he has no pain;
-but it is evident, from his aspect and his manner,
-that he has little sensation of any kind. The eye is
-dull, heavy, stupid, without lustre: the old English
-word “lac-lustre” expresses its character truly and
-strikingly. But it is remarkable, that while the pain
-in the head is only slight, the pains in the back,
-loins, and extremities, and, as the patient himself
-says, in the bones, are severe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. When pain is present it diminishes sooner and
-disappears more completely than in synochus: when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>it is not present, the advancement of the disease is
-indicated by increasing insensibility, and by the
-rapid transition of dullness or confusion into a state
-of stupor approaching to coma. The eye is already
-muddy, and it soon becomes injected and suffused.
-The skin over the body is generally warm, sometimes
-hot: over the head it is often hot. The face is
-usually pallid, but the pallidness frequently alternates
-with flushing. The change of dullness into insensibility
-more or less profound sometimes takes place
-as early as the second or the third day: it is seldom
-that it is as late as the seventh or the eighth: it is
-postponed, when not prevented, by active and appropriate
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6. There is little or no sleep; the restlessness is
-great; there may be no violence; but there is abundance
-of inquietude.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7. Delirium is more constantly present than in
-synochus; and when it comes it comes earlier: its
-presence is not unusual as early as the sixth or the
-seventh day; and it may appear still sooner, but that
-is rare. It consists of low muttering incoherence
-rather than of loud and violent talkativeness; and
-is expressed in moaning rather than in screaming.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8. The connexion between delirium and muscular
-tremor, between muscular tremor and subsultus tendinum,
-and between both, and the passing of the
-stools and the urine unconsciously, has already been
-pointed out. Like delirium, muscular tremor is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>much more constantly present in typhus than in
-synochus; and its relation to delirium is so close
-that it is sometimes observed to supervene on the
-very same day; frequently on the day following;
-and, if it appear at all, it is seldom longer absent than
-the third. Its degree likewise is commonly in proportion
-to the violence of the delirium; and though
-early and great delirium may appear without it, yet
-it very rarely appears without delirium; and in general
-all these symptoms form one series or train;
-pain disappearing, confusion of mind increasing,
-muttering incoherence supervening, and muscular
-tremor and involuntary and unconscious stools rapidly
-succeeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9. In the commencement of typhus the pulse is
-sometimes of good strength, and it may not exceed
-90 in frequency; but as the disease advances it uniformly
-becomes weaker, smaller and quicker; so
-that death rarely takes place before it has reached
-120. In the severer cases it is weak, quick, and
-easily compressed at a very early period.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10. The respiration is often not very obviously
-affected, but if it be attentively observed it will usually
-be found to be shorter and quicker than natural.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11. The tongue is always foul on the first or second
-day; it seldom continues moist longer than
-three or four days; it is often quite dry as early as
-the fourth, especially on the body and at the root;
-the apex and the edges sometimes remain moist a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>day or two longer; but in a short time the whole
-tongue becomes perfectly dry and of a brown colour;
-as the disease advances the colour often changes to
-a darker and darker hue until it becomes quite black;
-it is then frequently fissured into deep chaps, while
-the lips and teeth soon become covered with a black
-sordes. Were the sensibility not greatly altered,
-such a condition of the mouth and tongue must be
-attended with insatiable thirst; yet thirst is often
-not felt, although at other times it is considerable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12. In the early stage of typhus the skin is frequently
-hot; as the disease advances the heat lessens:
-through the greater portion of the disease it
-is moderately warm; towards its termination it becomes
-cool, and some days before death it falls below
-the natural standard. It is always of a darker colour
-than in synochus: the whole surface is of a dull
-and dusky tinge. Sometimes it is covered with dun
-coloured petechiæ, at others with petechiæ of a florid
-colour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13. During its progress, erysipelas, first appearing
-on the face, then extending over the scalp, and often
-down the shoulders and back, is very apt to occur.
-Excoriation on the back and hips often form sloughing
-sores of great malignity and extent, while enlargement,
-inflammation and suppuration of glands
-situated in different parts of the body frequently appear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14. Typhus terminates much earlier, whether favourably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>or unfavourably, than synochus; if it terminate
-unfavourably death frequently takes place as
-early as the 10th or the 14th day, although if early
-and appropriate treatment be employed, the force of
-the disease is sometimes so much lessened that it is
-as protracted as synochus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Towards the termination of the disease more or
-fewer of the symptoms which it has been stated occasionally
-to occur in synochus,<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a> supervene; but, as
-these depend upon particular conditions of the brain,
-they will be detailed under the pathology.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>2. <em>Typhus Mitior, with Acute Cerebral Affection.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>In typhus with acute cerebral affection the pain
-of the head is often not more severe than it is
-in the subacute; but there is a greater degree of
-heaviness, or weight, or stupor, or giddiness; the
-eyes are more and sooner injected and more suffused;
-the insensibility comes on sooner and is deeper; the
-delirium appears earlier and is more violent, frequently
-requiring restraint, and the whole train of
-symptoms already enumerated, and which it is needless
-to repeat, are more intense in degree, and succeed
-each other with greater rapidity.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Solden</span>, æt. 44, plaisterer. Admitted on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>the 7th day of fever: attack came on with chilliness;
-great debility; some pain of head; sense of
-giddiness and weight; together with symptoms of
-thoracic disease. At present pain of head entirely
-gone; it has passed into insensibility; mind quite
-delirious; almost constant moaning; pulse 96, weak;
-tongue brown and dry; stools passed in bed; respiration
-short and hurried; cough without expectoration;
-tenderness of abdomen on full pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Insensibility more profound; restlessness and
-delirium increased; respiration more hurried; cough
-the same; stools passed in bed: pulse 92.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Died.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Clark</span>, æt. 17. Admitted on the 4th day
-of fever: attack commenced with ordinary symptoms,
-and was attended with severe pain of the head,
-which continues at present, and which is attended
-with a sense of weight; eyes injected and suffused;
-expression of countenance extremely dejected; sleeps
-none; skin pungently hot, especially over the scalp;
-pulse 108, of good power; tongue already brown
-and quite dry; some thirst; respiration hurried;
-some uneasiness of chest on coughing; considerable
-tenderness of abdomen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. Eight ounces of blood which were drawn not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>sizy; crassamentum loose; pain of head not at all
-relieved; sense of weight distressing; no sleep;
-much restlessness; heat over the scalp pungent;
-pulse 104; tongue more dry; tenderness of abdomen
-the same; six stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Pain of head still severe; mind more confused;
-passed a more restless night; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of head undiminished; eyes more suffused;
-extremely restless night, during which delirium
-came on; this morning muscular tremor has
-appeared; pulse 124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Pain of head entirely gone; scarcely at all
-sensible; constant muttering delirium; muscular
-tremor with subsultus tendinum; two stools passed
-in bed; pulse 124; abdomen still painful on firm
-pressure, and has become swollen and tense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Insensibility and delirium increased; constant
-incoherent muttering; extreme prostration;
-erysipelas has appeared on the forehead, and is
-spreading to the scalp: pulse 128; two stools passed
-in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Died.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Typhus Mitior, with Thoracic Affection.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>Prominent thoracic affection, as we have seen, is
-not infrequent in synochus; in typhus it is more
-constant; and the signs which denote its existence
-are more obvious, but they are not precisely the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>same. The pain in the chest is less severe; it is
-more often absent altogether; while the sense of
-stricture and the dyspnœa are more urgent. The
-cough is more constantly attended with mucous
-rattle; the respiration is shorter and more hurried.
-The skin in general is cooler, and it is always more
-dusky. The dark colour of the skin, in severe cases,
-becoming quite livid, is one of the most characteristic
-marks of intense thoracic affection. The colour of
-the cheek is at first of a deep and vivid red; as the
-disease advances it becomes of a purple tinge, and
-at length it is quite livid. In these cases it is not
-uncommon for the respiration to be from forty to
-fifty in a minute. The pulse is invariably rapid and
-weak. The cerebral affection is equally peculiar
-and characteristic; it never consists of intense excitement;
-it is never accompanied with violent delirium;
-it is indicated by confusion and stupor passing
-rapidly into coma; and is attended with low
-muttering incoherence or disjointed rambling, the
-trains of ideas that pass through the mind being
-extremely faint, and linked together by no distinguishable
-affinity. We know that one of the most
-essential conditions to the due exercise of the sensorial
-faculties is the due supply of the brain with
-arterial blood; but in this state of the system arterial
-blood does not and cannot circulate through the
-brain, because it is not formed in the lung: the patient
-is in a state approaching to asphyxia, and in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>very severe cases he remains for several days in as
-perfect a state of asphyxia as seems to be compatible
-with life. Why debility should, in these cases, be
-carried to the utmost possible extent; why such cases
-should form the most exquisite specimens of the
-adynamic state, need not be pointed out: the disease
-is concentrated in the very organ which elaborates
-the pabulum of life, and that stream which should
-convey its vivifying and animating influence to every
-nook and point of the system is corrupted at its
-source.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is in these cases, too, that the tongue becomes
-dryer than in any other; in its advanced stage it
-is sometimes quite black and even hard, and is altogether
-incapable of being protruded. Sometimes it
-is covered with a thick, black and hard crust; at
-other times it is cut into deep fissures, so as to give
-it a cracked appearance. These states of the tongue
-without doubt arise in part from the excessive dryness,
-occasioned by the mouth being kept always
-open, on account of the difficulty of respiring.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such are the most characteristic marks of thoracic
-affection in typhus; as an illustration of which, as
-it occurs, perhaps, in the severest form ever witnessed
-in this country, the following case may be cited.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Alexander Crombie</span>, æt. 19, seaman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>The mate of his vessel states that, notwithstanding
-some previous indisposition, three days ago he was
-on duty; that while on watch, about eleven o’clock
-at night, he became too ill to remain at his post, and
-that, since that time, he has scarcely spoken a word.
-At present he is incapable of giving any account of
-himself. He is dull, stupid, and, when roused, is
-scarcely able to answer coherently; he does not speak,
-but he is constantly picking at the bed-clothes; there
-is extreme restlessness; the countenance is heavy and
-inexpressive; the features in general are swollen,
-the lips especially, which are also extremely parched.
-The entire skin is dusky, but the cheeks are of a
-deep red colour, approaching to a purple hue; the
-integuments of the eye are dark; the conjunctiva
-injected; the tongue brown and quite dry; the lips
-and teeth sordid; respiration oppressed; occasional
-cough; pulse from 130 to 140; small and thrilling;
-skin, especially over the scalp, hot; tenderness of
-abdomen on full pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4th. Cerebral symptoms the same; cough frequent,
-difficult; respiration short and hurried; pupils
-dilated, not contracting on exposure to light;
-conjunctiva injected; pulse small, hurried, irregular;
-all the stools passed in bed; pressure over the abdomen
-induces cough and apparently excites pain.
-Died in the evening. See pathology.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>III. <span class='sc'>Typhus Mitior, with Abdominal Affection.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>To the account of abdominal affection in typhus,
-it is necessary to add nothing to that already given
-of abdominal affection in synochus, excepting that,
-in the former, pain in the abdomen is scarcely ever
-felt; tenderness on pressure is less acute, and it is
-more common for both to be absent. On the other
-hand, the abdomen is more often swollen, hard,
-tense and tympanitic, while the stools are more
-early and more constantly passed involuntarily. It
-is in this type of fever, also, that hæmorrhage from
-the bowels most frequently takes, place—an event
-not very uncommon in the severest and the most
-protracted examples of the disease. The tongue,
-also, is less constantly red than in the abdominal
-affection of synochus; but it is more uniformly dry,
-black and cracked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Since the full exposition of pathology requires
-that many examples of this affection should be detailed
-under that head, and since, however numerous
-and striking such examples may be, they can illustrate
-no characteristic symptom beyond what has
-been already stated, it is unnecessary to cite any
-cases of it here.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>IV. <span class='sc'>Typhus Mitior, with Mixed Affection.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Whenever the brain, the lungs, and the intestines
-become simultaneously and prominently affected in
-typhus, the case no longer assumes the mild, but
-lapses into the severer form. We shall, therefore,
-speak of this complication under—</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Typhus Gravior.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The typhus gravior of authors is extinct; at least
-I have seen no example of it in London. I have
-witnessed nothing bearing a tolerable resemblance
-to this disease, even as it is depicted by Cullen, much
-less as it is portrayed in the darkly vivid, yet apparently
-but too faithful colouring of Huxham. This
-malady seems to have disappeared with the epidemic
-intermittents and the epidemic dysenteries of the
-good old times. Whatever there may have been in
-the condition of our ancestors to excite our envy,
-there is certainly nothing to provoke it in their diseases.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the examples of fever which approach in likeness
-to the descriptions on record of typhus gravior
-which I have seen, have consisted of the mixed cases
-of typhus. They have been cases in which the brain,
-the lungs, and the intestines were all simultaneously
-and intensely affected. The symptoms may not always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>denote an <em>equal</em> degree of affection in all these
-organs; but I have never seen a case in which there
-were not the most unequivocal signs of intense affection
-in all of them. For the reason already assigned,
-such cases must necessarily be the severest
-that can occur, because the patient may be said to
-have three diseases instead of one to contend with,
-each of which alone is sufficient to destroy life, and
-each of which alone frequently does destroy it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the examples of this form of fever which I
-have observed are referrible to two classes; one in
-which the arterial action is excessive; the other in
-which it is oppressed, or rather overwhelmed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. In the first, the patient lies insensible, with
-delirium, perhaps so violent that he cannot be kept
-in bed without restraint; with extreme restlessness
-and constant watchfulness; with rapid and panting
-respiration; with a tender abdomen, perhaps with
-frequent and involuntary stools, a dry, black, and
-hard tongue, a quick, yet weak pulse, and the skin
-universally and pungently hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. In the second he lies insensible, with a cold
-and dusky skin; with a swollen and livid countenance;
-with a heavy and oppressed respiration; with
-a pulse perhaps not to be felt, or, if distinguishable,
-either so rapid that it cannot be counted, so small
-that it is like a thread beneath the finger, and so
-weak that it is lost by the slightest pressure, or else
-slow, irregular, and intermittent. In this state, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>patient is almost as completely paralyzed as in apoplexy,
-and the attack is almost as rapidly fatal as
-apoplexy. It constitutes what has been called congestive
-fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunately, these intense forms of the disease are
-of rare occurrence: they are witnessed only in solitary
-instances, and they arise either from exposure
-to a highly-concentrated poison, or from some condition
-of the constitution, by which that power to
-resist the influence of noxious agents, which is characteristic
-of life, is more than commonly diminished
-or exhausted. They have been conceived to form
-exquisite specimens of diseases of debility. But
-where is the debility? Not in the disease, for that
-is of giant strength; not in the patient, for remove,
-if you can but remove, a part of the load that oppresses
-him, and instantly an intensity of action will
-be set up in the whole system, perhaps as great as
-it is capable of exerting, and certainly greater than
-it is capable of sustaining without the most imminent
-danger. The brain is overwhelmed by the intensity
-of its affection; the energy that should animate the
-system, and of which it is the great source, is withheld:
-but that energy is suspended, not destroyed;
-and the debility which seems to be the result is not
-real, but apparent, not direct, but indirect. The
-giant that lies prostrate on the earth, mastered by
-superior power, has still a giant’s strength, though
-he does not at that moment put it forth: give him but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>the chance of throwing off the load that keeps him
-down, and he will soon shew you that he is not weak.
-I have always been struck with the extraordinary
-clearness and decision with which the acuteness of
-Sydenham enabled him to make this important distinction,
-perhaps in the very first case that occurred
-to him, in which the discrimination was required.
-Having described, in his own powerful manner, an
-excellent specimen of congestive fever to which he
-was called, he states that he ordered the patient to
-be bled: that the bye-standers regarded the suggestion
-with horror: that the man seemed at the
-point of death; that to them it appeared that the
-abstraction of blood must inevitably extinguish the
-last remaining spark of life; while to him it was
-manifest that the patient was in this alarming condition,
-because he was oppressed by an overwhelming
-load, and if that could only be lessened, his condition
-would be the very reverse of what it now
-seemed: that accordingly, on the removal of some
-ounces of blood, the state of oppression ceased at
-once, and fever arose of a true inflammatory nature,
-for the subdual of which repeated bleedings were
-required.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is remarkable, and it is highly characteristic of
-these intense forms of disease, that their pathology
-exhibits a striking contrast to that of the less severe
-affections. No morbid appearances are visible in
-the organs which seem capable of accounting for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>death. There are signs of vascularity; the vessels
-are turgid with blood, and consequently the organs
-on which they are spent are in a state of congestion.
-But they seldom if ever exhibit any real appearance
-of inflammation, and still less do they contain any
-true inflammatory product. Why? Not on account
-of debility; but because the force of the disease is
-so great as to overwhelm the powers of life at the
-first onset, allowing even of no reaction, and much
-less of that continued excitement which is part and
-parcel of the inflammatory state, and which is indispensable
-to an inflammatory product. Reduce the
-intensity of the disease a little, bring it just within
-the limit that is compatible with the continuance of
-life for a given time, and then the products of inflammation
-at once appear in the greatest possible purity,
-variety, and extent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And this is precisely the fact, as is demonstrated
-by the condition of the organs, in those ordinary
-types of fever, the essence of which has been supposed
-to consist in debility, and which have recently
-assumed the dignified name of adynamic. That
-men who are capable of looking only at the most
-obvious appearances of things, who, satisfied with
-what they find at the surface, give themselves no
-concern to discover its source, should continue to
-mistake the effect for the cause, and to consider as
-in its own primary and essential nature, that to be
-debility which is the last result of long-continued
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>and most destructive energy of action, is highly probable;
-but, on that very account, the fallacy is the
-more deeply to be deplored; because to these men
-must sometimes be committed the care of human
-beings who will fall certain victims to the error. It
-is easy to disregard the voice of reason when opposed
-to specious, however fallacious appearances; but it
-is difficult to withstand the evidence of sense. In
-justification of the strength of the language I use,
-I therefore appeal to the pathology I adduce. The
-notion of debility in the intense forms of fever I look
-upon to be an error no less palpable in its nature
-than destructive in its consequences; and if the havoc
-it produces do not confer upon it a pre-eminence as
-bad as that of the very disease of which it is supposed
-to constitute the essence, it at least entitles it,
-in comparison with every other error in medicine, to
-the distinction recognized in society, between the
-hero and the murderer: the one destroys a single
-human being now and then; but the other numbers
-its victims by thousands. It may be difficult to
-eradicate this mischievous opinion where it was first
-engendered, and where it still continues to be fostered,
-in the study of the falsely reasoning theorist;
-but it is easy to confute it at the table of the pathological
-anatomist; and it must ultimately fall, if not
-by the pen, by the scalpel.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of Scarlatina. Characters by which it is distinguished
-from Continued Fever, without an Eruption.
-Division into Scarlatina Synochodes and
-Typhodes. Events which occasionally occur in
-Fever, but which form no essential Part of it.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The only kind of continued fever attended with an
-eruption, which it falls within the compass of the
-present work to notice, is that of scarlatina, and,
-even in relation to this, after the full account which
-has been given of the other forms of fever, it will be
-necessary to state only the peculiarities by which it
-is distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. The depression of the nervous system so characteristic
-of synochus and typhus, is much less in
-degree in scarlatina. Neither the physical nor the
-mental debility is as great. In the whole attitude
-and manner of the patient, as well as in his own
-sensations, there is less prostration. The disease is
-more nearly allied to a pure inflammatory affection
-than either of the preceding forms of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Accordingly, the circulation is not only more
-rapid, but it is also more strong. It is not uncommon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>for the pulse to be 140 in a minute; in severe
-cases it is seldom below 120. Without being hard,
-it is more full and strong and less easily compressed
-than in the other forms of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. Corresponding with the activity and energy of
-the circulation is the increase of the temperature;
-the heat over the whole surface of the body is often
-intense and pungent. In this fever, the temperature,
-as indicated by the thermometer, rises several degrees
-higher than in any other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. The capillary vessels of the external skin, as is
-shewn by the bright and vivid colour of its characteristic
-eruption, are filled with blood. Often from
-the crown of the head to the sole of the foot, the
-external covering of the body is in a state of inflammation,
-and this inflammation constantly terminates
-in the death of the cuticle, whence it is thrown off
-by the process of desquamation. It is not improbable
-that the large quantity of blood which is thus
-spent upon the surface of the body, and which is
-thereby diverted from the internal organs, is one
-reason why the latter are not so much oppressed as
-in the other forms of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. Much as the external skin is loaded with blood,
-the capillary vessels of the internal skin appear to
-be equally turgid with it. This is indicated by the
-bright and vivid redness of the mucous membrane
-covering the mouth, the tongue, the fauces and the
-throat. That this redness extends beyond these external
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>parts into the internal organs there is abundant
-evidence, because, although we cannot follow it with
-the eye, we can trace it by the signs of disordered
-function which arise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6. Certain parts of the internal skin, as it covers
-particular organs, is peculiarly apt to pass into inflammation,
-and to terminate, like ordinary inflammation,
-in ulceration. The principal seats of inflammation
-are the throat and the larynx; but that, on
-the one hand, the inflammation extends from the
-throat into the stomach, is evident from the peculiar
-tenderness of the epigastrium, which is almost constant
-in scarlatina, and which is more acute than in
-ordinary fever; and that, on the other hand, it extends
-from the larynx into the bronchi and their ramifications,
-is evident from the symptoms of thoracic
-affection, which are at once more prominent and
-more constant than in the other forms of fever. The
-larynx, the cartilages of which are apt to be destroyed
-by ulceration, in the severe and mortal cases,
-is now and then attacked with a peculiar kind of laryngitis,
-to be further noticed in the pathology,
-which is almost uniformly and most rapidly fatal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7. From the preceding observations, the new
-symptoms which are added to the febrile train in
-scarlatina, and which arise out of the modification
-of the fever by its complication with an inflammatory
-condition of the external and internal skin, are easily
-understood. They are the following: namely,</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Scarlet eruption on the skin; vivid and peculiar
-redness of the mouth, tongue, fauces and throat: the
-presence of the disease may usually be discovered
-by this peculiar and specific redness of the tongue
-and throat alone, although every other characteristic
-symptom were absent: pain in the throat, difficult
-deglutition, huskiness and hoarseness of the voice. To
-these must be added other symptoms, which, though
-they are sometimes present in ordinary fever, are
-both more constant and more severe in scarlatina
-than in the latter, namely, pain in the chest, cough,
-difficult and hurried respiration, duskiness, in severe
-cases lividness of the cheek, often, especially in the
-commencement of the attack, nausea and vomiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such are the chief peculiarities by which scarlet
-fever is distinguished: in all other respects the condition
-of the organs, and the symptoms which denote
-their disordered state are the same as in continued
-fever without an eruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scarlatina occurs under two forms.—1st, With the
-symptoms common to synochus, (scarlatina synochodes)
-a form which, however severe the symptoms,
-if properly treated, rarely proves fatal. In
-general, it is a trifling malady, and, when severe, its
-chief danger consists in its tendency to pass into the
-second form, if it be neglected, or if it be badly
-treated. Under the most formidable aspect it ever
-presents, if the active treatment, which, when the
-symptoms are severe, ought always to be employed,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>be resorted to with promptness and decision, in more
-than ninety cases out of a hundred, those symptoms
-are certainly and effectually subdued, and the disease,
-although it may not be cut short at once, is at
-once rendered mild and safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. The second form of the disease (scarlatina
-typhodes) presents a striking contrast to the first:
-it is one of the most highly dangerous diseases
-which the practitioner in this country is ever called
-to witness. It is invariably attended with the
-symptoms which have been described as proper to
-typhus gravior. And these symptoms may consist
-either of those which belong to the first form
-of typhus gravior, and which have been already
-described,<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a> or they may be those which characterize
-the second, or the congestive form.<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a> The former is
-the most frequent, but the latter is not uncommon.
-The most exquisite specimens of congestive fever
-which it has happened to me to witness, have been
-those afforded by scarlatina: and there is no disease
-incident to this climate which is more alarming,
-more beyond the reach of remedies, or more rapidly
-fatal. Though fortunately several years may sometimes
-elapse without the occurrence of a single case
-of it, yet occasionally seasons return in which many
-cases happen. I have witnessed two such seasons
-in London, and all the persons I remember to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>seen affected with it were near the age of puberty
-and not beyond that of thirty. For examples of it
-the reader is referred to the pathology.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Before bringing to a close this account of the
-general phenomena of fever, it is necessary briefly
-to notice some events which, because they occasionally
-occur in the progress of the disease, but are not
-constant, may be considered as accidental.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. It is not very common, but there sometimes
-takes place an extreme degree of tenderness over
-the entire surface of the body. The sensibility is
-so much increased that the patient cannot bear,
-without pain, the slightest pressure. Several cases
-have occurred in which the entire skin was as tender
-to the touch as the abdomen in some of the
-abdominal cases. Whenever this preternatural sensibility
-occurs, it is always in connexion with an
-exceedingly severe form of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. One of the most common occurrences in severe
-and protracted cases is excoriation of the skin, and
-the subsequent formation of a sloughing sore. In
-bad and long-continued cases of fever the powers of
-life are so much exhausted, and the sources of nourishment
-are so completely vitiated, that the skin
-and the subjacent parts have not vitality sufficient
-to bear even the pressure occasioned by the weight
-of the body. The most common seats of these sores
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>are the back, the sacrum, and the hips. They often
-spread far and eat deep; they are additional sources
-of irritation and exhaustion to a frame already reduced
-to the last extremity of feebleness, and the
-scale which seemed to be equally balanced between
-life and death, they often turn on the side of death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. In severe and protracted cases, and often coming
-to destroy the hope that was beginning to spring
-up in favour of the patient, erysipelas is no unusual
-visitant. It is the outward and visible sign of inward
-and always most formidable disease. Many
-and many are the persons it destroys who, but for
-it, would ultimately gain the victory over a malady
-with which they have carried on a doubtful contest,
-perhaps for fourteen or for one and twenty days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. Pain, swelling, hardness and suppuration of the
-glands in different parts of the body are not uncommon.
-The gland which most commonly suffers is
-the parotid, although the submaxillary, the axillary,
-and even the inguinal, are occasionally involved.
-These glandular affections never take place but in
-formidable cases, and their occurrence sometimes
-changes at once the entire character of the disease,
-and destroys the slightest hope of recovery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. Now and then there take place severe pain in
-the joints, together with tumefaction and excessive
-tenderness on pressure. These events usually come
-on towards the close of exceedingly bad cases, and
-they are often attended with very acute suffering.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>Neither the occurrence of the events nor the appearances
-presented on examination after death, have
-hitherto been noticed, as far as I am aware, by any
-author. Every case attended with this peculiar affection
-that I have seen, has proved rapidly fatal. The
-condition of the joints, as ascertained by dissection,
-will be stated in the pathology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Purulent discharge from the ears, deafness, spasmodic
-contraction of the extremities, convulsions,
-all depend upon certain states of the brain, and will
-be noticed when these states are spoken of. Numerous
-maladies arising from various degrees and complications
-of disease in the lungs, heart, pleura, viscera
-of the abdomen and investing membrane, not
-belonging to fever, but adding to its evils, are found
-on examination after death, which often fully account
-for anomalous symptoms that aggravated the
-case during life. Of these mention will be made in
-the proper place.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> OF THE PATHOLOGY OF FEVER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Importance of connecting the Symptoms with the
-States of the Organs: Pathology of Fever comprehends
-the Morbid Changes that take place in
-the Solids and Fluids of the Body. 1. General
-Pathology of the Solids, exhibiting a collective
-View of the Morbid Appearances in the Head,
-Thorax, and Abdomen. Cases illustrating such
-Morbid Appearances in each of these Cavities.
-2. Pathology of the Fluids.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The preceding history of the symptoms of fever can
-be of no real use unless it be possible to connect it
-with the events of which those symptoms are the
-signs. The events consist of certain morbid changes
-which take place in the series of organs already
-enumerated. We arrive at the knowledge of these
-events first by noting the symptoms which occur
-during life, and their order of succession: and, secondly,
-by examining the condition of the organs
-after death in the fatal cases: a comparison of the
-symptoms, as previously observed, with the state of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>the organs as subsequently ascertained, teaches us
-what the symptoms indicate. By carefully observing
-the symptoms in a large number of cases, we
-at length become acquainted with all the important
-symptoms that arise: by carefully examining the
-organs after death in a large number of cases, we
-gradually learn all the important changes in structure
-which they undergo: and by comparing, in all
-cases, the morbid symptoms with the altered states,
-we acquire in the end the power of ascertaining,
-with a high degree of probability, the presence of
-an event which we cannot see, by the presence of
-its sign which we can see.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In proportion as our knowledge becomes perfect,
-we are thus enabled, during life, and at the bed-side
-of the patient, to see what is going on within his
-brain, within his lungs, and within his intestines,
-with as much distinctness and certainty as we could
-were the cases in which these organs are enclosed,
-and the organs themselves transparent. The highly
-interesting and important fact demonstrated by the
-examination, in the manner of which we have just
-spoken, of large numbers of fever patients is, that
-the changes which take place in the organs are uniform;
-that the symptoms by which these changes
-are denoted are likewise uniform, and therefore, that
-it is possible to arrive at a perfect knowledge of the
-phenomena of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The present state of our knowledge, it must be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>confessed, is far from being perfect. To a certain
-extent, however, it is even already sufficiently perfect
-to afford the physician an invaluable guide in
-the conduct of his practice; and the steps that are
-wanting to complete the knowledge we possess (as
-far as human knowledge can be complete) future
-labour and perseverance will assuredly supply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pathology of fever comprehends the morbid
-changes that take place in the solids and the fluids
-of the body. It is probable that the changes in the
-fluids are wholly dependent upon those which take
-place in the solids, although the vitiation of the
-former must necessarily react upon, and increase the
-derangement of the latter. If it be true, as is highly
-probable, that the changes in the solids are beyond
-all comparison of the greatest importance, as not
-only antecedents, but <em>invariable</em> antecedents, or
-causes, it may be considered fortunate that our
-knowledge of their diseases is so much more advanced
-than our knowledge of the diseases of the
-humours. The morbid changes of the solids are
-ascertained with a great degree of exactness, it may
-almost be said with a great degree of perfection;
-while those which occur in the fluids are almost
-wholly unknown. Until very recently physicians
-satisfied themselves with framing conjectures about
-their corruption; and knowing with certainty no
-one vice that they possess, they attributed to them
-a thousand. Attention is now awakened to the subject:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>investigation is going on: and before long we
-shall probably know, with some degree of precision,
-whether any changes really take place, and what they
-are: but the researches which have hitherto been
-made are so few and so imperfect, that it can hardly
-be said that a single point is satisfactorily made out
-and firmly established.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In laying before the reader the pathology of the
-solids, as far as it is yet ascertained, it is my most
-anxious wish to enable him constantly to make for
-himself, as he proceeds, the association between the
-morbid appearances that are found after death, and
-the symptoms that were present during life. For
-this reason every case that is adduced to illustrate
-any morbid change is preceded by a brief account
-of the symptoms that were observed, day by day, at
-the bed-side of the patient. For the sake of brevity
-however, no less than for that of clearness, none
-but the essential are noticed. The daily reports, of
-which all the cases cited, are exceedingly condensed
-forms, are full, and contain, as they necessarily must
-contain, many repetitions with which it would be
-worse than useless to burthen this account of them.
-Even the statement of the remedies that were adopted
-(excepting in as far as they obviously influenced
-the symptoms) is omitted, from the conviction that
-the mind cannot attend without distraction, at one
-and the same time, to the pathology and the treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>Predominance of affection is the principle according
-to which the cases are arranged, those in which
-the brain was most affected being classed together
-under one section—the cerebral; those in which the
-lungs were most affected under a second—the thoracic;
-and those in which the intestines were most
-affected under a third—the abdominal. In like
-manner, the individual cases under each section are
-so placed as to succeed each other, as nearly as possible,
-in the order of their severity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before entering into particular details, it may be
-useful to exhibit a brief outline of the general pathology
-of fever, shewing, at one view, the general
-results which are derived from an examination of
-the collective cases. In this outline the organs in
-each cavity are noticed in the order of the frequency
-and extent in which they are found diseased.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>I. <span class='sc'>Pathology of the Solids in Fever.</span></h3>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>1. <em>External Appearances of the Body after Death.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>The skin is always of a more dusky colour than
-natural; it is sometimes studded with petechiæ,
-which in bad cases are large and of a deep purple
-tint, giving to the body a spotted or speckled appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Externally the body always appears emaciated,
-and on removing the skin, the greater portion of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>adipose substance is found to be absorbed; what
-remains of it is of an unhealthy yellow colour. The
-muscular fibre is remarkably dark, and this dark colour
-extends, as we shall see immediately, to the internal
-viscera.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>2. <em>Morbid Appearances in the Head.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>Of the membranes of the brain, the arachnoid
-is the most constantly diseased. It is seldom or
-never in a healthy condition. It is always either
-more vascular than natural, or when in this respect
-unchanged, it is altered in structure, being thickened,
-opake and milky: when in this latter state, a gelatinous
-fluid is usually effused beneath it. Not uncommonly,
-it is united at several points to the membranes
-above and below it. To the dura mater it
-very often adheres, particularly at the angles of the
-hemispheres, or along the course of the longitudinal
-sinus; and, in these cases, the adhesion is always
-peculiarly firm at the vertex. The dura mater itself
-is less constantly changed in appearance, although
-this membrane also is sometimes more vascular than
-natural, and frequently it either adheres with preternatural
-firmness to the skull-cap, or, on the contrary,
-it is quite detached from it, in consequence of
-effusion between it and the bones of the cranium.
-To the pia mater, the arachnoid is also very often
-adherent at several points: it is seldom that the pia
-mater is changed in structure, but it is generally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>preternaturally vascular. In like manner, the theca
-which encloses the spinal cord is frequently highly
-vascular, and contains a larger quantity of fluid than
-natural.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The brain itself is seldom or never in a healthy
-condition; the morbid changes to be distinguished
-in it differ greatly in degree in different cases, but
-still, in almost every case, some morbid change is
-to be discerned. These changes consist of an altered
-state of its substance, or of its cavities, or of both.
-The most usual change apparent in its substance is
-a higher degree of vascularity than natural. This
-increased vascularity is sometimes confined to the
-surface; sometimes it is more manifest deep in its
-substance; and, while common to both, it may exhibit
-different degrees of intensity in either. When
-on the surface, this preternatural vascularity is denoted
-by a greater fullness of the vessels, and, apparently
-by an increase in their number; when within
-the substance, by a greater number of bloody points,
-which are rendered visible by an incision with the
-scalpel. And in both situations it may exist in all
-degrees, from a faint blush to a deep and vivid redness.
-The substance itself is sometimes softer, sometimes
-firmer than natural. The softening differs in
-degree and in extent. Sometimes the entire cerebrum
-is manifestly and considerably softer than natural;
-at other times, only particular portions of it
-are found in this softened state. Now and then,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>but very rarely, abscess is discovered within its substance.
-It is remarkable that the cerebellum is always
-considerably softer than the cerebrum: whence
-these two portions of the organ are often observed
-to be in opposite states, the cerebrum being frequently
-preternaturally firm, and the cerebellum
-being almost always softer than natural. The pituitary
-gland also is very constantly softened, and often
-in a state of suppuration. When the cerebrum is
-preternaturally firm, the firmness is usually general.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The morbid change observable in the cavities of
-the brain consists in their containing an excess of
-secretion. This increase of secreted fluid is usually
-accumulated in the lateral ventricles: the quantity
-varies from a drachm to several ounces; when thus
-great, the lateral ventricles themselves are enlarged,
-the third and fourth ventricles are likewise distended
-with fluid, and the passages connecting them are
-proportionally full.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Common as it is to find a preternatural quantity
-of fluid in the ventricles, it is still more common to
-find it in excess between the membranes; often between
-the dura mater and the arachnoid, almost always
-between the arachnoid and the pia mater. It
-has been already stated, that the fluid effused between
-the arachnoid is of a gelatinous appearance
-and aspect; every where else it possesses the physical
-properties of serum, being thin, transparent,
-and of a straw colour: now and then it is thicker in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>consistence, opake, and even bloody, and sometimes
-that beneath the membranes contains flakes of lymph,
-or is mixed with pus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is observable that the two morbid conditions
-now described, that of excessive vascularity and that
-of increased secretion, are never co-existent. If the
-vessels of the brain and its membranes are loaded
-with blood, there is little or no fluid within the former
-or between the latter: if, on the contrary, the
-effusion be great, there is little or no appearance of
-vascularity. Effusion is the effect and the termination
-of vascularity; it is the ultimate result of vascular
-action, and the effect having ensued, the cause
-ceases to be apparent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The substance of the spinal cord is seldom changed,
-either in vascularity or in consistence: the morbid
-changes which this organ undergoes have hitherto
-been observed only in the membrane that
-invests it, which, as has been just stated, is not only
-highly vascular, but likewise contains a much larger
-quantity of fluid than natural.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>3. <em>Morbid Appearances in the Thorax.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>Of all the thoracic viscera, that which is most frequently
-diseased is the mucous membrane of the
-bronchi. The disease which takes place in this organ
-is not only the most constant, whatever be the type or
-the degree of fever, but it is also the most characteristic
-of the febrile state. Its disease is specific and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>uniform. It consists of preternatural redness. The
-character of this redness distinguishes it from that
-which is observed in ordinary inflammation. It is
-uniformly and strikingly darker, the difference in
-colour being precisely that which subsists between
-venous and arterial blood. This darkness of colour
-apparent in the bronchial lining, increases in degree
-as the tubes of the bronchi diminish in size: while it
-may be only just discernible in the large trunks, the
-colour may be nearly black in the minute branches.
-This change in the natural colour of the membrane
-is indicative, not only of an increase in its vascularity,
-but of alteration in its structure. It is almost always
-attended with a preternatural thickening of its substance,
-as is demonstrated by cutting through the
-tube and reflecting the membrane. The tubes themselves
-contain more or less fluid, which consists of
-mucus, mixed with pus. Analogous to what has
-been stated with regard to the vascularity of the
-brain and to its secretions, when the quantity of
-secretion contained in the bronchial tubes is great,
-the degree of vascularity apparent in the membrane
-is lessened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In scarlet fever, the morbid changes are somewhat
-different. The mucous membrane covering the trachea,
-the larynx with its cartilages, the amygdalæ
-and the soft palate is inflamed; the redness is of a
-brighter and more vivid colour than that which has
-been stated to be characteristic of continued fever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>without an eruption: it is similar to the characteristic
-colour of the scarlatina tongue. But what is very
-remarkable, and what appears to justify the view we
-have taken of scarlatina and the division we have
-suggested of its types, when the cases are severe,
-the colour of the mucous membrane becomes much
-darker, the deepness of the tinge increasing with
-the severity of the affection, until, at length, the colour
-closely resembles that which is peculiar to ordinary
-fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As in continued fever without an eruption, so in
-scarlatina, the increased vascularity of the mucous
-membrane is accompanied with a preternatural thickening
-of its substance. In scarlet fever, that portion
-of it which covers the epiglottis, the rima glottidis,
-and the arytænoid cartilages, is especially found in
-this diseased condition. When this inflammation
-and thickening passes into the state of ulceration,
-which it often does, the arytænoid cartilages are the
-special seat of this process, although the ulceration
-often extends to the amygdalæ, and sometimes to
-the root of the tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When in every other respect healthy, the substance
-of the lungs in fever is so constantly found either
-engorged with blood or infiltrated with serum, that
-these changes would seem to form essential parts of
-the morbid phenomena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In examining those who die of fever, a great variety
-and complication of thoracic diseases, in addition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>to the morbid changes just described, are found.
-The pleuræ exhibit every degree of vascularity, from
-the faintest blush of redness to that which is characteristic
-of the most intense inflammation, and
-every extent of adhesion, from that of the smallest
-point to the complete obliteration of the cavity.
-The usual products of inflammation, namely, the
-effusion of serum and lymph, and the formation of
-pus and of adventitious membrane are likewise found
-equally varying in degree. The parenchyma of the
-lungs, besides the engorgement and infiltration just
-adverted to, presents hepatization and tubercular
-disease in every variety and degree; ulceration and
-abscess in every extent, and hæmorrhagic and calcareous
-depositions, together with enlargement and
-melanosis of the bronchial glands. But, since none
-of these diseases form any part of the changes of
-structure which are peculiar to the febrile state, it is
-sufficient in this place merely to advert to them.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>4. <em>Morbid Appearances in the Abdomen.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c015'>On opening the cavity of the abdomen all the
-viscera contained in it appear, in general, more
-vascular than natural, and invariably of a darker
-colour than in the state of health. Several of the
-organs are affected in a uniform and peculiar manner,
-but that which is by far the most constantly
-diseased is the mucous membrane of the small intestines;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>and especially that portion of it which
-lines the ileum and the cæcum.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The varieties of disease exhibited by this membrane
-may be comprehended under three, namely,
-vascularity, thickening and ulceration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In all cases increased vascularity is the first stage
-of disease: in a great proportion of cases this increased
-vascularity is confined to the inferior extremity
-of the small intestines, which is often distinctly
-inflamed when not the slightest deviation from healthy
-structure is traceable in any other part of the
-canal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second stage of disease consists in thickening
-of the membrane, or in deposition of matter beneath
-it, or in both. Preternatural thickening of the
-membrane is often of very considerable extent:
-deposition of matter beneath it appears to be confined
-to the situations of the mucous glands. These
-glands are found in all states and stages of disease
-from the least to the greatest enlargement, and from
-the mere abrasion of their surface to the entire ulceration
-of their substance. Perhaps one of the
-glandulæ solitariæ enlarged and covered with inflamed
-mucous membrane may constitute the only
-morbid appearance discernible in the intestine; or
-this deposition may take place in so many of these
-glands as to present a most extensive surface of disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The third stage is that of ulceration, which may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>supervene when the membrane is affected in either
-of the modes just described; but the ulcer will not
-be the same in both cases: in each it will have a
-different and a distinctive character. If ulceration
-take place while the mucous coat is in a state of
-simple vascularity, the ulcer will in general be
-extensive but superficial; its surface will present a
-smooth appearance, and its margin will be regular
-and defined: if, on the contrary, it occur after thickening
-of the membrane or enlargement of its glands,
-its characters will be just the reverse: it will be less
-extensive, but more deep, because it must penetrate
-a mass of adventitious matter before it can reach the
-other coats; and, for the same reason, its margin
-will be more elevated and its surface more ragged.
-It is in this form of ulcer that perforation of the
-intestine generally occurs; in which case the mucous
-and muscular coats alone are ulcerated: the
-peritoneal gives way from gangrene.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whenever the mucous membrane is ulcerated,
-whatever be the form of the ulcer, the corresponding
-portion of the peritoneal coat is more vascular
-than natural; and perforation must be attended
-with inevitable death, on account of the extensive
-and intense peritonitis excited by the escape of
-fæces into the peritoneal cavity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Frequent as ulceration of the mucous membrane
-is in fever, and characteristic as this lesion is of the
-febrile state, yet it sometimes appears to be present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>when it does not really exist. From the quantity of
-adventitious matter deposited beneath the mucous
-coat, its surface sometimes becomes irregularly elevated,
-its valvulæ conniventes obliterated and its
-aspect smooth and glistening: in this state it may
-be easily mistaken, on a superficial examination, for
-ulceration, while more careful observation will shew
-that the membrane itself remains entire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Proportioned to the extent and degree of these
-changes in the intestine are, inflammation, enlargement,
-induration and suppuration of the mesenteric
-glands; and invariably those glands which are embedded
-in that portion of the mesentery attached to
-the affected intestine, are the most diseased.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is quite remarkable with what uniformity the
-spleen is diseased in fever. In almost every case of
-genuine fever hitherto examined, it has been found
-altered in appearance and deranged in structure. Its
-natural purple colour is changed to a deeper and
-darker tint, and, on the removal of the peritoneum
-that invests it, its substance, on being slightly touched
-with the finger, breaks down into an almost fluid
-mass.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pancreas, the structure of which is so seldom
-changed in any other disease, is very constantly deranged
-in fever. Its morbid condition is invariably
-the same, and, what is singular, it is exactly the
-reverse of that produced in the spleen. It is always
-more firm than natural; often it is exceedingly indurated,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>and that portion of it which is attached to
-the duodenum is sometimes nearly cartilaginous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Each organ having been described in the order of
-the frequency and extent of the disease it exhibits,
-we have hitherto said nothing of the mucous membrane
-of the stomach. This viscus having been
-regarded in France as the great source and seat of
-fever, particular attention has been paid to the appearances
-it exhibits after death. The uniform result
-of the most careful examination of fatal cases
-in London is, that the mucous membrane of this
-organ is less frequently, less severely, and less extensively
-diseased than any other portion of the same
-membrane. Occasionally it is more vascular than
-natural; this vascularity is seldom general; it is
-almost always confined to its pyloric half; in the
-few cases in which it has been very great, the membrane
-has been observed to be thickened and sometimes
-softened: but no instance has occurred in
-which it has been the seat of a single ulcer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of all the abdominal viscera, the liver is the least
-frequently deranged in structure, and when it exhibits
-any morbid change it is both less extensive and
-less characteristic. The blood contained in it is peculiarly
-dark and always fluid; its parenchyma is
-sometimes softer than natural; the gall-bladder contains
-a large quantity of bile, which is seldom healthy,
-being almost always in one of two states of disease,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>either paler and more fluid than natural, or extremely
-dark and very much inspissated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The preceding comprehend all the morbid conditions
-of the abdominal viscera which are peculiar to
-fever: but the organs of this cavity exhibit other
-and great varieties of disease, to which, since they
-form no part of the febrile changes, it is sufficient
-merely to advert. Such are inflammation of the peritoneum;
-effusion of lymph upon its surface or of
-serum into its cavity; agglutination of the intestines;
-inflammation of the mesentery; false adhesions between
-the liver, spleen, and mesentery; tubercles in
-the liver; induration of its substance; tubercles and
-abscess of the spleen; thickening of the coats of the
-bladder and inflammation of its mucous membrane:
-in the female, vascularity and enlargement of the
-ovaria, to which hydatids are sometimes attached;
-vascularity of the external surface of the uterus, and
-inflammation of the os tincæ and of its internal membrane:
-it is rare to find any appearance of disease
-in the kidney in either sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such is the circle of organs which are observed
-to be specifically diseased in fever, and with the
-most remarkable constancy. We go on to give
-individual cases in illustration of these morbid
-changes and of the symptoms with which they are
-accompanied.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Cases in illustration of the Morbid Changes which take place within the Head: or Cerebral Cases.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h5 class='c016'>1. <em>Vascularity of Brain, Spinal Cord and Membranes, with Gelatinous or slight Serous Effusion.</em></h5>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Agenbar</span>, æt. 21, married.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After some previous indisposition, attacked, eight
-days ago, with the ordinary symptoms of fever. At
-present, unable to give any account of her illness,
-or to answer any question: delirium came on four
-days ago, which still continues; mind quite fatuous;
-extreme restlessness; no sleep: eyes wild and rolling;
-tongue not to be protruded; pulse 130, weak and
-indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No sleep; delirium the same; pulse 126.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of the brain
-highly vascular; no effusion. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera exhibited
-only slight indications of disease. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Viscera nearly healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Welsh</span>, æt. 55, admitted on the 15th day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>of fever. Attack came on with ordinary symptoms.
-Pain of head now gone; some sleep; tongue loaded,
-moist; pulse 80; skin cool.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. No pain; much prostration; tongue dry;
-pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Stupor; mind incoherent; scarcely any sleep;
-tongue brown and dry; pulse 108; skin hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Coma; erysipelas on face; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Coma increased; tongue deeply crusted;
-erysipelas extending.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Delirium; tongue black; stools passed in
-bed; erysipelas extending.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Muscular tremor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Increasing coma and prostration. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake; slight serous effusion;
-substance of brain and spinal cord vascular. <em>Thorax.</em>
-<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a>[Ten or twelve ounces of serum in bag of
-pleuræ; pericardium contained twelve ounces of
-sero-purulent fluid; that part of it which is reflected
-over the heart highly inflamed and covered with
-flakes of coagulable lymph.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Viscera
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Margaret Gibbs</span>, æt. 63, widow, admitted on
-the 43rd day of fever. Pain of head still considerable;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>sleeps badly; pain of chest on right side;
-much cough, with purulent expectoration; abdomen
-tender; tongue loaded, dry; pulse 105.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>45th. Pain gone; drowsiness, approaching to coma;
-no delirium; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>48th. Insensibility continues; cough, with bloody
-sputa; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>55th. Prostration; pulse 135, extremely weak;
-skin cold and clammy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>57th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake, with gelatinous effusion
-beneath it; adherent to the dura mater along the longitudinal
-sinus; substance of brain vascular. <em>Thorax.</em>
-[Pleuræ adherent; slight effusion in left side;
-substance of lower lobes partly gorged, partly hepatized;
-melanotic deposits in the parenchyma. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Both ovaria dropsical; partly converted into
-cartilage; scirrhous tumour in walls of uterus.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Ralph</span>, æt. 65, widow, admitted on
-the 8th day of fever. From commencement, severe
-pain of head and abdomen; both continue; mind
-confused; scarcely any sleep; tongue foul and dry;
-much thirst; bowels purged; pulse 105.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of head diminished; that of abdomen
-unrelieved; 8 stools; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>10th. Pain of head gone; that of abdomen undiminished;
-4 stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Pain of head not returned; tenderness of
-abdomen undiminished; 7 stools; pulse 124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Tenderness of abdomen unabated; now
-swollen, hard, and rounded at umbilicus; 7 stools;
-pulse 125.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Tenderness and purging continue. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> [Falciform process of dura mater ossified;]
-substance of brain vascular; more fluid than natural
-in the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ adherent; serous
-effusion into parenchyma of lungs. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Peritoneal sac contained several ounces of pus and
-serum; peritoneum covering the liver coated with
-coagulable lymph; peritoneal coat of the intestines
-highly inflamed; colon adherent to the omentum
-all around;] all its coats so softened as to be easily
-torn; mucous membrane in general healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Gasset</span>, æt. 32, married, admitted on
-the 8th day of fever. Attack commenced, in addition
-to the common symptoms, with violent pain of
-the bowels. Epigastre still extremely tender; tongue
-red, clean, moist; no stool for six days; no pain of
-head or chest; pulse 99.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Tenderness of epigastrium continues; tongue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>red and dry; no stool; pulse 84; no cerebral nor
-pectoral symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of the brain
-highly vascular; no effusion. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera
-healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> [Eight inches of the jejunum
-intussuscepted within a portion of the same intestine
-of equal length; the farthest extremity of the
-intussuscepted part mortified; the mucous membrane
-of the containing portion highly vascular and in a
-state of ecchymosis; the intestinal canal, between
-the constricted portion and the stomach, contracted,
-and its valvulæ conniventes enlarged and œdematous;
-the size of the tube beyond the disease much
-diminished, and the colon, especially, contracted into
-a mere cord.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Joseph Danbury</span>, æt. 20, stone-cutter. Admitted
-on the 15th day of fever; pain of head, which has
-never been great, is now very slight; much vertigo;
-eyes sallow; no uneasiness in chest; some cough;
-abdomen tender; tongue brown; teeth sordid; much
-thirst; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Since last report, pain of head never entirely
-absent; vertigo constant and distressing; pain in the
-right side of the head much increased to-day, while
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>the vertigo is now gone; delirium; eyes suffused;
-tongue dry; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. The pain of the head and the giddiness
-have continued to alternate; both are now quite
-gone; mind confused and dull; expression of countenance
-wild; muscular tremor; respiration hurried.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>37th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Pia mater vascular; substance of brain
-vascular; slight effusion between the membranes
-and into the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> No prominent
-disease. <em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular;
-other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Edward Forrester</span>, æt. 46, cabinet-maker. Admitted
-on 6th day of fever. Complaint commenced
-with severe pain of back, loins, and epigastrium, with
-sense of ardent heat. At present, pain of head slight;
-that of epigastrium continues; tongue white, moist;
-no uneasiness of chest; pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of head, limbs and epigastrium; tongue
-white, dry; pulse 96, full and strong. V.S. ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Pain of head gone; that of epigastrium diminished;
-pulse 110; blood not sizy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of head returned; that of epigastrium
-diminished; no sleep; delirium; pulse 126.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Pain of head again gone; delirium continues;
-pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>13th. No sleep; mind confused; delirium; subsultus
-tendinum.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Cerebral symptoms undiminished; tongue
-dry and quite black; lips and teeth covered with
-black sordes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Severity of symptoms had diminished; lips,
-teeth, and tongue had begun to clean; pulse fallen
-to 96; but the parotid gland to-day painful, enlarged
-and indurated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Tumour of parotid increased; all the symptoms
-greatly aggravated; tongue not to be protruded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Insensibility amounting to coma.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Insensibility and prostration gradually increased.
-Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid white and opake; firmly adherent
-along the vertex to the dura mater. Surface
-and substance of brain highly vascular; gelatinous
-effusion between the membranes. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous
-membrane of bronchi vascular; [pleuræ adherent;
-lower lobe of left lung partly hepatized, and
-partly consisting of a mass of suppurating tubercles.]
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Small intestines of extremely dark colour;
-mucous membrane vascular.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Singleton</span>, æt. 28, married. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever: pain of head slight, confined
-chiefly to the occiput; pain of left side, with inability
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>to lie on it; no cough; tenderness of abdomen;
-pulse 111.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. After venesection to twelve ounces pain in
-head, side, and abdomen relieved; blood buffy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Slight pain of occiput; much pain and tenderness
-of abdomen; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Cerebral and abdominal symptoms unchanged;
-tongue brown and dry; eyes yellow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Pain of head never entirely disappeared,
-but though always present it was always slight;
-now respiration hurried; tongue extremely brown
-and dry; pulse 120; eyes yellow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular with gelatinous
-effusion beneath them; and slight serous
-effusion into ventricles: substance both of cerebrum
-and cerebellum highly vascular; pituitary gland softened
-and suppurating. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of bronchi vascular; substance of both lungs
-gorged with blood; [pleuræ universally adherent.]
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of intestines not vascular;
-but the mesentery highly injected: [liver
-adherent to diaphragm.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Ann Lamberth</span>, æt. 16, servant. Admitted
-on 22d day of fever. Pain of head, which has been
-very severe, is now gone; no tenderness of abdomen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>on fullest pressure; tongue red, smooth, and chapped;
-lips and teeth sordid; bowels purged; pulse
-108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Cough with slight expectoration; cheek
-dusky; no tenderness of abdomen; bowels purged;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Mind confused; much restlessness; no
-sleep; stools passed in bed; pulse 124, weak. A
-diffused swelling has appeared about the left wrist,
-attended with great pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. Mind more confused; countenance sunk;
-swelling of wrist increased; pulse not to be counted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>37th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>N.B. Probable that the swelling of the wrist arose
-from the peculiar affection hereafter to be described.<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Some effusion beneath the membranes, and
-at the base of the skull; substance of brain natural;
-anterior and middle lobes firmly adherent. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> The ilium contained one large
-and spreading ulcer, the glands around which were
-darkened and inflamed.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Crouch</span>, æt. 30. Admitted on the 7th day
-of fever. At present pain of head gone; some pain
-of back continues; no sleep; great restlessness;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>almost constant moaning; no uneasiness of chest;
-no cough; respiration hurried; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Sleeplessness, hurried respiration, tenderness
-of abdomen continue; tongue red and glazed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Delirium; respiration hurried and noisy;
-lips and teeth sordid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Subsultus tendinum.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Face livid; dark, bloody-coloured fluid issuing
-from the mouth; convulsive twitchings of muscles
-of face and hands. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake; dura mater vascular;
-substance of brain vascular; some effusion between
-membranes and into ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Nearly
-healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium
-vascular; liver soft.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Goodman</span>, æt. 50, nurse. Admitted on 4th
-day of disease: has been in a state of constant intoxication
-for several days past; has had much pain
-of head, which is now nearly gone; mind confused;
-eyes injected; abdomen tender; bowels purged;
-tongue brown and dry in middle; white at edges;
-tremulous; pulse 120; skin hot. Died next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Sinuses of dura mater turgid with blood;
-vessels of pia mater greatly congested; an ounce
-and a half of serum at the base of the skull. Theca
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>vertebralis highly vascular; great congestion of vertebral
-veins; some effusion of serum at cauda equina.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of small intestines vascular; [liver greatly enlarged.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Eyles</span>, æt. 25, servant. Admitted on the
-10th day of scarlet fever. Throat sore; deglutition
-painful; eruption fading; no pain of head, chest,
-or abdomen; tongue red and glazed; lips and teeth
-sordid; bowels purged; pulse 129.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Voice hoarse; pulse 120; not the slightest
-pain of head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Numerous ash-coloured crusts scattered
-over the internal fauces; countenance anxious; respiration
-hurried; pulse 108. Died next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid thick, opake, and unusually
-firm, with slight effusion beneath it; substance both
-of cerebrum and cerebellum highly vascular; pituitary
-gland enlarged and beginning to suppurate.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Larynx inflamed, covered with superficial
-circular ulcers; tongue aphthous; mouths of ducts
-on the surface of the amygdalæ ulcerated. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum highly
-vascular, not ulcerated; vessels of all the organs exceedingly
-turgid with blood.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>
- <h4 class='c016'>2. <em>Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &amp;c. with Effusion of Coagulable Lymph and Formation of Pus.</em></h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Moulden</span>, æt. 17, servant. Admitted on
-the 5th day of fever; left the hospital three months
-ago cured of a similar attack. Present relapse came
-on besides the ordinary symptoms, with severe pain
-of the head; pain still continues, but it is now only
-slight; expression of countenance dull and heavy;
-pulse 92, soft; no thoracic symptoms; no tenderness
-of abdomen; tongue loaded in middle with
-yellow fur, red around the edges, moist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Pain of head continues with sense of weight
-and intolerance of light; scarcely any sleep; pulse
-102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of head and intolerance of light increased;
-adnatæ glistening; pulse 94.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of head quite gone; sense of weight
-and intolerance of light continue; face flushed;
-pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Pain of head returned; no sleep; delirium;
-pulse 96; tongue brown and dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Pain of head and dullness and heaviness of
-eyes increased; pulse 84; abdomen tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Nearly insensible; pulse 90; abdomen
-tender, swollen, and hard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>15th. Last evening coma increased; respiration
-became hurried and laborious; great prostration;
-expired this morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes highly vascular; a large
-quantity of coagulable lymph effused at base of
-the brain. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi
-highly vascular; substance of lungs gorged with
-blood. <em>Abdomen.</em> On mucous membrane of stomach
-several patches of a dark red colour; mucous
-membrane of intestines pretty natural. [Spleen
-studded with soft tubercles of various sizes, some of
-which contained a cheesy matter; others a puriform
-fluid; the liver contained a few tubercles of the
-same nature but smaller.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charlotte Clarke</span>, æt. 18, servant. Admitted
-on 3d day of scarlet fever; throat sore; deglutition
-painful; no pain of chest; some cough; pain of
-head severe; much pain of limbs; mind distinct;
-tolerable sleep; no tenderness of abdomen; skin
-warm, covered with scarlet eruption; tongue characteristic;
-much thirst; no stool for three days;
-pulse 126, of good power; V. S. ad ℥xvj.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4th. Blood inflamed; throat continues sore;
-pain of head gone; pulse 130. Hirud. xij. gutt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. Throat unrelieved; deglutition very painful;
-no pain of head; pulse 110. Rep. Hirud. x.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>6th. Throat nearly well; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Had become convalescent; yesterday evening
-felt scarcely so well; during the night extremely
-restless, with much noisy delirium; at present quite
-prostrate; pulse 117, not weak; respiration hurried;
-abdomen tender; tongue quite dry; four stools
-of green colour, all passed in bed; erysipelas on
-right temple.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Lies quite prostrate; insensible; constant
-delirium with unceasing moaning; muscular tremor;
-all the stools passed in bed; pulse 126. Died following
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular; some spots of ecchymosis
-between its laminæ; arachnoid vascular, with
-effusion of viscid serum between it and pia mater.
-Between the arachnoid and the pia mater covering
-the superior part of the right hemisphere a layer of
-coagulable lymph of a yellow colour, on the removal
-of which the pia mater beneath it appeared entire.
-Shreds of coagulable lymph were also found at the
-base of the brain where there was more serum than
-natural as well as in the ventricles. Substance of
-the brain highly vascular. Viscera of thorax and
-abdomen healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Isaac Coombes</span>, æt. 60, weaver. Admitted on
-9th day of fever: at present no pain of head; some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>sleep; face pallid; great prostration; no thoracic
-or abdominal symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Attacked suddenly with shivering, heat,
-vomiting; no pain of head or of any organ;
-pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Continues quite free from pain, but no sleep;
-extreme restlessness; great prostration; skin warm
-and dry; pulse 84. Died following morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Between the pia mater and the arachnoid
-a large quantity of coagulable lymph of a yellow
-colour, with which indeed the arachnoid appeared
-to be universally lined, and which in some places
-was very thick. Substance of the brain highly vascular,
-being exceedingly full of bloody points, and
-in some places stained; three or four ounces of serum
-in the ventricles, at the bottom of each of which
-lay about a drachm of pus. The spinal sheath contained
-the same kind of substance, while the cord
-itself presented a healthy appearance. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Right lung gorged with blood and partly hepatized.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Spleen soft; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Susanah Stammers</span>, æt. 9, destitute. Admitted
-on the 8th day of fever. Attack commenced with
-severe pain of the head which continues with almost
-equal violence; little or no sleep; eyes dull and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>heavy; face flushed; pulse 126; slight uneasiness
-of chest on full inspiration; no cough; no tenderness
-of abdomen; tongue loaded with white fur;
-red at point; bowels purged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of head quite gone; less sensible;
-countenance more dull and heavy; pulse 120;
-abdomen tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Delirium, with much talkativeness; pulse
-112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Coma; bowels continue purged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Abdomen tender, swollen, rounded at navel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. More sensible; more tranquil sleep; delirium
-gone; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. No coma nor delirium; tranquil sleep;
-tongue moist, cleaning; pulse 108 feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>45th. Appeared upon the whole to be convalescing,
-but in an exceedingly slow and imperfect
-manner; there was a remarkable vacancy in her
-countenance, almost amounting to a fatuous expression;
-and her mind was peevish and childish. On
-this day she was seized suddenly with convulsions of
-extreme violence, and died within twenty-four hours
-after the attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid thickened and opake; effusion
-of gelatinous fluid beneath it; substance of brain
-highly vascular; in the inferior cornu of left ventricle
-a pint of purulent matter, somewhat resembling
-broken down cortical substance; it lay loose
-within the cavity. <em>Thorax.</em> Superior lobe of right
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>lung gorged and partly hepatized. [Pleuræ of right
-side adherent;] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of
-cæcum and commencement of colon vascular.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Henry Brewer</span>, æt. 59, labourer. Admitted on
-the 10th day of fever: states that he has no pain in
-the head, and that he is quite free from pain every
-where excepting in the right side, where he has some
-uneasiness, which is attended with slight cough;
-tongue brown and dry; bowels natural; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. No pain of head; that of chest gone; sleeps
-well; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. About an hour after yesterday’s visit became
-suddenly insensible; it has been impossible to rouse
-him from this coma which still continues profound;
-respiration stertorous. Died in the course of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head</em>: Dura mater thickened but not vascular;
-arachnoid thickened and opake; beneath it gelatinous
-effusion; upon its external surface a large
-quantity of well-formed pus; a quantity of purulent
-matter at the base of the brain surrounding the
-corpora quadrigemina: walls of the fourth ventricle
-ragged; two ounces of serous fluid in lateral ventricles
-and at base. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pluræ adherent;
-lower and middle lobes of right lung hepatized.]
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>
- <h4 class='c016'>3. <em>Vascularity of Brain, Membranes, &amp;c. with copious Serous Effusion.</em></h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George Blackbeard</span>, æt. 18, servant. Admitted
-on the 22nd day of fever: complaint commenced
-with violent head-ache attended with frequent fits
-of epistaxis; pain of the head still continues, chiefly
-confined to the occiput; little sleep; eyes injected
-and suffused; pulse 102, tongue loaded, dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Scarcely any pain in the head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Pain of the head entirely gone; epistaxis.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Delirium: muscular tremor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Delirium and muscular tremor increased;
-pulse 112; tongue more dry; lips and teeth sordid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31st. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain vascular;
-ventricles distended with serum; no characteristic
-disease in thorax or abdomen.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Higgins</span>, æt. 30, servant. Admitted on the
-22d day of fever: pain of head from the commencement
-very severe; chiefly confined to the right side;
-still continues, together with severe pain in the limbs;
-some pain in the right side of chest; cough; abdomen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>not tender; tongue dry in middle; red and
-moist around edges and at point; pulse 105, feeble;
-much prostration; entire surface of the body preternaturally
-sensible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23rd. The sensibility which from the commencement
-has been felt over the whole surface of the
-body is now particularly acute in the joints; in all
-of which there is severe pain; pulse 112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Pain of head gone; mind indistinct; tongue
-dry: stools passed in bed; pulse 105. Pains in the
-joints; swelling and redness of left fore-arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Mind more and more indistinct; pressure
-on any part of the body produces extreme pain;
-joints the same; died next day. At this period
-attention had not been awakened to the peculiar
-disease of the joints hereafter to be described; they
-were not therefore examined; but without doubt the
-affection was of the same nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular, and adhered with
-preternatural firmness to the skull; pia mater vascular;
-substance of brain natural; pituitary gland
-suppurating; the lateral and the third ventricles full
-of serous fluid; one ounce at base. <em>Thorax.</em> [Lungs
-emphysematous; several points of tubercular suppuration
-in left.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of
-small intestines inflamed without ulceration.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span><span class='sc'>Case XXXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Dennie</span>, æt. 28, labourer. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever, which attacked with usual
-symptoms: at present pain of head; little sleep;
-eyes dull and heavy; some cough; respiration hurried;
-abdomen not tender; tongue white; pulse
-112, weak; prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of head increased; delirium; eyes suffused;
-cough and hurried respiration continue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of head gone; constant and violent
-delirium; no sleep; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Delirium gone; profound coma; muscular
-tremor; respiration hurried; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Coma deeper; extreme restlessness; respiration
-more hurried; stools and urine passed in
-bed. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid vascular; substance both of
-cerebrum and cerebellum vascular; all the ventricles
-full of serum; viscera of thorax and abdomen
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charlotte Watts</span>, æt. 9. Previous history of disease
-unknown: at present scarcely at all sensible;
-almost constant crying; frequent rolling of the head
-on the pillow; countenance anxious; pulse not to be
-counted from her extreme restlessness; respiration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>hurried; abdomen not tender; lips and teeth sordid.
-2d day after admission constant noisy delirium;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Almost imperceptible, but still gradual improvement
-since last report; more sensible; no
-delirium; but mind throughout extremely peevish
-and fretful; stools have constantly been and still are
-passed in bed; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Large sloughing sores on loins and hips; erysipelas
-of surrounding integuments; pulse 112, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Sloughs have extended between the shoulders,
-along the back, and over both hips; great emaciation;
-extreme prostration; mind continues very
-fretful; pulse 110, very weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>37th. Gradually grew weaker and weaker until
-this day, when she died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid vascular; substance of brain
-and especially medulla oblongata highly vascular;
-between the arachnoid and the dura mater much
-limpid serum; all the ventricles distended with
-a similar fluid. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ adherent. Both
-lungs contained numerous tubercles in a state of
-suppuration. A large proportion of right lung hepatized.]
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Sullivan</span>, æt. 26, married. Admitted on
-the 14th day of disease; pain of head severe from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>the beginning; continues unabated and even violent;
-no sleep; face pallid; expression depressed; pulse
-81; abdomen tender; tongue foul and dry. V. S.
-ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Pain of head gone; delirium; pulse 70,
-soft; tongue more dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Pain of head, which had returned slightly
-on some of the preceding days, was, from this period,
-finally lost in insensibility; no longer conscious;
-prostration; great restlessness; almost constant moaning;
-occasional retching; pulse 72.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Continues perfectly insensible; all the stools
-passed in bed; pulse suddenly rose to 120, on the
-following day fell to 102; eyes half open and injected:
-no material change till 29th, died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain appeared
-pretty healthy; all the ventricles enlarged,
-and contained about three ounces of limpid serum;
-a considerable quantity, also, at base; some coagulable
-lymph effused on that part of the arachnoid
-which covers the tuber annulare. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ
-adherent; substance of lungs full of tubercles, in
-different stages of disease.] <em>Abdomen.</em> [Liver hard;]
-other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Boon</span>, æt. 14, admitted on 10th day of fever.
-Attacked in the beginning with severe head-ache,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>which still continues; abdomen tender; lips and
-teeth sordid; tongue brown and dry; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Pain of head undiminished; eyes heavy
-and suffused; delirium; tongue red, dry, and glazed;
-pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Pain of head quite gone; delirium; pulse
-118.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Much noise through the night; peevishness
-during the day; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. More insensible; can give no answer to
-any question; pulse 118.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Constant rolling of the head; pupils dilated;
-all the stools passed in bed; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Eyes vacant and staring; pupils contracted;
-head sunk in bed; legs drawn up; stools passed in
-bed; urine abundant; pulse 117, regular and of
-good power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Skin covered in several places with vesicles,
-which discharge a thin ichor. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain vascular;
-upwards of three ounces of serum in the
-ventricles and at base; much similar fluid in theca
-vertebralis. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Mesenteric glands greatly enlarged; some of them
-suppurating.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XXXVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Richard Maciff</span>, æt. 30, admitted on the 22d
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>day of fever. No account can be obtained of its
-previous history: at present he lies quite prostrate
-and perfectly insensible; eyes wild and rolling; pupils
-dilated and insensible to light; constantly
-picking at the objects around him; pulse not to be
-counted, on account of his extreme restlessness, but
-it feels like a soft cotton cord, and nearly without
-pulsation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Profound coma; senseless muttering; constant
-muscular tremor; squinting; neither stool nor
-urine has been passed since admission; pulse 96,
-soft, not intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Coma undiminished; one stool passed in
-bed; urine drawn off by the catheter; pulse 100,
-extremely feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. No change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular; arachnoid highly
-vascular; that portion of it covering the tuber annulare
-distended into a bag of considerable size, filled
-with serum; all the ventricles enlarged and distended
-with serum. <em>Thorax.</em> [Right lung contained tubercles
-in various stages of disease.] <em>Abdomen.</em>
-[Liver of unusually deep red colour; in right and
-left lobes two small sacs, filled with calcareous matter;
-on surface of spleen a sac, containing matter
-similar to that in the liver.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span><span class='sc'>Case XXXIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Tennant</span>, æt. 18, tailor. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever; at present much pain of head
-back, and extremities; no sleep; face flushed; epigastrium
-tender: tongue red round margin, coated
-in middle; much thirst; pulse 99. V.S. ad ℥x.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Pain of head continues; scarcely any sleep;
-pulse 96. C.C. ad ℥x. nuchæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of head unrelieved, particularly severe
-over the forehead; face flushed; tongue brown and
-dry; pulse 92.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Pain of head quite gone; no longer conscious
-of any uneasiness in the limbs; much drowsiness;
-delirium; pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Rather more sensible; delirium; tongue
-unchanged; stools and urine passed in bed; pulse
-112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Delirium increased; eyes glistening; pulse
-120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Mind more distinct this morning; much
-delirium through the night; respiration hurried;
-pulse 130. Died next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance healthy; on the
-under surface of right hemisphere, corresponding
-with the middle lobe, a remarkably deep and extensive
-depression, the deepest part corresponding to
-the centre of the brain; this depression was lined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>with the arachnoid, which being reflected formed a
-sac, that contained 12 ounces of serous fluid, and
-completely filled the cavity. The cerebral substance
-beneath and around was perfectly sound and entire.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of ilium and cæcum extensively and greatly
-ulcerated.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c016'>4. <em>Vascularity &amp;c. with preternatural Firmness of Brain.</em></h4>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XL.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Conolly</span>, æt. 58, labourer. Admitted
-on 7th day of fever: severe pain of head early in the
-attack which has continued without intermission,
-accompanied with vertigo; scarcely any sleep; face
-flushed; no uneasiness of chest; abdomen not tender;
-no stool for four days; tongue loaded and dry;
-pulse 96, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Less pain of head; no improvement in other
-symptoms; pulse 92.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Scarcely any pain of head; no sleep; delirium;
-muscular tremor; tongue brown and dry;
-pulse 111.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain quite gone; more insensible; constant
-talkative delirium; colour of cheek dusky,
-almost livid; respiration hurried; stools and urine
-in bed; pulse 112, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; arachnoid thickened
-and opake; substance of brain highly vascular
-and preternaturally firm; some fluid beneath membranes
-and in ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ adherent;]
-lungs gorged with blood. <em>Abdomen.</em> Liver
-and spleen exceedingly softened, readily breaking
-down beneath the finger.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Tiffin</span>, æt. 25, servant. Perfectly insensible:
-no account can be obtained of history or duration
-of disease: abdomen tender; tongue loaded,
-moist; pulse 99.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2d day after admission scarcely any sleep; delirium;
-muscular tremor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3d. Insensibility continues; constant delirium;
-has passed neither stool nor urine; latter drawn off
-by catheter; pulse 124, feeble and fluttering. Died
-next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater and arachnoid natural; pia
-mater vascular; substance of brain highly vascular
-and unusually firm; cerebellum soft; effusion beneath
-arachnoid and at base. <em>Thorax.</em> [Substance
-of both lungs filled with miliary tubercles.] <em>Abdomen.</em>
-[Liver studded with tubercles, similar to those
-of the lungs; spleen full of the same kind of tubercles,
-excepting that they were larger, and some of
-them were suppurating;] pancreas extremely firm.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span><span class='sc'>Case XLII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Poulston</span>, æt. 50. No account to be obtained
-of duration of disease: lies quite insensible
-and prostrate; frequent jactitation of the arms;
-face flushed; respiration stertorous; cheeks alternately
-expanding and collapsing during inspiration
-and expiration; tongue not to be protruded; stools
-and urine in bed; pulse 138, weak, and easily compressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2d. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular; arachnoid thickened
-and opake; substance of brain highly vascular and
-firm. <em>Thorax.</em> All the viscera perfectly healthy.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of intestines vascular,
-without ulceration; mesentery inflamed; [contained
-a calcareous deposit of an oval shape included in a
-cyst.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Ashley</span>, æt. 65, messenger. Admitted
-on 4th day of fever: slight occasional head-ache;
-mind distinct; scarcely any sleep; face flushed;
-no uneasiness of chest or abdomen; slight cough;
-pulse 81.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. Slight head-ache; little sleep; pulse 82.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Pain of head gone; pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>8th. No pain; mind confused; delirium; stools
-in bed; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Prostration; pulse 111.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Perfectly insensible; great prostration;
-deglutition difficult; hiccup; pulse 116, extremely
-feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substances of brain intensely
-vascular; perhaps as much so as in pure
-phrenitis; substance exceedingly firm; viscera of
-thorax and abdomen healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Francis Hodgkinson</span>, æt. 15, servant. Admitted
-on the 8th day of fever: pain of head and vertigo,
-which ushered in the attack already gone; mind
-confused; scarcely any sleep; slight pain of chest
-on full inspiration; slight cough; abdomen not tender;
-tongue red at margin, centre covered with
-yellow fur; pulse 117, easily compressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No pain; much confusion; much restlessness;
-respiration oppressed; tongue still moist; lips
-and teeth sordid; stools in bed; pulse 112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Petechiæ; tongue dry; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. No material change in symptoms. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; substance exceedingly
-vascular and firm; some fluid in ventricles and
-at base. <em>Thorax.</em> Lower lobe of left lung of dark
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>red colour and inflamed. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of small intestines vascular, and of dark red
-colour.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William White</span>, æt. 17, labourer. Admitted on
-6th day of fever: pain of head; especially over forehead;
-mind distinct; some sleep; face flushed;
-no thoracic or abdominal uneasiness; tongue white
-and dry; no stool for a week; pulse 126.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of head very severe; pulse 117; V. S.
-ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Died this morning most suddenly and unexpectedly,
-after having complained of violent pain
-of the head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head</em>, not examined till three days after death,
-yet the substance of the brain was exceedingly firm,
-and seemed to distend and protrude its membranes,
-so that there seemed something like hypertrophy
-of its substance; viscera of thorax and abdomen
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Mullins</span>, æt. 28, servant. Stated to be
-a relapse after a fever of three weeks duration: at
-present, lies perfectly senseless; noisy delirium;
-extreme restlessness; pulse 70.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>2nd day after admission, continues perfectly insensible;
-respiration slow and stertorous; tongue
-not to be protruded; stools passed in bed; pulse 60.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Remained nearly in the same state until
-this morning. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura and pia mater highly injected; surface
-of brain quite dry and hard; substance throughout
-exceedingly firm, and thickly crowded with
-bloody points; cerebellum soft; pituitary gland soft;
-all the ventricles, especially the third, exceedingly
-enlarged and quite full of limpid serum; communicating
-passages greatly distended; an ounce of
-serum at base. <em>Thorax.</em> [Left pleuræ completely
-adherent; both lungs full of tubercles, many of
-which in the left lung were softened and others were
-in a state of suppuration.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of small intestines inflamed and thickened;
-no ulceration. [Sigmoid flexure of colon contracted
-into the form of a small white cord of very
-narrow calibre, the superior extremity of which was
-blocked up by a large scybala; and beyond it there
-was a great accumulation of fæces; spleen very
-small; right kidney weighed only six drachms; left
-seven ounces and a half; liver extremely small
-weighing only two pounds, six drachms; it lay
-across the epigastrium and adhered by a preternatural
-membrane to the diaphragm on the left side;
-mesentery wasted.]</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>
- <h4 class='c016'>5. <em>Vascularity, &amp;c. with Softening of the Brain.</em></h4>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Hampden</span>, æt. 50. No account to be obtained
-of history of disease, but it is stated that this
-is the 22d day of her fever: at present mind quite
-fatuous; some uneasiness of chest; cough; abdomen
-not tender; tongue red and dry; pulse 99.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Subsultus; urine in bed; no stool.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Mind rather more distinct and more firm;
-less subsultus; submaxillary gland enlarged and
-painful; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Much prostration; no other change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Increasing prostration; pulse 120, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular and thickened;
-arachnoid white and opake; substance of brain
-slightly vascular, but very soft; pituitary gland suppurating;
-all the ventricles distended with serum.
-<em>Thorax.</em> [Universal adhesion of the pleuræ; lungs
-studded with tubercles.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of small intestines inflamed; no ulceration;
-pancreas very hard; liver much softened.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Virgina M’Mahon</span>, æt. 8, admitted on 14th day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>of scarlet fever. No account can be obtained of
-previous history; mind quite confused; extreme
-restlessness; abdomen tender; tongue very red and
-sore; tarsi red and irritable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Delirium; moaning; no sleep; more sensible
-to-day; abdomen less tender; pulse extremely
-quick and weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Without any material change, died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake; effusion between it and
-the pia mater; substance of brain exceedingly soft;
-two ounces of serum in the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous
-membrane of trachea and bronchi vascular;
-bronchial tubes filled with mucus. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of small intestines vascular; mesenteric
-glands enlarged.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XLIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Dorcas Wingrove</span>, æt. 23, servant, admitted on
-the 6th day of fever. Attack commenced with violent
-pain in the head, preceded by no other symptom
-that was observed; this pain still continues exceedingly
-severe, and is confined chiefly to the right eye;
-mind distinct; no sleep; much restlessness during
-the night; countenance pallid; no uneasiness of
-chest; abdomen tender; bowels constipated; tongue
-pale, clean and moist; pulse 93, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of head undiminished; delirium; three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>stools in bed; tongue brown and quite dry; pulse
-100, firm, strong, and sharp. C.C. ad ℥xij. nuchæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Pain of head gone; no sleep; noisy delirium;
-stools in bed; pulse 120, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Slight, but very transient amendment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Comatose; lies quite prostrate; stools in
-bed; pulse 130, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; arachnoid opake;
-corpus striatum in part highly inflamed, in part softening
-to suppuration; viscera of thorax and abdomen
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case L.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Proctor</span>, æt. 45. Date and progress of
-disease unknown: at present perfectly insensible;
-extreme restlessness; eyes dull and vacant; tongue
-dry; pulse scarcely to be distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2d day after admission. Insensibility the same;
-almost constant moaning; features sunk; expression
-of countenance anxious; pulse 118. Next morning
-died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> [In falciform process of dura mater an
-ossification, two inches and a half in length and half
-an inch in breadth, with several similar ossifications
-along the course of the longitudinal sinus;] the arachnoid
-and pia mater consolidated into one thick, opake
-and yellow membrane; substance of brain highly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>vascular and very soft; cerebellum quite disorganized,
-being broken down into a yellow, puriform
-mass of matter, a considerable portion of which lay
-loose on the floor of the cranium; all the ventricles
-full of serum, in which floated numerous flakes of
-lymph; base immersed in similar fluid. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of
-jejunum and ilium much inflamed, neither thickened
-nor ulcerated; [liver greatly enlarged; walls of bladder
-half an inch thick.]</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following is placed at the end of the cerebral
-cases, not because it illustrates any new circumstance
-in the condition of the brain, but because, while the
-symptoms and the pathology are prominently cerebral,
-it affords one of the most complete examples of
-the peculiar affection of the joints already referred to.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George Carter</span>, æt. 28. Admitted on the 4th
-day of scarlet fever: throat sore; deglutition painful;
-cough; no pain of chest or abdomen; nausea;
-tendency to vomiting; no pain of head; mind distinct;
-pulse 108, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. No pain; eyes suffused; pulse 120, firmer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Mind confused; eruption partial, interspersed
-with papulæ; tongue of strawberry appearance,
-and rough from prominence of papillæ; pulse
-124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>7th. Delirium, so violent as to require restraint;
-no sleep; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Eruption changed to copper-colour; tongue
-dry; pulse 112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Inflammation of parotid gland.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Tumour of left parotid exceedingly hard
-and slowly suppurating; slight difficulty in swallowing;
-pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Tumour opened last night and discharged
-two ounces of bloody pus; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Alternately mended a little and then fell
-back to his former state until last night, when swelling
-of right wrist and left knee came on, attended
-with excruciating pain and great heat without any
-discoloration: 12 leeches have been applied with
-considerable relief: mind confused; no sleep;
-countenance anxious; face flushed; rigors; pulse
-135.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Other wrist and knee have begun to swell
-and are excessively painful; left wrist and knee
-which had been more easy, again extremely painful;
-vomiting; respiration hurried; pulse 116, weak.
-Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Much serum both in ventricles and at
-base. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of the ilium ulcerated and extremely
-dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the large joints swollen and red: on opening
-the knee joints they were found to contain several
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>ounces of serum mixed with pus; the cellular tissue
-in the neighbourhood was partly inflamed, and partly
-mortified and sloughing: both wrists were in a similar
-condition.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Solden</span>, æt. 44, plasterer. For symptoms
-see page 155.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular; substance
-highly vascular; some effusion beneath the arachnoid.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of ilium vascular; no ulceration;
-mesenteric glands enlarged.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Clark</span>, æt. 17. For symptoms see page
-156.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Corresponding portions of the pericranium
-and dura mater detached from the occipital
-bone to the extent of four inches in length by three
-in width; coagulated blood effused between the
-dura mater and the cranium; vessels of the membranes
-turgid with blood; substance of brain vascular;
-effusion between the membranes; a little at
-base. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of ilium greatly inflamed; cæcum
-ulcerated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>From the study of these cases we see that the
-process of disease is as uniform as that of health, or
-of any other process of nature; that certain phenomena
-constantly take place; that they follow a determinate
-order; that the events seldom or never
-vary; that their relations to each other never
-change; that in these cerebral cases of fever a preternatural
-fulness and apparently increase in the
-number of the blood-vessels of the brain and spinal
-cord, or of their membranes is always present; or that
-if a case do now and then occur in which even <em>no</em>
-preternatural vascularity can be discovered such an
-event is exceedingly rare; that this fulness and increase
-of the blood-vessels is either identical with,
-or passes into the state of inflammation; that the
-state of inflammation, after a certain period, produces
-results which are known to be effects of inflammatory
-action in other parts of the body; that
-these products of inflammation consist of a given
-number; that the whole of that number never concurs
-in any one case, but that two or more are frequently
-found in combination; that the laws by
-which any one of these is formed rather than any
-other are at present wholly unknown; while instances
-do occasionally occur, although they are extremely
-rare, in which the state of mere vascularity
-alone subsists without the formation of any inflammatory
-product that can be discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the study of the history of these same cases
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>we further see that the indications of this inflammatory
-state of the brain and spinal cord or of their
-membranes are as uniform as the existence of the
-state itself; that certain symptoms invariably accompany
-it; that these symptoms not only declare
-with absolute certainty that this process is going on,
-but likewise, in general, clearly mark its progress; and
-that this series of symptoms and the place in which
-each stands in the series is as follows: namely,</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pain in the head, or giddiness, or some other uneasy
-sensation in this organ, attended with a loss of
-sleep and with a derangement in all the sensorial
-faculties,—these are the signs of the presence of
-the disease in the brain or its membranes. Pain
-in the back, loins, or limbs, or diminution of the
-power of voluntary motion—these are the signs
-which mark the existence of the disease in the
-spinal cord or its membranes. These symptoms
-having been present a certain time, and at length
-succeeded by—diminution of the pain or uneasiness
-<em>without a corresponding diminution in the other
-febrile symptoms</em>, but with an <em>increase</em> in <em>some</em> of
-them; for instance, with an increase of the sleeplessness
-and restlessness: at last, total cessation of
-all pain or uneasiness, together with a diminution
-of the sensibility—these are the signs which mark
-the progress of the disease, and which, in general,
-denote a transition from the state of mere inflammation
-to the formation of some inflammatory product.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Thus far the change of state is certain and
-the signs which denote it invariable; to the latter
-other symptoms are added which occur in the great
-majority of cases, but not in all; namely, delirium,
-muscular tremor, involuntary and unconscious stools,
-acceleration, and in general, increased and increasing
-weakness of the pulse. Other accessory symptoms
-still frequently occur and with considerable regularity,
-but as these are more variable the student
-is referred to the cases themselves, the study of which
-can alone teach when they may be expected.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Since the diseased states of the brain and spinal
-cord or of their membranes, which the preceding
-pathology discloses, exist, as is there shown, in all
-degrees of intensity, so the signs by which these
-states are denoted may vary from a prominence
-which it is impossible to overlook to an unobtrusiveness
-which it requires careful attention to discover.
-And from causes which we do not yet understand,
-the prominence of the sign is not always in accordance
-with the intensity of the state; but the important
-truth here maintained is, (and the more the
-practitioner observes, the more satisfied he will become
-that it is a truth,) that whenever these states
-exist in sufficient intensity to produce death, their
-presence may be discovered during life. It is not
-affirmed that these states can be distinguished one
-from another; but it is contended that the existence
-of some one or more of them may be ascertained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>with absolute certainty. As we sometimes see death
-occur, preceded by the ordinary symptoms of cerebral
-inflammation, when, on examination after death,
-nothing can be discerned but preternatural vascularity
-of the membranes or substance of the brain,
-without the presence of any inflammatory product
-that can be distinguished; and as, moreover, when
-<em>some</em> inflammatory product is generated, we are in
-total ignorance of the laws by which, in one case,
-the blood-vessels pour out serum, in another secrete
-pus, in a third soften, and in a fourth indurate the
-cerebral substance; so the signs which indicate that
-these events have taken place are to us, at present,
-uncertain. There can be no question that the laws,
-according to which each of these events is produced,
-are fixed and invariable in their operation; and each
-may possibly be attended with its specific and therefore
-diagnostic sign; but it is certain that we have
-not yet discovered the one nor observed the other.
-And the preceding cases have been detailed under the
-heads assigned them, rather with the view of making
-the pathology clear, than in the hope from this arrangement
-of affording any guide to practice. In the
-mean time, what we may know, and ought to know,
-is when inflammation exists: what we may, in general,
-further know is, when some product of inflammation
-has been poured out still more to oppress the
-brain: to the thoughtful and discerning practitioner it
-would be without doubt a high satisfaction to be able
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>to carry his diagnosis still further, and to ascertain
-<em>what</em> that product is: the desire to arrive at such
-precise and perfect knowledge appears to me to be
-in the highest degree meritorious: the constant and
-unwearied endeavour to acquire it may not always
-succeed with reference to the particular object immediately
-pursued, but it cannot fail to increase his
-power and to strengthen his habit of observation;
-and the sure reward of a devotion thus truly honourable
-and faithful to the duties of his profession, if it
-should not be, as it may not invariably be, the confidence
-and the gratitude of his patient, will at least be
-the proud consciousness that he has deserved both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Were it possible to ascertain with absolute certainty
-and with perfect exactness in which of its
-various modes inflammation of the brain and its
-membranes terminates, it would be a subject of interest,
-as far as we can at present perceive, rather to
-the physiologist and pathologist than to the practical
-physician. To the latter the great fact which
-it is of paramount importance that he should know
-is, that inflammation is going on in the brain of his
-patient, and that if he cannot put a stop to it in the
-course of a day or two, it will in that short space of
-time terminate in some irreparable change of structure,
-of which death will be the inevitable consequence.
-This, it is again repeated, it is always in
-his power to know; and as there is no one fact
-which can or which ought to have so much influence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>upon his practice, so there is no diagnosis which
-it is of so much importance that he should acquire
-the habit of forming.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Cases in illustration of the Morbid Changes which take place within the Chest; or Thoracic Cases.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case VII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Angelica Fidgett.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For symptoms see page 125.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all their
-ramifications, exceedingly inflamed; bronchial tubes
-full of mucus; [substance of left lung extremely
-inflamed; left pleuræ adherent; right pleuræ and
-lung much less severely affected.] <em>Head.</em> Substance
-of brain vascular. <em>Abdomen.</em> All the viscera healthy
-except the uterus and its appendages, which were
-slightly inflamed.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case VIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Potter</span>, æt. 21.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For symptoms see page 127.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all their
-ramifications, of dark red colour; bronchial glands
-much enlarged; [pleuræ of right side generally adherent;
-substance of lungs consolidated; pericardium
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>contained four ounces of serum;] heart natural.
-<em>Abdominal</em> and <em>cerebral</em> organs healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Alexander Crombie</span>, æt. 19, seaman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For symptoms see page 159.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi, in all
-their ramifications, highly vascular; bronchial tubes
-full of mucus, mixed with pus. <em>Head.</em> Dura mater
-adherent with preternatural firmness to cranium;
-substance of brain unusually firm; posterior lobes
-crisp, and cut almost like cartilage; anterior lobes,
-when cut into, abound with bloody points; cerebellum
-exceedingly firm. <em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat
-of small intestines in general vascular; eight or ten
-portions of the jejunum and ilium, to the extent of
-three or four inches each, intussuscepted; mucous
-membrane of these parts extensively ulcerated, some
-of the ulcers circular, the greater number oblong,
-and at least two inches in length; mucous membrane
-in general highly vascular, but that surrounding
-the ulcers less so than the other parts; mesenteric
-glands corresponding to ulcerated portions of intestine
-enlarged and vascular; crimson spots on convex
-surface of liver; gall-bladder distended with a yellowish
-watery fluid; spleen enlarged, and so soft as
-to be easily broken down under the finger.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span><span class='sc'>Case LII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Lewis</span>, æt. 51, taylor, admitted on the
-8th day of fever. Complaint commenced with general
-pains, nausea and vomiting, together with
-cough and dyspnœa. At present there is no pain
-of chest except on coughing, which produces some
-uneasiness; cough frequent, with copious sputa;
-pain of epigastrium; tongue exceedingly parched
-and dry; much thirst; bowels purged; some pain
-of head, chiefly in forehead; mind distinct; scarcely
-any sleep; face pallid; pulse 126, weak. Early
-next morning died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed;
-[pleuræ of right lung covered with coagulable lymph;
-substance of right lung universally consolidated, and
-infiltrated with tubercular matter;] left lung gorged.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> [Liver indurated; crisping under the
-knife; kidneys indurated.] <em>Head.</em> Membranes and
-substance of brain vascular.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Sullivan</span>, æt. 40, married, admitted on the
-15th day of fever. Some pain of chest; severe
-cough; much pain of head, with sense of noise;
-mind dull; scarcely any sleep; face flushed; skin
-warm; tongue foul and dry; pulse 98.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>16th. Frequent short cough, without expectoration;
-mind confused, yet sensible when spoken to;
-pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Thoracic and cerebral symptoms unchanged;
-pulse 111, indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Cough diminished; sensibility increased;
-she appeared in all respects better until this day,
-when the cough became more frequent and the expectoration
-purulent; pulse 60.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Cough frequent; expectoration the same;
-respiration short and hurried; pulse 60, intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Respiration became more and more hurried,
-and the strength rapidly sunk. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed;
-bronchial tubes full of mucus, mixed with pus;
-[pleuræ adherent; patches of left lung hepatized.]
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Liver and spleen extremely softened,
-breaking down under the fingers into a mass like
-coagulated blood. <em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance
-of brain pretty healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Peach</span>, æt. 23, married, admitted on the
-17th day of fever. Thoracic symptoms came on
-with the very commencement of the disease: at present
-there is no pain of the chest, but much cough;
-respiration short and hurried; colour of the face
-quite dusky; some pain of head; mind confused;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>pulse 100; abdomen not tender; tongue of beefsteak
-character; bowels regular.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Cough and hurried respiration continue;
-dusky colour of face has become livid; delirium;
-low muttering talkativeness; pulse 116; teeth sordid;
-stools in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Severity of bronchial symptoms much increased;
-respiration panting; colour of skin in general,
-but especially of face, livid; deglutition difficult;
-pulse 124, weak. Died following morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed;
-bronchial tubes filled with mucus, mixed with pus;
-mucous membrane of trachea vascular; [both lungs
-studded with miliary tubercles.] <em>Head.</em> Dura mater
-and arachnoid highly vascular; theca of spinal cord
-highly vascular; substance of brain vascular. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-[Spleen contained a small mass of cheesy
-tubercles near its surface;] patches of mucous membrane
-of small intestines inflamed, but without ulceration.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Isabella Lora</span>, æt. 12. Admitted on the 3rd
-day of scarlet fever; throat sore; deglutition painful;
-slight cough; skin covered with copper-coloured
-eruption; tongue loaded in middle with white fur;
-red around edges and at tip; some pain of head;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>4th. Much improved; less pain of throat and
-head; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Convalescent and gradually gaining strength
-up to this day; early this morning seized suddenly
-with rigors attended with vomiting: abdomen tender;
-three stools; pulse scarcely to be felt; mind
-distinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Left parotid painful, hard and swollen;
-throat again inflamed; pulse 124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Early this morning seized with symptoms
-of severe laryngitis, for which leeches have been
-applied with partial relief; tonsils and uvula much
-swollen; respiration exceedingly laborious; pulse
-140, sharp. Died same day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Tonsils much enlarged; mucous follicles
-full of purulent fluid mixed with blood; some of
-them exceedingly enlarged, and communicating so
-as to form cavities; membrane covering the upper
-part of larynx highly vascular and much thickened,
-especially that about the epiglottis and the arytænoid
-cartilages; mucous membrane below the rima
-glottidis healthy; both the parotids, the sublingual,
-and the maxillary glands enlarged. <em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal
-coat of the intestines inflamed and thickened.
-<em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain tolerably
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span><span class='sc'>Case LVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Anne Lawrence</span>, æt. 22, servant, admitted
-on the 5th day of scarlet fever. Throat sore; deglutition
-painful; slight uneasiness and sense of tightness
-in chest; frequent cough, with copious expectoration;
-abdomen not tender; tongue characteristic;
-skin warm, covered with scarlet eruption; slight pain
-of head; pulse 126, strong. V.S. ad ℥xvj.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Felt much relief after venesection; dyspnœa
-returned in the evening, and she was again bled to
-the extent of sixteen ounces: blood first drawn with
-firm buff, that of the second bleeding with coagulum
-firm but not buffy; at present cough severe, short,
-dry; dyspnœa; pulse 148.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Tightness of chest continues; cough better;
-pulse 144, tremulous. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Uvula and surrounding parts much inflamed,
-but not ulcerated; mucous membrane of
-trachea inflamed; bronchial tubes inflamed, and
-filled with frothy mucus; [pleuræ of both lungs adherent;
-lungs contained a few tubercles; thyroid
-gland enlarged, and so hard as to be cut with difficulty.]
-Abdominal and cerebral organs tolerably
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Wormington</span>, æt. 24, servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>After some previous indisposition, seized, the day
-before admission, with shivering, attended with pain
-of bowels, nausea and vomiting; throat sore; deglutition
-painful; scarlet eruption on skin; no uneasiness
-of chest; no cough; abdomen tender; tongue
-covered with yellow fur; bowels purged; mind confused;
-eyes injected and heavy; pulse not to be
-counted. Died four hours after admission.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of trachea of dark
-red colour; epiglottis quite blackened; arytænoid cartilages
-ulcerated; substance of lungs much gorged.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular;
-substance of brain preternaturally firm.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Margaret Scandling</span>, æt. 26, admitted on the
-8th day of fever. No uneasiness of chest; no cough;
-pain in head; severe pain in limbs and bones;
-scarcely any sleep; threatening erysipelas on face;
-abdomen tender; tongue white and dry; no stool
-for seven days; pulse 88, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. No uneasiness of chest; pain of head diminished;
-pulse 72.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Erysipelas of cheek, spreading to scalp,
-and attended with considerable pain; tongue dry;
-pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Erysipelas extending; this morning attacked
-with severe dyspnœa, attended with husky noise in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>inspiration; deglutition extremely difficult. Hirud.
-x. gutturi. C.C. ad ℥xij. nuchæ. Capiat Hydrar.
-Submuriat. gr. ij., c. Pulv. Opii, gr. ss. 6ta q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Respiration and deglutition unrelieved;
-erysipelas of face very painful; mouth sore; mercurial
-fetor; pulse 120, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Respiration unchanged; deglutition more
-painful; erysipelas increased, passing into suppuration;
-delirium; pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Difficulty of deglutition undiminished; respiration
-rather more easy; pulse 98; much pain of
-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. No change in the respiration, deglutition, or
-erysipelas; much discharge from both ears; left elbow
-attacked with swelling; heat and excessive pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of larynx inflamed;
-epiglottis much thickened; both arytænoid cartilages
-in a state of suppuration, right nearly destroyed;
-cellular substance about the right parotid
-in a state of suppuration; [pleuræ of right side adherent;
-substance of both lungs infiltrated.] <em>Head.</em>
-Membranes and substance of brain vascular; serum
-in lateral ventricles. <em>Abdomen.</em> [Mucous membrane
-of small intestines in several points raised in the form
-of vesicles, containing air;] spleen soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>N.B. In this case, the erysipelas evidently extended
-from the external skin to the mucous membrane
-of the throat and larynx, an event which is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>not very common in fever, but which does occasionally
-happen. The affection of the elbow-joint
-was clearly of the same nature as that described in
-case 51.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charles Tyler</span>, æt. 54, chocolate maker, admitted
-on the 7th day of fever. No pain of chest;
-slight cough; abdomen tender; tongue loaded and
-dry; thirst; bowels loose; no pain of head; much
-pain of loins; some vertigo; mind distinct; no sleep;
-pulse 90, full and firm. V.S. ad ℥xx.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Pain of head and abdomen gone; pulse 102,
-full and sharp; blood with very firm buff. Repr.
-V.S. ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. No return of pain in any organ; mind confused;
-no sleep; great restlessness; delirium; muscular
-tremor; respiration short and hurried, with
-mucous rattle; tongue white and dry; pulse too indistinct
-to be counted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Delirium became exceedingly violent soon
-after yesterday’s visit; there was neither pain nor
-cough, but he passed by the mouth a considerable
-quantity of fluid blood; respiration became more
-and more hurried and he died in the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of the trachea and
-bronchi inflamed; [the substance of the left lung
-studded with nodules, consisting of coagulated blood,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>forming the apoplexia pulmonalis of the French
-writers:] viscera of the head and abdomen healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Wotton</span>, æt. 46, plaisterer. Admitted on
-the 7th day of fever: attack commenced with chilliness,
-succeeded by cough and severe pain in the
-region of the heart; has had two similar attacks of
-pain which he soon recovered; at present he has so
-much pain in the side that he cannot take a full inspiration;
-frequent cough exciting pain; respiration
-short and painful; abdomen not tender; tongue
-white and moist; pain of head; little sleep; pulse
-120, full and hard; skin hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Pain of chest diminished; can take full inspiration
-with less uneasiness; cough less frequent;
-respiration little changed; pulse 102, intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Respiration much more easy; cough less frequent,
-with copious mucous expectoration; pulse
-108, intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Says he is quite free from pain everywhere;
-cough again increased; respirations 50; pulse 110,
-not intermittent; delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Respirations 60; no sleep; great restlessness;
-pulse 108, intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Perfectly insensible; scarcely to be retained
-in bed; respiration extremely quick; pulse not to
-be counted. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi highly
-vascular; [left lung adherent to parieties of chest by
-a layer of coagulable lymph nearly an inch in thickness;
-substance of lung completely hepatized; pericardium
-exceedingly thickened throughout, and universally
-adherent to the heart; heart itself soft and
-flabby; inner coat of aorta of reddish brown colour.]
-<em>Head.</em> Vessels of pia mater exceedingly turgid; effusion
-beneath it and the arachnoid; substance of
-brain very much softened. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of ilium vascular.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>III. <span class='sc'>Cases in Illustration of the Morbid Changes which take place within the Abdomen; or Abdominal Cases.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Hindmarsh</span>, æt. 26. Admitted on the
-10th day of fever: too indistinct to give any account
-of previous symptoms; at present abdomen tender;
-tongue loaded and dry; bowels purged; mind confused;
-very deaf; eyes red and suffused; pulse 108,
-firm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Abdomen less tender; five stools; insensibility
-increased; pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Abdomen a little tender; tongue quite dry;
-three stools in bed; noisy delirium; eyes wild and
-staring; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>13th. Tongue no longer to be protruded; no stool;
-scarcely at all sensible; eye-lids half closed; pulse
-96, firm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Abdominal and cerebral symptoms little
-changed; sensible of some pain in chest; cough;
-dyspnœa; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Abdomen still tender, and now become tympanitic;
-four stools in bed; perfectly insensible; constant
-muttering delirium; muscular tremor; large
-slough on sacrum; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of intestines in general
-vascular; mucous coat of small intestines highly vascular,
-and indicated approaching ulceration. <em>Head.</em>
-Not examined. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ of both sides adherent
-throughout; substance of both lungs healthy;
-slight effusion of serum into pericardium.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Isaac Grey</span>, æt. 30. Admitted on 22d day of
-fever; no account to be obtained of the previous
-symptoms; at present the abdomen in general is
-exceedingly tender on pressure, but especially the
-epigastrium; tongue brown, dry in centre, moist at
-edges; very tremulous; scarcely at all sensible, yet
-seems very apprehensive, almost constantly muttering
-and crying; face flushed; eyes wild; skin
-speckled with petechiæ; pulse 112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>23d. Abdomen still very tender; says he is without
-pain; four stools; delirium; muscular tremor;
-pulse 100, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. In the early part of last evening became
-violently delirious, and was extremely restless, constantly
-tossing his arms about, and throwing off the
-bed-clothes. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> All the coats of the stomach appeared
-much attenuated; mucous membrane of cardiac extremity
-so soft as to lacerate under examination;
-that of pyloric end exhibited numerous minute spots
-of a deep red colour, as if touched with a paint-brush;
-peritoneal coat of ilium of dark red colour; other
-viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Arachnoid thickened and
-opake; considerable effusion between it and the dura
-mater; substance of brain vascular; half an ounce
-of serum in each ventricle. <em>Thorax.</em> [Right pleural
-cavity contained one ounce and a half of bloody
-fluid, left eight ounces; substance of both lungs
-much condensed, and on their surface an appearance
-as if blood had exuded and coagulated. Pericardium
-contained two ounces of serum: heart
-healthy.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Hannah Swift</span>, æt. 20, servant. Admitted on the
-8th day of fever: abdomen, especially the epigastric
-region, tender; tongue clean, red, chapped; lips
-parched and cracked; some pain of head, back, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>limbs; mind rather confused; pulse 120, soft, and
-feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. The abdomen, which continues tender, has
-become swollen and tense; two stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Abdomen still very tender, swollen, and
-hard; tongue dry; two stools; vomiting of much
-green coloured fluid; pain of head gone, but sense
-of weight in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Tenderness of abdomen and vomiting continue;
-delirium; pulse 100, small and feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Tenderness of abdomen increased; no vomiting;
-tongue the same; pain of head returned;
-delirium; erysipelas of face; pulse 109, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Erysipelas extending to arm; tongue brown,
-dry, and cracked; much delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Cheeks livid; extremities cold and livid;
-pulse imperceptible. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium highly inflamed,
-and ulcers just forming; other viscera
-healthy. <em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular; arachnoid
-opake; substance of brain vascular; some fluid in
-ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi
-inflamed: tubes filled with mucus mixed with pus:
-[pleuræ in part adherent; some serous fluid in both
-cavities; substance of lungs natural.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Sexton</span>, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>3d day of scarlet fever; complaint came on with
-nausea, vomiting, and pain of the limbs; at present
-throat sore; deglutition easy; chest free from pain;
-no cough; abdomen tender, especially in the region
-of the epigastrium; tongue white in middle, red
-around margin; no stool for several days, because,
-as he supposes, he has vomited all his medicine;
-pain of head; vertigo; face flushed; frequent attacks
-of epistaxis during his vomiting, always relieving
-the head-ache; pulse 102; skin warm; no
-eruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4th. Pain of head gone; vertigo continues; eyes
-dull and heavy; face flushed; no vomiting; pulse
-96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. Sense of vertigo lessened; tongue brown
-and dry; four stools; pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Abdomen tender; tongue brown and dry;
-six stools; pain of head returned; much pain of
-back; no sleep; delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Less sensible: drowsy; delirium; three
-stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Insensibility increased; drowsiness approaching
-to coma; cheeks dusky; tongue with
-dark brown crust, dry; stools in bed; pulse 102,
-weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Abdomen tender; tongue not to be protruded;
-three stools all in bed; pulse 130, extremely
-weak; great prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>17th. Countenance sunk; respiration short and
-hurried; four stools; more prostrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. No change excepting that the prostration
-is still greater. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum
-extremely vascular, and contained several small
-ulcers, some of which were merely the abraded
-points of enlarged mucous glands; other glands in
-the neighbourhood much enlarged but not ulcerated;
-mesenteric glands very much enlarged; liver mottled;
-spleen larger than natural; pancreas indurated.
-<em>Head.</em> Arachnoid highly vascular; substance
-of brain natural; gelatinous effusion between the
-arachnoid and pia mater; half an ounce of serum
-at base. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Gannicott</span>, æt. 8. Duration and progress
-of disease unknown; abdomen tender; lips
-and tongue sordid; bowels purged; comatose; pupils
-dilated, but sensible to light; expression of eyes
-dull and vacant; pulse 125.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2d day after admission. Abdomen no longer tender;
-three stools; insensibility continues; frequent
-screaming; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3d. Perfectly insensible; all nourishment refused;
-stools and urine in bed; pulse 120. Died
-next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of ilium vascular; its
-mucous coat contained numerous ulcers which varied
-much in size; but all of them were raised above
-the surface and defined and regular in their margins;
-mucous glands throughout the entire intestine diseased,
-and many of them in different stages of disease;
-some were only enlarged; others enlarged
-and inflamed; others ulcerated at the apex; others
-ulcerated throughout; so that the largest ulcers appeared
-to be diseased glands in the last stage of ulceration;
-mesenteric glands prodigiously enlarged
-and hung over the abdominal vessels like a bunch
-of grapes of the largest size; rest of the intestines
-healthy excepting that they were much contracted
-and intussuscepted in several parts. <em>Head.</em> Dura
-mater adherent with preternatural firmness to the
-skull; vascular; pia mater highly vascular; substance
-of brain vascular and firm; slight effusion
-between the membranes. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pluræ of right
-side adherent;] substance of both lungs healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Henry Todd</span>, æt. 18. Duration and progress
-of disease unknown; abdomen tender on pressure;
-tongue coated with dirty yellow crust, red at tip;
-perfectly insensible; delirium; eyes, glistening;
-pulse 120, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2d day after admission. Little change excepting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>that the coma is more deep; abdomen less tender;
-two stools; pulse 124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3d. Coma undiminished; respiration short, hurried,
-rattling; stools in bed; pulse 132; great
-prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium inflamed
-throughout; lower part of it ulcerated; other viscera
-healthy. <em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of
-brain vascular. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of
-bronchi inflamed; bronchial tubes filled with mucus
-mixed with pus.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Frederick Kilham</span>, æt. 12. Admitted on the
-15th day of fever; abdomen tender; tongue not to
-be seen on account of its being covered with grumous
-blood from a large ulcer on the right side of
-the lower jaw; bowels bound; some pain of head;
-no uneasiness of chest; pulse 114; much emaciation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Lips and teeth sordid; mind confused;
-prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Violent delirium; pulse 92.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. The ulcer along the lower jaw in the inside
-of the mouth sloughing and extending; delirium;
-pulse 96, weak. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium vascular,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>and contained some ulcers; other viscera healthy.
-<em>Head.</em> More fluid than natural between the membranes.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two ulcers in the substance of the cheeks; that
-on left cheek extended from the angle of the mouth
-to the last molares, and contained a large black
-slough a quarter of an inch thick; this ulcer had
-extended to both gums, denuding the alveolar processes
-and loosening the teeth; that on the right
-cheek precisely similar, but less extensive.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Mount</span>, æt. 28, servant. Admitted on 15th
-day of disease; epigastrium tender; tongue brown
-and dry; bowels purged; slight pain of head; much
-vertigo; some cough; pulse 111, very intermittent
-in the right wrist; less so in the left.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Early this morning attacked with severe
-pain of the chest and dyspnœa, attended with much
-headache, for which she has been bled with the
-removal of the symptoms; pain now quite gone;
-tongue white; four stools; pulse 120, soft; blood
-buffy and cupped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Seized last evening with violent delirium
-which required restraint; occasional sleep with paroxysms
-of delirium; face flushed; abdomen not
-tender; pulse 120, firm. V. S. ad ℥xvi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. No pain of head; no delirium; slept better;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>tongue brown and dry; five stools; pulse 132,
-firm; blood sizy and deeply cupped. V. S. ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Complains of “stupid pain of head;” no
-vertigo; delirium, but less violent; scarcely any
-sleep; countenance still heavy, but rather more
-animated than yesterday; abdomen not tender;
-three stools in bed; pulse 132, firm but soft. C. C.
-ad ℥xij. nuchæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Pain gone; more insensible; countenance
-more dull and heavy; scarcely any sleep; almost
-constant moaning; tenderness of abdomen quite
-gone; tongue brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid;
-four stools in bed; pulse 144, weak. Vini Albi, ℥ii.
-Mist. Camph. Fort. 6ta. q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Slept rather better; less moaning; countenance
-scarcely as collapsed as yesterday; pulse 132, firmer;
-stools in bed. Augeat. Vinum ad ℥vi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Scarcely any sleep; almost constant moaning;
-face flushed; skin covered with cold perspiration;
-tongue scarcely to be protruded; deglutition
-difficult; subsultus tendinum; pulse 132.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No change except that the prostration
-continued to increase. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of jejunum, ilium
-and cæcum highly vascular; that of ilium contained
-three or four large oval ulcers; other viscera healthy.
-<em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain vascular;
-more serum than natural in the ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span><span class='sc'>Case LXIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Martin</span>, æt. 37, servant. Admitted on the
-8th day of fever; complaint came on with ordinary
-symptoms, attended with nausea and vomiting; at
-present abdomen not tender; tongue red, cracked
-and dry; bowels regular; no uneasiness of chest;
-slight cough with scanty expectoration; pulse 92,
-very intermittent, beating thrice regularly, then intermitting
-for a space equal to that of the three
-pulsations; pain of head gone; some vertigo remains.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Cough with difficult expectoration; respiration
-hurried; five stools; pulse 104, more regular.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Tongue more fissured; five stools; respiration
-less hurried and difficult; pulse 112. Two
-grains of tartar emetic in solution every two hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. No material change; pulse 116; has taken
-ten draughts with the tartar emetic, the last four
-vomited. The draughts to be continued every three
-hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Bronchial affection very much relieved;
-last four draughts not vomited. Pt. Haustus
-4ta. q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Respiration nearly natural; much less
-cough; pulse 96; tongue moist; four stools, last
-tinged with blood; abdomen not tender. Tartar
-emetic omitted on account of appearance of blood
-in the stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>17th. Bronchial affection appears to be quite gone;
-yet the tongue has again become dry; the pulse has
-risen to 112; there is scarcely any sleep; and slight
-muscular tremor is perceptible. Capiat. Vin. Alb.
-℥iv. Jus. Bov. i lb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Respiration again short and hurried; face
-quite dusky; tongue furred, dry and cracked; pulse
-110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Respiration laborious; cough returned with
-very copious muco-purulent expectoration, amounting
-to a pint in the twenty-four hours; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. No change; a grain of tartar emetic resumed
-every four hours. Wine and beef tea to be continued.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Neither vomiting nor purging; respiration
-more easy; cough diminished; tongue more moist;
-pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Respiration much more natural; cough
-greatly diminished; tongue clean and moist; pulse
-112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. From the period of last report she steadily
-and progressively improved and became convalescent;
-on the morning of this day while speaking to
-the nurse in her usual manner she suddenly fell back
-and expired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of intestines in
-general inflamed, especially that of ilium and cæcum,
-which contained some ulcers; peritoneal covering
-of posterior surface of spleen cartilaginous; other
-viscera healthy. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>bronchi highly inflamed; bronchial tubes full of
-purulent fluid; substance of lungs healthy. <em>Head.</em>
-Unfortunately, from some accident, the head was
-not examined.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Stephen Winter</span>, æt. 78. Duration and previous
-symptoms of disease unknown; at present abdomen
-tender; tongue brown and dry; stools natural; respiration
-wheezing with some cough; slight pain of
-head; mind composed; muscular tremor; pulse
-100, irregular.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2nd day after admission. Abdominal and thoracic
-symptoms the same; mind more confused; more
-muscular tremor; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. Respiration laborious; mind quite unconscious;
-constant incoherent talking; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Respiration hurried and laborious; pulse not
-to be counted; perfectly insensible. Died next
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> All the coats of the stomach appeared
-much attenuated; colon contracted into the form of
-a white cord; its coats in several places thickened,
-and its mucous membrane ulcerated; liver soft;
-[gall bladder much thickened, and its cavity so diminished,
-that it would scarcely admit the end of the
-finger, filled with two small gall-stones. About five
-inches of the recti muscles black and infiltrated with
-blood.] <em>Head.</em> Arachnoid thickened and opake;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>considerable effusion between it and the dura mater;
-substance of brain firm; ventricles distended with
-serum. <em>Thorax.</em> All the viscera healthy, [excepting
-that the coronary arteries were ossified.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Richard Harvey</span>, æt. 19, butcher. Admitted
-on the 8th day of disease; no account to be obtained
-of previous symptoms; at present abdomen
-tender; bowels purged; tongue brown and dry;
-lips and teeth sordid; pain of head gone; mind
-confused; delirium requiring restraint; subsultus;
-pulse 116, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Tenderness of abdomen continues; stools in
-bed; no sleep; much delirium; scarcely conscious
-when spoken to; pulse 108, more firm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Slept better; rather more sensible this
-morning; pulse again 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. All nourishment refused; stools and urine
-in bed; delirium; muscular tremor; pulse 128,
-weak; extremities cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Passed a better night; more sensible; pulse
-116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Extensive slough on sacrum; slough also on
-right elbow-joint, with erysipelas of surrounding integuments;
-pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Skin covered with petechiæ; slough extending;
-great prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>35th. No change, excepting that the sloughs were
-improved in appearance by the chlorate of lime, but
-the emaciation increased, the strength diminished,
-and all nourishment was refused excepting wine.
-Died following day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Both small and large intestines vascular
-throughout; mucous membrane of ilium contained
-several ulcers of considerable magnitude; gall-bladder
-contained an ounce and half of serous fluid;
-spleen indurated; other viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em>
-Substance of brain vascular; effusion between the
-membranes; more fluid than natural in the ventricles
-and at base. <em>Thorax.</em> Bronchi natural; substance
-of right lung gorged with blood and infiltrated
-with serum; that of left healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Gore</span>, æt. 24, servant. Admitted on
-22d day of fever: attack commenced with ordinary
-symptoms, accompanied with sense of nausea and
-some vomiting. At present abdomen not tender;
-tongue red, moist; lips and teeth sordid; bowels
-bound; pain of head gone; that of loins remains;
-deafness; no uneasiness of chest; much cough;
-skin dusky; pulse 120, weak and intermittent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Abdomen tender; four stools, dark; some
-pain of head; delirium; pulse the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Stools in bed; no sleep; delirium; respiration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>hurried and noisy; cheek dusky; extremities
-cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Deglutition difficult; pulse 128. Died
-next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium ulcerated;
-mesenteric gland excessively enlarged. <em>Head.</em> Membrane
-and substance of the brain natural; much
-effusion into the ventricles, and at the base of the
-skull. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera of the thorax in other respects
-perfectly healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Kensit</span>, æt. 20, servant. Admitted on the
-8th day of relapse: perfectly insensible; cannot be
-roused; no sensation on firmest pressure over the
-abdomen; pupils natural; tongue brown and dry;
-bowels loose; pulse 124.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Some uneasiness induced by firm pressure
-over the abdomen, which has become swollen, tense,
-and tympanitic; tongue not to be protruded; lips
-and teeth sordid; stools in bed; respiration slow
-and laborious; face cadaverous; extremities blue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. No change; has never spoken nor shown
-any degree of sensibility since admission.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of intestines in general
-vascular, that of small intestines particularly so;
-numerous patches of the mucous membrane of the
-ilium raised by matter deposited beneath it, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>extensively ulcerated; mesenteric glands much
-enlarged. <em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular.
-<em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ of both sides adherent; that of
-right side vascular; right cavity contained some serous
-fluid mixed with flakes of lymph.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Hassell</span>, æt. 40. Admitted on 8th day
-of fever; complaint commenced with usual symptoms,
-accompanied with much nausea. Abdomen
-not tender; tongue furred at root, red and clean at
-tip and around edges; bowels purged from the very
-commencement of the attack; no uneasiness of
-chest; cough; pain of head gone; that of back remains;
-vertigo; pulse 108, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No tenderness of abdomen on firmest pressure;
-tongue brown and dry; four stools; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Still no tenderness of abdomen; six stools;
-tongue quite dry; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Abdominal symptoms unchanged, excepting
-that the tongue has been exceeding dry; nearly
-insensible; delirium; almost constant moaning;
-pulse 120, very weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Abdominal and cerebral symptoms continue
-with little change; cough more frequent with muco-purulent
-expectoration; pulse 130, very weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Quite helpless; pulse scarcely to be distinguished;
-copious expectoration of purulent matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>31st. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Ilium contained several large ulcers,
-especially at its termination in cæcum; liver enlarged
-and softened; other viscera healthy: <em>Head.</em> Membranes
-vascular; arachnoid opake and thickened;
-substance of brain vascular; effusion between the
-membranes; more fluid than natural in ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Lungs gorged; mucous membrane of bronchi
-vascular; bronchial tubes full of mucus mixed
-with pus.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Edward Hammond</span>, æt. 24, servant. Admitted
-on the 22d day of fever: attack commenced with
-usual symptoms, accompanied with loss of appetite
-and sense of nausea; at present no tenderness of
-abdomen; tongue red, glazed and cracked; bowels
-purged; no uneasiness in chest; cough with mucous
-expectoration; pain of head entirely gone; sensation
-in general diminished; mind composed; little sleep;
-pulse 110, of good power but easily compressed;
-much prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. No pain acknowledged in any organ; little
-sensibility; no sleep; much restlessness; delirium;
-expression of countenance wild; pulse 108,
-firm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No pain; less sensible; tongue has become
-brown and dry; three stools; pulse 124, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>25th. More sleep; more tranquil this morning;
-tongue also is more moist; but the stools have been
-passed in bed, and the pulse is 124, weak and fluttering.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. More sleep; much more tranquil; more
-sensible; tongue more clean and moist; stools not
-passed in bed; the pulse notwithstanding is 136,
-and the pulsations are not distinct, but run into each
-other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Mind distinct; more sleep; tongue continues
-more moist, but no stools and no urine have
-been passed; the latter has been drawn off by the
-catheter; pain is now complained of in the right
-lumbar region; pulse 123. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium ulcerated;
-pancreas indurated, nearly of the consistence of
-cartilage, and of paler colour than natural; other
-viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Membranes natural; half
-an ounce of fluid at the base of the skull; substance
-of brain much softened. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case X.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Raven</span>, æt. 17. For symptoms see page
-140.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of small intestines
-in general inflamed; lower part of ilium extremely
-ulcerated. <em>Head.</em> Both dura and pia mater vascular;
-arachnoid opake; much serum effused between
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>the membranes. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pluræ of both sides
-adherent; left lung inflamed;] right lung healthy;
-other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary M’Gowan</span>, æt. 18, servant. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever; attack commenced with usual
-symptoms; at present, abdomen tender; tongue
-thickly coated and dry; lips and teeth sordid; much
-thirst; bowels purged; stools dark and offensive;
-pain of head which has been severe from the beginning
-continues, and is most severe over the fore-part;
-pulse 116, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Abdomen and tongue the same; pain of
-head unabated; eyes dull and heavy; right cheek
-deeply flushed; pulse 110. C. C. ad ℥x. temporibus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Abdominal symptoms unchanged; pain of
-head relieved, but not gone; pulse 132, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Tongue cleaning; quite moist; three stools;
-very slight pain of head; delirium; pulse 120,
-weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Pain of head quite gone; but there is no
-other change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. No sleep; great restlessness; noisy delirium;
-pulse 126, weak; swelling, redness and
-pain of left parotid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Tongue has become brown and dry; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>respiration difficult and rattling; face flushed; colour
-dusky; lies on back quite prostrate; pulse
-136, weak; inflammation of left parotid subsided,
-but it has now attacked the right.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Respiration hurried and noisy; skin in
-general dusky; cheeks extremely flushed and of
-deep purple colour; pulse scarcely to be counted;
-prostration extreme. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular;
-several ulcers in ilium and cæcum; appearance of
-ulcers peculiar, resembling those of phthisis rather
-than those of fever; vermiform process externally
-vascular; internally contained a crop of bodies like
-tubercles or enlarged glands and so numerous as to
-form a layer under the mucous membrane. <em>Head.</em>
-Membranes and substance of brain vascular; more
-fluid than natural in the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ
-of left side adherent;] other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Waller</span>, æt. 24, barge builder, admitted
-on 22d day of fever. No tenderness of abdomen on
-firmest pressure; tongue loaded and dry; thirst;
-bowels said to be regular; no uneasiness of chest;
-some cough; pain of head, which had been severe,
-entirely gone; mind dull and confused; no sleep;
-face flushed; prostration; great sense of oppression;
-pulse 114, tremulous and indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>23d. No change, excepting that the tongue has
-become brown and dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Pulse 120, weaker and more tremulous:
-other symptoms the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Tongue has become extremely dry; thirst
-urgent; three stools, mixed with blood; abdomen
-not tender; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. After yesterday’s visit, seized suddenly with
-violent delirium, urgent dyspnœa, and copious discharge
-of blood from the bowels; these symptoms
-continued until half past eleven, p. m. when he expired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of greater part of
-small intestines much inflamed; that in lower part of
-ilium quite black and nearly sphacelated, containing
-several spreading ulcers; colon throughout of darker
-colour than natural; mucous membrane of rectum
-highly vascular; spleen enlarged and softened; [bladder
-thickened and vascular.] <em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake
-and milky, covering a large quantity of gelatinous
-fluid. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ of left side generally adherent,
-of right less extensively adherent;] substance
-of both lungs healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Margaret Pennifold</span>, æt. 20, servant. Admitted
-on the 8th day of fever, which, besides the ordinary
-symptoms, commenced with pain and tenderness of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>bowels: at present, abdomen tender, especially the
-epigastrium; tongue very red, sore, and cracked;
-lips and teeth sordid; much thirst; some uneasiness
-of chest on full inspiration; slight cough; some pain
-of head, especially in occiput; scarcely any sleep;
-mind much confused during the night, scarcely
-distinct during the day; pulse 105.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No pain; tongue the same; three stools;
-slept some; mind more distinct; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. No pain; some cough; face flushed; colour
-of cheek dusky; voice hoarse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Little change; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Still says she is free from pain; no tenderness
-of abdomen on firm pressure; tongue very red
-and dry; four stools, mixed with a large proportion
-of blood; rather more cough; sleeps well; pulse
-116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Stools mixed with blood; pulse 117.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Three stools, dark and offensive but without
-blood; pulse 100; other symptoms the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Stools in bed; much prostration; pulse 120,
-very weak; respiration difficult.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Vomiting; pulse 120, weaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Vomiting continues; six stools; mind confused:
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Vomiting has ceased; deglutition difficult;
-face collapsed and cadaverous; five stools in bed;
-great prostration; pulse 117, extremely weak. Died
-in the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of pyloric end of
-stomach and of intestines in general vascular; that
-of jejunum and ilium very nearly black, presenting
-the appearance of extensive ecchymosis; ilium contained
-an infinity of elongated ulcers, many of which
-had penetrated the muscular coat; the cæcum and
-the lower part of the colon in a similar condition;
-there was no deposition of adventitious matter; but
-the ulcers were formed entirely in the coats of the
-intestine; other viscera healthy. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous
-membrane of both bronchi inflamed; bronchial
-tubes full of mucus; mucous membrane of larynx
-perfectly healthy, and without the least thickening
-in any part; [apex of left lung adherent to costal
-pleura; adhering part of the substance of the lung
-contained a mass of tubercles, some of which were
-passing into the state of suppuration; the remainder
-of the lung more vascular than natural, and some
-parts of it hepatized; right lung less consolidated,
-but still more firm and vascular than natural.] <em>Head.</em>
-Brain and its membranes tolerably healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Bryan</span>, æt. 18, labourer. Admitted on
-the 8th day of fever: at present pain of abdomen,
-much increased on pressure; tongue white and moist;
-much thirst; bowels loose; pain in right side on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>full inspiration; some cough; pain of head and back,
-which had been severe, gone; pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. A few hours after the visit, the pain in the
-side became exceedingly severe and was attended
-with frequent cough. On account of these symptoms
-he was bled to the extent of twenty-four ounces,
-with immediate and great relief: the pectoral symptoms
-have not returned; abdomen still tender; five
-stools, dark; no pain of head, but the skin over the
-scalp is hot, and there is some intolerance of light;
-pulse 112. Takes a grain and half of calomel, with
-two of Dover’s powder, every six hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of abdomen continues; vomiting; two
-stools; pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Gums already affected; throat sore; none
-of the symptoms relieved; tongue has become brown
-and dry; five stools; less sensible; much moaning;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Abdominal symptoms undiminished; five
-stools; more insensible; pulse 112.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Insensibility increased to coma; little change
-in the other symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Severe pain in the abdomen, particularly
-in the region of the cæcum; tongue brown and dry
-and quite hard; four stools; pulse 118.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Vomits food and medicine; coma continues;
-delirium; pulse 118.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No change, excepting that the vomiting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>ceased, after having taken a scruple of calomel at a
-single dose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Ilium and cæcum much and extensively
-ulcerated; other viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Membrane
-of brain natural; substance vascular; more
-serum than natural in the ventricles; some at the
-base; much fluid in the theca vertebralis. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Posterior part of left lung tuberculated, and infiltrated
-with purulent matter; upper part of right lung still
-more tuberculated and condensed.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Hammond</span>, æt. 50, married. Admitted
-on the 28th day of fever, which came on with the
-ordinary symptoms; at present she is without pain
-in any organ; face peculiarly pallid; some cough;
-pulse 120, and weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. No tenderness of abdomen; no pain;
-cough; delirium; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. Cough; delirium; pain, redness, swelling,
-and vesication of left leg; pulse 120, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Tongue scarcely to be protruded; very
-tremulous; three stools; cough; much delirium;
-pulse 120, very weak; the vena saphena major
-easily to be traced along its whole course, being
-hard, tense, and painful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>40th. Delirium; muscular tremor; much convulsive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>twitching of the face; pulse 130, extremely
-weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>40th. Delirium continues; muscular tremor increased;
-great prostration; leg more swollen, the
-tumefaction now extending up the thigh; the saphena
-traced to the middle of the thigh where it
-ends in a varix, which has for the last two days
-greatly enlarged; lymphatics along the course of
-the vein swollen; integuments of a dusky red colour;
-much thickening and hardening of the cellular
-tissue over the femoral vessels; says she has no pain
-in the leg; mind dull and confused, yet answers
-coherently when spoken to.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>43d. Delirium continues; prostration increases;
-lips and teeth covered with dark-coloured sordes;
-affected leg darker in colour, and colder to the
-touch; pulse 120; no tenderness of the abdomen,
-nor has it been tender through the whole course of
-the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium, cæcum,
-and commencement of colon extensively ulcerated;
-viscera of head and thorax healthy; slight swelling
-of the whole left extremity; ankle œdematous; the
-cellular tissue along the entire course of the saphena
-major and femoral vein exceedingly condensed and
-hard; on opening the saphena vein there was found
-a layer of coagulable lymph lining its whole internal
-surface, which was universally vascular and rough;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>in many places, especially about the knee, the coats
-of the vein were very much thickened, so that the
-calibre of the vessel was diminished at least one-half
-its size; the lower part of the femoral vein was
-in a similar state, but its superior portion and the
-external iliac were little, if at all affected.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Ford</span>, æt. 30, married. Admitted on the
-8th day of fever, which in addition to the ordinary
-symptoms, was attended at the commencement with
-pain in the abdomen, which continued for some time,
-but which is now entirely gone: states that the
-bowels have been very loose for upwards of a month
-past; tongue loaded and red; thirst; no uneasiness
-of chest; some cough; pain of head, which was
-severe in the commencement, quite gone; pulse 90;
-great prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No pain in any organ; tongue unchanged;
-two stools, light and offensive; delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Four stools in bed; delirium; lies on back
-quite prostrate; pulse 105, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Tongue not to be protruded; perfectly
-insensible; pulse 125.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of small intestines
-vascular; mucous membrane of ileum and cæcum
-contained several large ulcers; in other places the
-membrane was entire, but irregularly raised by submucous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>deposit so as to present the appearance of
-large ulcers. <em>Head.</em> Arachnoid highly vascular;
-effusion beneath all the membranes; more fluid than
-natural in the lateral ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Eleanor Norris</span>, æt. 12. Was seized eight days
-ago with sudden loss of strength, great confusion
-of mind, and severe pain in the head and limbs;
-the pain of the head continues, shooting down along
-the spinal cord to the loins; no tenderness of abdomen;
-tongue white; bowels purged; pulse 129,
-of good power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Tongue has become brown and dry; five
-stools; scarcely any pain of head; delirium;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Abdomen now tender on pressure; tongue
-continues brown and dry; four stools; pain of back
-and loins returned; delirium; pulse 130.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Pain of abdomen continues; tongue still
-browner and more dry; four stools; delirium;
-pulse 128.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Deglutition difficult; pulse 120; great
-prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Stools in bed; delirium and prostration
-increasing; pulse scarcely to be counted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Great restlessness; much delirium; countenance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>wild and anxious; pulse exceedingly quick
-and weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Respiration hurried and laborious; pulse
-not to be counted; insensible; stools in bed. Died
-in the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of jejunum and ilium
-extremely ulcerated; omentum a mere web; all the
-other viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance
-of brain apparently natural. <em>Thorax.</em> [Costal
-pleura of left side inflamed and thickened; pulmonary
-pleura covered with pus; pleural sac contained
-two ounces and a half of serum mixed with pus;
-substance of left lung nearly healthy; right side
-healthy; two ounces of serum in pericardium.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Maria Moore</span>, æt. 22, servant. Admitted on
-the 22nd day of scarlet fever: throat well; deglutition
-easy; no pain of chest; none of abdomen;
-tongue of dark red colour; bowels purged; some
-pain of head, especially at occiput; pulse 98.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Pain of head continues; noisy delirium;
-pulse 108; abdominal symptoms the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Amended the day following last report, and
-continued to improve until this morning, when she
-was again attacked with soreness of throat and
-difficult deglutition; tongue loaded; three stools;
-pulse 98.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>31st. Throat equally painful; deglutition equally
-difficult; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32nd. After the application of leeches to the throat
-the pain became easier and the deglutition less difficult;
-internal fauces very red; uvula much swollen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33d. Throat again better; deglutition easy; pulse
-120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Throat well, but the voice is hoarse; four
-stools, mixed with blood; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. Respiration hurried; tongue brown, dry,
-and cracked; lips and teeth sordid; four stools,
-mixed with lumps of coagulated blood, partly passed
-in bed. Died in evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum
-in part highly vascular and much thickened, in part
-ulcerated; pancreas indurated; other viscera healthy.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Epiglottis vascular and thickened; mucous
-membrane of arytænoid cartilages ulcerated; mucous
-membrane of trachea highly vascular; [pleuræ of
-both sides adherent; right lung filled with tubercles;
-bronchial glands enlarged.] <em>Head.</em> Not examined.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charles Crossley</span>, æt. 21. Admitted on the 15th
-day of fever, which came on with the ordinary symptoms:
-at present, tenderness of the epigastrium, and
-over the whole abdomen; tongue brown, cracked
-and tremulous; bowels purged; scarcely any pain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>of head; mind indistinct; expression of eyes wild;
-slight cough; pulse 40, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. After six leeches had been applied to the
-epigastrium the tenderness was much diminished:
-says he has now no pain any where; two stools;
-expression of countenance the same; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Abdomen has become swollen and hard,
-not tender on firm pressure; five stools; tongue unchanged;
-respiration hurried and noisy; no sleep;
-delirium; face pallid; eyes wild and rolling; pulse
-100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Abdomen hard, especially in hepatic region;
-slightly tender; vomiting; two stools, mixed with
-blood; extremities cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Abdomen hard, not tender; two copious
-stools, consisting almost entirely of blood; tongue
-the same; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. One stool without any feculent matter, consisting
-entirely of blood; delirium; muscular tremor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. No stool for two days; having taken two
-drachms of castor oil, he had two copious evacuations
-of very dark colour, mixed with blood; abdomen
-more soft, not tender; tongue cracked in the centre,
-more clean and moist at edges; cough; pulse 108,
-soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. From the morning of last report the hæmorrhage
-disappeared, sleep and sensibility returned,
-the tongue became more clean and moist, the strength
-improved, the appetite became keen: he was put
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>upon low diet, and was allowed three ounces of meat
-daily and four ounces of wine: he appeared to be
-so much recovered, that it was thought he could
-bear this liberal allowance; but, immediately on
-this change of diet, the skin became hot, the cough
-returned, he had six stools without medicine, the
-delirium re-appeared at night, and the pulse rose to
-100; there was not the slightest pain, either of the
-head or of the abdomen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. Tongue again brown and dry; three stools;
-no sleep; much restlessness; delirium; pulse 108,
-firm; skin extremely hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>43d. Stools and urine in bed; delirium; muscular
-tremor; subsultus tendinum; pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>46th. Sloughs have formed on both hips and an
-abscess in the right groin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>49th. Abdomen has become swollen, tense, and
-tympanitic; no stool; tongue the same; vomits
-every thing; a large black eschar on sacrum; much
-discharge from the ulcer in the groin; cough frequent;
-pulse 120, feeble; extreme prostration. Died
-in the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Lower portion of ilium and commencement
-of cæcum contained several ulcers, some of
-which were of large size; [peritoneal cavity contained
-two pints of serum, mixed with pus and flakes
-of lymph; intestines, liver, and abdominal parietes
-lined throughout with a coat of lymph, easily removeable
-with the scalpel; intestines adherent to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>each other and to the parietes of the abdomen.]
-<em>Head.</em> Arachnoid opake and of milky colour; pia
-mater highly vascular; much effusion beneath it
-and the arachnoid; several drachms of serum in the
-ventricles, and a large quantity at the base of the
-skull; substance of the brain highly vascular and
-much softened. <em>Thorax.</em> [In each cavity of pleura
-about six ounces of fluid; posterior part of lungs
-condensed; a few recent adhesions between the
-pleuræ of the right side;] other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Baker</span>, æt, 23, servant. Admitted on the
-22d day of fever, which, in addition to the ordinary
-symptoms, came on with nausea, anorexia and
-purging; at present complains of a sense of heat
-in the abdomen without pain; but there is uneasiness
-when firmly pressed; tongue white in
-middle, red at edges, moist; thirst; bowels stated
-to be regular; pulse 104; no pain of chest or
-head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Abdominal symptoms the same; no sleep;
-some pain of head; pulse 120, weak; much sense
-of weakness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Tongue has become dry; three stools;
-pain of head gone; some vertigo; delirium; expression
-of countenance anxious and sunk; pulse
-120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>25th. Tongue more moist; three stools; slept
-better; expression of countenance more natural;
-but the pulse has risen to 130 and is extremely
-weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. More pain of abdomen on pressure; more
-prostration; delirium continues; pulse 130, extremely
-weak. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of small intestines
-highly vascular; mucous membrane of lower part
-of ilium and cæcum full of ulcers, some of which
-had penetrated through the muscular to the peritoneal
-coat; this latter membrane was very dark and
-approaching to gangrene; peritoneal cavity contained
-a considerable quantity of bloody serum;
-omentum dark and inflamed; cardiac extremity of
-the stomach vascular; other viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em>
-Dura mater adherent with more firmness than natural
-to the skull; other membranes healthy; more
-fluid than natural in the ventricles; substance of
-brain and cerebellum vascular. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous
-membrane of both bronchi highly inflamed; [left
-thoracic cavity obliterated by old adhesions; left
-lung completely hepatized; right lung loaded with
-blood and serum; right cavity contained a considerable
-quantity of blood and serum; heart flaccid;
-both auricular valves very dark.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span><span class='sc'>Case XI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George English</span>, æt. 25. For symptoms see
-page 141.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Numerous ragged ulcers in the cæcum,
-which, having destroyed the mucous, had laid the
-muscular coat quite bare; both the muscular and the
-peritoneal coats were blackened and in the first stage
-of sphacelation; an aperture of about the size of a
-sixpence had been formed in them through which a
-considerable quantity of fæces had escaped into the
-peritoneal cavity; in different portions of the mucous
-membrane of the other intestines there were slight
-patches of inflammation; omentum much thickened,
-adhering anteriorly to the abdominal peritoneum and
-posteriorly to the intestines; the latter were so agglutinated
-together, that it was impossible to trace their
-convolutions; the peritoneal sac contained four pints
-and a half of serum mixed with pus; the peritoneal
-coat of the liver adhered to the diaphragm all around,
-except at one point where a sac was formed which
-was filled with serum; substance of liver healthy;
-other viscera healthy. <em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular;
-pia mater highly vascular; arachnoid healthy; more
-fluid than natural between the membranes and in the
-ventricles; substance of the brain pretty healthy.
-<em>Thorax.</em> [Right pleura vascular; superior and middle
-lobes of right lung contained numerous miliary tubercles;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>lower lobe, one or two in the first stage of suppuration;
-the under surface of this lobe adhered to the
-diaphragm with great firmness, shewing that the
-disease of the abdomen had extended to the thorax;
-pleuræ of left side contained two ounces of bloody
-serum; substance of left lung healthy; pericardium
-contained three ounces and a half of serum; left ventricle
-of heart full three-fourths of an inch thick.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Baker</span>, æt. 26. Admitted on 15th
-day of fever: no account to be obtained of previous
-symptoms: too insensible to give any statement that
-can be depended on of his present feelings; points
-to lower part of chest and epigastrium as the chief
-seat of pain; abdomen tender on pressure; some
-cough; voice hoarse, husky, and feeble; no pain of
-head; pupils contracted; pulse 100, sharp.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Six stools, two passed in bed; hiccup;
-frequent cough; respiration laborious; pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. No perceptible change until to-day, when
-the stools, six in number, became mixed with blood;
-the expectoration is also tinged with blood; respiration
-more hurried and difficult; hiccup continues;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Five stools in bed; hiccup gone; no sleep;
-great restlessness; pulse the same. Died next
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span><em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneal coat of intestines vascular;
-mucous membrane of small intestines, and especially
-of ilium, inflamed and ulcerated; near the caput coli
-a large ulcer had perforated the peritoneal coat, and
-through the opening, which was an inch and a half
-in diameter, a quantity of fæculent matter had escaped
-into the cavity of the peritoneum; spleen very
-much softened, easily breaking down under the
-finger. <em>Head.</em> Pia mater highly vascular; substance
-of brain slightly vascular; a small quantity
-of bloody serum effused into the lateral ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi of dark
-red colour; tubes contained much frothy mucus;
-substance of both lungs gorged; [pleuræ of left side
-contained a pint and half of fluid; pericardium adherent
-to the pleura costalis; heart flaccid and pale.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thomas Kennie</span>, æt. 30, labourer. Admitted on
-10th day of fever: attack commenced, besides the
-ordinary symptoms, with tenderness of abdomen:
-at present the abdomen, which is generally tender,
-is exceedingly so over the right iliac region; bowels
-stated to be regular; tongue foul, red and dry;
-thirst; some pain of chest on full inspiration and
-coughing; cough troublesome; respiration hurried;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>little sleep; mind confused; face flushed; pulse
-120, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Tenderness of abdomen continues; five
-stools; respiration hurried, with occasional cough
-and viscid expectoration; slight pain of head; mind
-distinct; eyes suffused; skin cool, covered with petechiæ.
-Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of small intestines
-very vascular, that of ilium intensely so; contained
-several oval and deep ulcers, one of which had perforated
-the peritoneum, the aperture of which was
-sufficiently large to allow the apex of the ring finger
-to pass through it; the peritoneal cavity contained
-about a pint of pus; the intestines were all glued
-together; the surface of the liver was very dark and
-much inflamed. <em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular;
-substance rather vascular; more fluid than
-natural in the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>David Piggott</span>, æt. 19, furrier. Admitted on
-the 9th day of fever: at present, severe pain in the
-right hypochondrium, stretching towards the umbilicus,
-increased on pressure; tongue brown and dry;
-no stool; slight cough; some pain of head; eyes
-suffused; pulse 108, firm. V.S. ad ℥x.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Pain of right hypochondrium gone; tongue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>the same; no pain of head; very deaf; slept tolerably;
-pulse 100, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. No pain; tongue unchanged; one copious
-stool, consisting chiefly of blood; slept well; mind
-confused; countenance rather improved; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. No pain; two stools, with less admixture
-of blood; mind distinct; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Eight stools, scanty, without blood; tongue
-dry and furred; slept ill; great prostration; pulse
-90. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of small intestines
-in general vascular, especially that of the ilium and
-commencement of the colon, in both of which were
-numerous ulcerations; one in the former had perforated
-the bowel, forming a hole of the size of a
-sixpence; about a quart of sero-purulent fluid in the
-peritoneal cavity; the intestines were glued together,
-and their peritoneal coat generally inflamed. <em>Head.</em>
-Membranes of brain vascular; substance natural.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case LXXXIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Spoull</span>, æt. 23, baker. Admitted on
-the 22d day of fever: no pain or tenderness of abdomen;
-tongue red and dry; bowels loose; no pain
-of chest; some cough; no pain of head; some of
-limbs and back; mind distinct; little sleep; very
-deaf; pulse 102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>25th. Tongue much furred and fissured; four
-stools; cough the same; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Four stools, mixed with blood; respiration
-hurried.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Tongue more clean, slightly aphthous;
-three stools without blood; respiration less hurried;
-pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Severe pain of abdomen, from which he
-had hitherto been quite free, came on during the
-night; at present it continues very severe, is much
-increased on pressure; abdomen swollen and tense;
-four stools without blood; pulse 112, sharp.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Pain of abdomen not so severe, but still excited
-by full pressure; vomited a large quantity of
-bilious fluid; two stools, dark and slimy; respiration
-hurried; countenance sharp and anxious; pulse
-124, small. Died two hours after visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Abdomen.</em> The mucous membrane, both of the
-small and large intestines, in general highly inflamed;
-the lower third of the ilium, the cæcum and
-the colon were full of ulcers, one of which, in the
-ilium, had perforated through all the coats of the
-intestine, and formed, near the ileo-cæcal valve, a
-large circular opening, of the size of a crown piece,
-through which the contents of the bowel had escaped
-into the cavity of the peritoneum; this cavity
-contained a large quantity of sero-purulent fluid,
-mixed with feculent matter; the convolutions of the
-intestines were glued together and their peritoneal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>coat every where highly inflamed; the spleen, liver,
-and pancreas were sound. <em>Head.</em> The brain and its
-membranes were healthy. <em>Thorax.</em> Viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c007'>The attentive student of the important and instructive
-cases included under this section will have
-perceived that, in the order in which they stand,
-they exhibit a complete series of changes in the intestines
-from the slightest vascularity to the most
-intense inflammation; and from mere elevation and
-inequality of the mucous membrane, in consequence
-of adventitious deposit beneath it, or from the simple
-and most superficial abrasion of its surface, to
-the most extensive and deep ulceration, on to the
-ultimate perforation of all the coats of the bowel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When a number of cases are thus brought together
-and placed in juxta position it is impossible not
-to perceive, and indeed not to be forcibly struck
-with the uniformity with which a certain series of
-changes takes place. We do not see the same number
-of morbid appearances in every case, but we see
-in every case precisely the same morbid changes as
-far as they go, the difference being merely a difference
-in degree; so that the description of such a number
-of cases as has now been detailed would be tedious
-on account of its sameness, were it not that the fact
-they establish is one which it is of paramount importance
-to the practitioner that he should know;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>and that there appears to be no other means by which
-it can be duly impressed upon the mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In like manner the uniformity of the symptoms
-which denote that these morbid changes are going
-on, is as remarkable as the regularity with which the
-changes themselves occur. Their great peculiarity,
-which it is as important to know as it is to understand
-their indication itself, is <em>their want of prominence</em>.
-They are always to be discerned, or with extremely
-rare exceptions; but they seldom or never force
-themselves upon the notice of the careless or extort
-the attention of the unobserving: still they are not
-the less constant in their occurrence because they
-come without noise, nor is the indication they give
-of their presence less significant because it is unobtrusive.
-They do not announce their presence by
-the excitement of violent paroxysms or by inducing
-intense pain, because the state of the system in
-which they take place is incompatible with acute
-sensation of any kind. The prominent symptoms
-during life are almost always in the head; the great
-changes of structure found after death are always in
-the intestines; and this, which the pathologist learns
-from observation, the physiologist might have predicted
-from his knowledge of function. The affection
-of the intestines in fever is never a simple or
-single affection: it never occurs alone, but always
-in combination with an affection of the brain; and
-the cerebral affection is always antecedent, the intestinal,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>invariably subsequent; while the certain consequence
-of the cerebral affection is a diminution,
-and ultimately an abolition of sensation. It is therefore
-quite impossible, from the very nature of the
-derangement that takes place in the animal economy,
-that the intestinal affection should ever be
-attended with violent pain. Occasionally, indeed,
-when the abdominal affection is very much in excess,
-and the cerebral affection is unusually slight, severe
-pain may be felt; but that is rare, and the total
-absence of pain, and even the total absence of tenderness
-on pressure, is more common. It is not
-then to the patient’s own complaint of pain in the
-abdomen that the practitioner must trust for the
-discovery of abdominal affection in fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But though the patient seldom complain of pain
-in the abdomen, yet in the great majority of cases
-the abdomen is tender on pressure, and it is so in all,
-excepting when the cerebral affection is peculiarly
-severe or is very far advanced. These exceptions
-render this symptom not absolutely constant, although
-at the bed-side of the sick the practitioner
-will find it very rarely absent. The symptom which
-is still more constant, as the reader must have observed
-in the perusal of the preceding cases, and
-which therefore affords a very certain guide to the
-detection of the disease, is a loose state of the bowels.
-Whenever both concur there can be no doubt of the
-diseased process which is going on within the intestine:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>but as the tenderness may be obscured or lost
-from the intensity or advancement of the cerebral
-affection, so it is very remarkable that, in the progress
-of the intestinal disease, the bowels sometimes
-become regular and even constipated. The physician
-who sees the patient for the first time in this
-stage of the disease, can ascertain the condition of
-the mucous membrane of the intestines only by obtaining
-an accurate account of the preceding symptoms.
-And when it is possible to procure a distinct
-and complete history of the disease from its commencement,
-it is commonly found that nausea and
-vomiting were among the early symptoms, while, as
-we have seen, the latter is not unusually present in
-the more advanced stages. The result of the whole
-is that, excepting when the cerebral affection is most
-intense and overwhelming, the existence of inflammation
-and ulceration in the mucous membrane of
-the intestines in fever are denoted by signs which
-are quite constant, and in the fidelity of the indication
-of which we may repose implicit confidence.
-The importance of the diagnosis may perhaps plead
-our excuse for repeating them again. They are
-tenderness of the abdomen on pressure; loose stools;
-redness of the tongue, especially at the tip and edges,
-in general preceded by nausea and vomiting, and in
-the most exquisitely marked cases, and in their advanced
-stage, followed by a mixture of blood in the
-stools and a swollen, hard and tympanitic state of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>the abdomen. All these symptoms by no means
-always concur in the same case: but the presence
-of one or two of them will be sufficient to guide the
-attentive observer to the knowledge of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have seen that the appearance of blood in the
-stools is not very frequent: that the most extensive
-ulceration may and commonly does exist without it;
-still when blood does appear it is generally found in
-combination with an ulceration which is not only
-extensive, but which has penetrated deep into the
-coats of the intestine. But although this be the
-general fact, yet it must be borne in mind that blood
-may be poured out in large quantities without the
-existence of a single ulcer. In this case the blood
-issues from the capillary vessels of the mucous membrane
-of the intestine, and when examined after
-death this membrane is found to be of a dark red
-colour, and presents the appearance of ecchymosis.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>IV. <span class='sc'>Cases in Illustration of the Morbid Changes which take place within the Head, Thorax, and Abdomen, in the same Individual; or Mixed Cases.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Margaret Eades</span>, æt. 18, dress-maker. Admitted
-on the 22d day of fever, which attacked with
-the ordinary symptoms: at present the mind is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>dull; the sensibility diminished; there is scarcely
-any sleep; the eyes injected and suffused; the skin
-hot; the tongue brown and dry; the pulse 120, but
-there is no pain in any organ.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Insensibility increased to coma; delirium;
-tongue dry and quite black; gums bleed on the
-slightest touch; lips and teeth sordid; four stools,
-dark and offensive; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Coma undiminished; almost constant moaning;
-scarcely any sleep; three stools of same character;
-some cough; pulse 124, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31st. All the symptoms aggravated; extreme
-prostration; countenance sunk; cough, without expectoration;
-respiration with mucous rattle; stools
-in bed: pulse 140, extremely feeble. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater vascular; arachnoid thickened
-and opake; substance of brain highly vascular, in
-every point thickly studded with red points; effusion
-between the membranes and into the ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi inflamed;
-substance of lungs partly condensed and partly tuberculated.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium
-inflamed and ulcerated; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Middleton</span>, æt. 18, shoemaker. Admitted
-on the 5th day of scarlet fever, which commenced,
-in addition to the ordinary symptoms, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>exceedingly severe head-ache, which continues undiminished;
-scarcely any sleep; eyes red and ferrety;
-tongue white; bowels loose; pulse 120; eruption
-apparent only on the chest; no soreness of throat
-nor difficulty of deglutition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Pain of head nearly gone; more insensible;
-pulse 126; eruption fading.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Insensibility increased to coma; adnatæ glistening;
-tongue brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid;
-four stools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Coma deeper; great restlessness; no sleep;
-stools in bed; pulse 120, weaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Increasing restlessness; tongue not to be
-protruded; deglutition difficult; stools and urine in
-bed; pulse 150, indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura and pia mater highly vascular; arachnoid
-thickened and opake; substance of brain highly
-vascular; effusion between the membranes, into the
-ventricles, and at the base. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of bronchi vascular; substance of both lungs
-inflamed. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium
-ulcerated; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Sharp</span>, æt. 18. Admitted on the 22d day
-of fever: the pain of the head, which had been severe
-from the commencement, continues; complains
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>also of much pain in back and limbs; abdomen
-tender; tongue fiery red; bowels purged; pulse
-100, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. No change, excepting that the tongue has
-become brown and dry in the middle, but still remains
-exceedingly red at the edges; four stools;
-pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. Pain of head quite gone; that of abdomen,
-which had increased, has now also disappeared; no
-sleep; great restlessness; delirium; eyes dull and
-heavy; face flushed; tongue red and dry; four
-stools; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>40th. Cerebral symptoms unchanged; no cough
-or uneasiness of chest; skin dusky, that of the
-cheek of a deep purple colour; tongue loaded and
-dry; lips and teeth sordid; stools in bed; pulse
-quick and very feeble; great prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>48th. Coma; discharge from both ears; vomiting;
-pulse 120, very weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>50th. Erysipelas of cheek, extending to scalp;
-much discharge from ears; tenderness of abdomen
-again returned; tongue again of fiery red colour;
-pulse extremely quick and feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>70th. During the whole of the period since last
-report there has been occasional vomiting; the erysipelas
-gradually disappeared; the sensibility returned;
-the tongue became clean and moist; the
-stools improved, and there was even some return of
-appetite: on the other hand, there came on extensive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>excoriation, and at last sloughing of back and hips;
-the emaciation became very great, the prostration
-extreme, and at length, on the 86th day from the
-commencement of the fever, she sunk exhausted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain highly vascular; substance
-natural; upwards of eight ounces of serum in
-the different cavities. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of trachea slightly reddened; bronchi vascular; lungs
-dark and much gorged with blood. <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of intestines slightly vascular, [but
-the peritoneal coat highly inflamed, and contained
-on its surface a coating of coagulable lymph, which
-glued the convolutions of the intestines to each other
-and to the omentum.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charles England</span>, æt. 22, servant. Admitted
-on the 11th day of fever: previous symptoms unknown.
-At present perfectly insensible; pupils
-contracted, insensible to light; face and lips of deep
-purple colour; extremities cold; full pressure induces
-some uneasiness in abdomen; body of tongue
-loaded and dry, edges red; deglutition difficult;
-pulse 100, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Some sleep through the night; more sensible
-to-day; no stool since admission; pulse 114.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Still more sensible; complains of giddiness;
-five stools; tongue beginning to clean.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>20th. Had been gradually improving since last
-report, and the pulse had fallen to 80; during last
-night he became extremely restless, with much delirium;
-mind now confused; face of a purple colour;
-tongue red and glossy; three stools; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Delirium; almost constant moaning; cheeks
-of purple colour; tongue brown and glossy; pulse
-130, but so indistinct that it can scarcely be counted;
-lies extremely prostrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Erysipelas of face, extending down the neck;
-some cough; abdomen again tender; three copious
-dark-coloured stools; pulse 130. Died following
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Scalp loaded with an unusual quantity of
-blood; the vessels of all the membranes of the brain
-exceedingly turgid; a large coagulum of blood between
-the dura mater and the arachnoid; substance
-of the brain exceedingly soft; an ounce and a half
-of bloody fluid at the base of the skull. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Mucous membrane of bronchi extremely vascular;
-substance of lungs somewhat condensed and very
-much gorged; [two ounces of serum in each pleural
-cavity.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium
-much thickened, softened, and injected, exhibiting
-a few points of incipient ulceration; [mucous membrane
-of bladder thickened and inflamed; peritoneum
-lining the pelvis vascular;] other viscera
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span><span class='sc'>Case XCIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>James Robinson</span>, æt. 25. Admitted on the 8th
-day of relapse: at present mind confused; acknowledges
-no pain in head, chest, or abdomen; tongue
-not much loaded, moist; thirst; pulse 60, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. No pain; some sleep; occasional delirium;
-two stools; pulse 78.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Mind dull and heavy; returns no answer
-when spoken to; pulse the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Little change until to-day; the entire body
-is now covered with an efflorescence, consisting of
-minute papulæ, of a vivid red colour; mind dull and
-confused; pulse 120. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> An old fracture over that part of the coronal
-suture which joins the parietal bone, seems
-to have left the brain unaffected; inner surface of
-skull perfectly smooth; both membranes and substance
-of the brain highly inflamed; pituitary gland
-suppurated; cerebellum natural. <em>Thorax.</em> [Left lung
-contained many tubercles in the stage of suppuration;
-the apex, which was full of tubercles, adhered
-to costal pleura; right side healthy; pericardium
-contained two ounces of bloody serum; serous
-lining of auricles and ventricles of heart highly
-vascular and of dark red colour; valves of aorta and
-of auricles extremely dark;] no account recorded
-of the state of the mucous membrane of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>bronchi. <em>Abdomen.</em> Omentum vascular; intestines
-throughout of dark red colour; all their coats every
-where exceedingly softened, the peritoneal peeling
-off with ease from the muscular; the mucous inflamed,
-not ulcerated; the mucous membrane of
-the stomach vascular; a considerable portion of the
-jejunum intussuscepted; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Smith</span>, æt. 23, married. Admitted on the
-15th day of fever; pain of head gone; some vertigo
-remains; no uneasiness of chest; some cough which
-excites pain in the abdomen; the latter not very
-tender even on full pressure; tongue loaded in middle
-with white fur, red at edges; no stool for the
-last twenty-four hours; pulse 120, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Eruption has appeared over almost the entire
-skin, consisting of minute papillæ of a dusky
-red colour; two stools; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Erysipelas extending over both shoulders;
-severe pains in the limbs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Cough troublesome with copious viscid expectoration;
-erysipelas extending from the shoulders
-to the chest; tongue dry: delirium; pulse 110,
-weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Cough diminished; respiration hurried;
-stools in bed; pulse 120, feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>27th. Delirium continues; respiration more hurried;
-pulse extremely feeble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Erysipelas still extending; powers sinking;
-respiration laborious; stools and urine in bed. Died
-in evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Arachnoid vascular; substance of brain
-vascular; sheath covering the lumbar portion of the
-spinal cord highly vascular; cord itself natural;
-effusion into the lateral ventricles; plexus choroides
-and velum interpositum highly vascular; pituitary
-gland gritty. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi
-inflamed; substance of left lung intensely inflamed,
-being nearly as red as muscle and its lobes
-adherent; [corresponding side of pericardium highly
-vascular; right lung slightly inflamed; right pleuræ
-not adherent; left adherent throughout.] <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Patches of vascularity in mucous membrane of intestines
-and over their peritoneal coat; pyloric end
-of stomach vascular; spleen soft; other viscera
-healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Joseph Baird</span>, æt. 12. Admitted on the 22d
-day of fever; slight pain of head; severe pain across
-the loins; no uneasiness in chest; no cough; respirations
-44; abdomen tender; tongue red, parched;
-bowels purged; pulse 134.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>33d. Abdomen tender, tumid, tense; four stools;
-tongue loaded with white fur; mind distinct;
-scarcely any sleep; extremely fretful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>34th. No delirium; stools in bed; pulse 114.
-Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of the brain
-vascular; at the surface of the right posterior lobe,
-an abscess of considerable size, the floor of which
-was formed by the pia mater; gelatinous effusion
-between the arachnoid and the pia mater. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular; substance
-of lungs healthy; [left cavity of pleuræ contained
-eight ounces of bloody serum; right six.] <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Peritoneal and mucous coats of jejunum and
-ileum vascular; mesenteric glands greatly enlarged;
-several of them suppurated; [large quantity of serum
-mixed with pus in the peritoneal cavity; omentum
-much thickened; adhered to the superior portion
-of the spleen; to the edge of the left lobe of the
-liver, and to the portion of the diaphragm immediately
-above the spleen; in this manner it formed
-the external boundary of an abscess of considerable
-size in the substance of the spleen; portions of the
-sac itself ulcerated; the rest of the spleen nodulated;
-these nodules when cut into were found to consist
-chiefly of puriform matter contained in cells; thoracic
-duct enlarged; receptaculum chyli exceedingly
-enlarged and ulcerated.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span><span class='sc'>Case XCVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Catherine French</span>, æt. 24. Admitted on the
-9th day of scarlet fever. Complaint came on with
-sudden loss of strength, shivering and violent pain
-of head and chest: at present throat sore; deglutition
-difficult; some pain of chest; great tenderness
-of abdomen; nausea and vomiting; tongue dry,
-brown and cracked; slight pain of head; eyes dull,
-heavy and suffused; pulse 104, pretty strong; no
-eruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. The pain of throat, the difficult deglutition,
-the tenderness of the abdomen had disappeared;
-the pulse had fallen to 90, and she appeared to be
-gradually recovering until this day, when, preceded
-by a slight return of sore throat, erysipelas appeared
-on the face; no pain of head; tongue again brown
-and dry; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. No sleep; delirium; erysipelas extending;
-pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>38th. Erysipelas has disappeared, but other symptoms
-are aggravated; extreme restlessness; much
-delirium; frequent cough, with scanty expectoration;
-tongue brown, dry and cracked; pulse 86.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>39th. Respiration difficult; delirium; vomiting;
-pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>41st. Respiration rattling; delirium; inclined to
-sleep; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>42d. Respiration increasingly difficult and painful;
-pulse 129.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>43d. Extremely restless; almost constant moaning;
-countenance anxious; cough; tongue continues
-brown and dry; lips and teeth sordid; pulse 122.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>44th. Died during the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> An abscess over the posterior extremity of
-the sagittal suture, around which for the space of
-two inches, the pericranium was destroyed, leaving
-this portion of the bone bare. Dura mater natural;
-arachnoid and pia mater vascular; substance of
-brain natural; effusion between dura mater and
-arachnoid; lateral ventricles full of serum; two
-ounces at base. <em>Thorax.</em> [Pleuræ of right side
-covered throughout with pus of very thick consistence,
-presenting the appearance of the interior of
-a large abscess, contained two pints of fluid consisting
-of serum, pus and blood; superior lobe of
-right lung hepatized and tuberculated; some of the
-tubercles in a state of suppuration; middle lobe
-contained a large abscess; lower lobe much wasted,
-blackened, and in many points softened down to a
-black fluid; left thoracic cavity contained about one
-pint of pure serum; pleuræ very vascular but not
-adherent; substance of lung perfectly sound;] condition
-of mucous membrane of bronchi not stated.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium contained
-several ulcers; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span><span class='sc'>Case XCVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Green</span>, æt. 10. Period and progress of
-disease unknown: throat much inflamed and ulcerated;
-deglutition difficult; respiration painful;
-much muco-purulent fluid constantly discharged
-from nostrils; eyes suffused; lips and teeth sordid;
-tongue cannot be protruded; pulse cannot be counted;
-noisy delirium; several dark-coloured vesicles
-on hands, especially in the neighbourhood of the
-joints. Died the same evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes slightly vascular; arachnoid
-and dura mater adherent at several points; substance
-of brain slightly vascular; effusion into ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of trachea and
-bronchi highly vascular; larynx much inflamed;
-arytænoid cartilages ulcerated; epiglottis dark and
-thickened; [pleuræ adherent throughout; substance
-of lungs inflamed.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane
-of intestines vascular; mesenteric glands enlarged;
-liver mottled on surface.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case XCIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ann Levitt</span>, æt. 24, married. Admitted on
-the 16th day of fever, which came on with severe
-pain of the head and epigastrium; pain of head is
-now gone, giddiness remains; much pain of limbs;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>scarcely any sleep; mind confused; eyes dull and
-heavy; face flushed; no uneasiness of chest; abdomen
-extremely tender on pressure; tongue red,
-parched, and cracked; lips and teeth sordid; bowels
-purged; pulse 123.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. After the application of ten leeches to the
-abdomen the tenderness is much diminished; the
-pulse fallen to 96; vomiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Eight leeches again applied; abdomen now
-free from pain; vomiting continues; tongue unchanged;
-pulse 106.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Vomiting undiminished; eight stools; abdomen
-again tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>20th. Vomiting; five stools; pulse 108; slight
-pain of abdomen on full pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Abdomen tender, swollen, and tympanitic;
-eight stools; pulse 96; great prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Abdomen less tender and tense; still more
-prostrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Stools in bed; pulse scarcely perceptible;
-features collapsed. Died in the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular; substance
-natural; effusion into the ventricles and at base;
-pituitary gland suppurated. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of bronchi inflamed; tubes full of mucus,
-mixed with pus; [superior lobe of right lung a
-mass of tubercular disease; one of the tubercles the
-size of a pigeon’s egg, in a state of suppuration;
-effusion of serum into the left pleural cavity.] <em>Abdomen.</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>Mucous membrane of jejunum and ilium
-much inflamed; caput coli firmly adherent to the
-abdominal peritoneum; large quantity of serum effused
-into the hepatic region; substance of liver
-soft; gall-bladder in a state of suppuration; contained
-three large biliary calculi; omentum inflamed;
-[two large hydatids attached to the left
-ovarium.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case C.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Robert Ebbott</span>, æt. 28, labourer. Admitted on
-the 12th day of fever: pain of head, which has been
-severe, is now only slight; frequent sighing; no pain
-of chest; frequent dry cough; respiration heavy and
-suspirious; abdomen tender; tongue dry, black, and
-cracked, red at apex; lips and teeth sordid; bowels
-purged; pulse 68.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Mind confused; insensibility increasing;
-abdomen tender; tongue quite black and extremely
-dry; teeth sordid; respiration the same; no stool;
-pulse 72, feeble. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater natural; longitudinal sinus
-contained a firm cord of fibrin; arachnoid and pia
-mater vascular; substance of brain natural; pituitary
-gland softened and suppurating; much effusion into
-the ventricles; at the base the membranes were
-elevated into a large bag, distended with fluid.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span><em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular;
-[right lung adherent to pleura, by a single point,
-at the upper part of the inferior lobe; substance
-contained numerous tubercles; left pleural cavity
-obliterated; left lung hepatized throughout, containing
-tubercles in every stage of disease; apex of
-heart adherent to pericardium.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of ilium and cæcum inflamed and extensively
-ulcerated; [liver exceedingly enlarged and
-hard, almost of cartilaginous firmness and texture,
-weighed seven pounds two ounces; right kidney externally
-nodulated, internally healthy; left, healthy
-externally, but, when cut into, found to contain several
-abscesses; urinary bladder small; walls one
-third of an inch thick.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Jane Hallam</span>, æt. 28, married. Admitted on
-the 6th day of fever: attacked with overwhelming
-loss of strength and severe pain of the head; pain
-of head continues, with distressing vertigo; no pain
-of chest; no cough; abdomen tender; tongue covered
-with white fur, but is extremely parched;
-thirst urgent; thinks she has had thirty stools
-within the last twenty-four hours; mind tolerably
-distinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of head gone; mind much more dull
-and heavy; abdomen very tender; tongue has become
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>brown and continues extremely dry; four
-stools dark and offensive; pulse 104, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Scarcely any sleep; much restlessness; mind
-confused; insensibility increasing; pulse 90, weak.
-Died next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; substance of brain in
-general much softened, but the floors of the ventricles
-especially were in an exceedingly softened state.
-<em>Thorax.</em> [Left pleuræ adherent at apex; superior
-lobe of left lung hepatized and stuffed with small
-tubercles; two adhesions in right pleuræ, one at
-apex; right lung stuffed with tubercles;] pericardium
-and heart healthy; condition of bronchi not stated.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membrane of ilium and cæcum
-exceedingly vascular, but not ulcerated; patches of
-peritoneal coat of stomach vascular; [large lobe of
-liver scirrhous;] other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Jonathan Studd</span>, æt. 27. Admitted on the 28th
-day of fever; symptoms throughout appear to have
-been chiefly thoracic; at present frequent cough
-with viscid expectoration; great emaciation; pulse
-102, extremely weak; no pain of head or abdomen;
-tongue foul; bowels regular; face pallid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>29th. Cough continues; abdomen not tender;
-tongue brown and dry in middle, red at tip and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>edges; three stools; pulse 100; mind dull and confused;
-muscular tremor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>30th. Cough the same; tongue unchanged; lips
-and teeth sordid; three stools mixed with blood;
-delirium; muscular tremor increased; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>31st. Abdomen has become tympanitic; three
-stools mixed with blood; delirium and muscular
-tremor increased; pulse 112, weaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>47th. On the evening of the day of last report he
-slept better and waked improved in all respects;
-this improvement appeared to be steady and progressive;
-the stools became natural; the pulse diminished
-in frequency and increased in strength; on
-this morning the stools continued natural; the pulse
-was 90, and he still seemed to be gradually though
-slowly recovering, when, without the return of any
-unfavourable symptom, he suddenly expired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain healthy,
-but more fluid than natural in the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Mucous membrane of bronchi greatly inflamed
-and thickened; bronchial tubes full of mucus mixed
-with pus; pleuræ of left side of chest extensively
-adherent; substance of left lung healthy excepting
-some slight patches of hepatization. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Mucous membrane of small intestines extremely
-vascular, in many places presenting the appearance
-of ecchymosis; at the valve of the colon several
-small ulcers; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span><span class='sc'>Case CIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John M’Carty</span>, æt. 22, labourer. Admitted on
-the 22d day of fever; complaint commenced with
-symptoms of severe cold; at present, slight pain of
-chest; cough, inducing pain in the abdomen, which
-is not tender; pain of head gone; eyes injected and
-suffused; face flushed; tongue brown and dry;
-bowels stated to be regular; pulse 99, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Cough very severe; abdomen not tender;
-tongue dry, brown and cracked; four stools; no pain
-of head; face flushed; eyes ferrety; pulse 90.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Mind more confused; eyes more injected;
-delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Insensibility increasing; no sleep; tongue
-more dry and brown; lips and teeth sordid; four
-stools; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Constant delirium; stools and urine in bed;
-pulse 104.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes and substance of brain vascular;
-more fluid than natural in ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em>
-Mucous membrane of bronchi vascular; [pleuræ of
-right side slightly adherent.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of jejunum, cæcum and ilium very much
-ulcerated; spleen soft; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span><span class='sc'>Case CIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sarah Nash</span>, æt. 14. Admitted on the 22d day
-of disease; pain of head appears to have been very
-severe but it has now wholly subsided; lies quite
-insensible; pupils dilated, but contractile; muscles
-of extremities quite rigid; hands clenched; arms
-and legs extended and inflexible; no tenderness of
-abdomen on fullest pressure; tongue brown and dry;
-no stool for four days; pulse 110, extremely feeble
-and indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Muscles of lower extremities rather less
-rigid; hands continue clenched; eyes in general
-closed; when opened appear injected and suffused;
-much grinding of the teeth; great restlessness;
-noisy delirium; two stools; pulse 126, stronger.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Great restlessness; scarcely any sleep; almost
-constant grinding of the teeth; pulse 129, of
-good power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. So restless that the pulse cannot be counted;
-exceedingly peevish; began to take two grains of
-calomel with half a grain of opium every four hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Little change excepting that she is now
-sensible of some pain in the epigastrium on full
-pressure, and acknowledges some pain in the head;
-pulse 142.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>32d. No amendment in the cerebral symptoms,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>and the strength is diminished; the mercurial odour
-is already quite evident, and the mouth is slightly
-ulcerated; no ptyalism; pulse 126, weak; calomel
-and opium omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>36th. Noise and delirium continue; ulceration of
-mouth gone; pulse 140, very weak. Calomel and
-opium were again resumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Slight ptyalism; no improvement; pulse
-130, extremely weak and indistinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>38th. Ptyalism continues; sinking. Died.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; substance of brain
-much softened; effusion between all the membranes
-and into the ventricles. <em>Thorax.</em> Bronchi of both
-lungs vascular, and contained a large quantity of
-purulent matter; right lung much hepatized; left
-slightly consolidated. <em>Abdomen.</em> Ilium and cæcum
-very much ulcerated; spleen very firm, contained
-one tubercle; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>William Gander</span>, æt. 22, servant. Admitted on
-15th day of fever; no account to be obtained of
-previous symptoms; some pain of head; much giddiness;
-mind confused; delirium; expression of
-eyes wild; face flushed; abdomen tender; tongue
-foul at root, moist, very red at apex; bowels purged;
-pulse 99, of good power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. No sleep; violent noisy delirium; eyebrows
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>contracted; face flushed; six stools; pulse
-100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>19th. Intensity of cerebral symptoms progressively
-increasing; constant violent delirium; muscular
-tremor; subsultus; tongue cannot be protruded;
-pulse 112. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; substance of brain
-natural; four ounces of serum in the lateral ventricles.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of trachea and
-bronchi highly vascular; other viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Glands of the mucous membrane of the intestines
-in general enlarged, many of them inflamed;
-some of them in a state of commencing ulceration,
-others completely ulcerated, so that the ilium and
-lower part of colon were full of ulcers, which varied
-in size, from that of a split pea to a crown piece;
-mesenteric glands much enlarged and dark; spleen
-very soft; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>George Bury</span>, æt. 9. Admitted on the 11th day
-of fever: complaint commenced with nausea, pain
-of abdomen and severe head-ache; the latter continues;
-abdomen, especially epigastrium, tender;
-tongue red; much thirst; bowels constipated;
-pulse 116.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Pain of head gone; countenance extremely
-pallid; no sleep; great restlessness; delirium; abdomen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>still tender; tongue red and dry; eight stools,
-dark and offensive; pulse 130. Died next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; substance of brain
-highly vascular; pituitary gland in a state of suppuration;
-cerebellum vascular; effusion between
-dura mater and arachnoid; one ounce of serum in
-ventricles, two at base; pia mater covering the spinal
-cord highly vascular; substance of cord natural.
-<em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane of bronchi slightly vascular;
-tubes contained some mucus, mixed with
-pus; [left pleuræ slightly vascular; lower lobe of
-left lung hepatized; right pleuræ healthy; lower
-lobe of right lung also hepatized, and contained several
-hard tubercles;] other viscera healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-Mucous membrane of lower end of ilium
-and entire cæcum thickly studded with ragged ulcers,
-raised and very foul, with indurated margins
-and irregular surfaces; longest diameter of ulcers in
-direction of longitudinal fibres of muscular coats;
-mesenteric glands very large, many of them being
-the size of almonds; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CVII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>John Meredith</span>, æt. 23, porter. Admitted on
-the 22nd day of fever, which came on, besides the
-ordinary symptoms, with pain of chest, cough and
-hoarseness: states that these symptoms were getting
-better when, a few days ago, he was attacked with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>pain of the abdomen, accompanied with loose stools:
-at present the abdomen is exceedingly tender on
-pressure; tongue brown and dry in the middle,
-edges white and moist; bowels purged; distressing
-hiccup; pain of head, which was severe in the
-commencement, gone; mind dull and heavy, but
-answers any question distinctly; countenance anxious;
-features sunk; pulse 88, feeble; slight degree
-of hoarseness and some cough remain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Tenderness of abdomen undiminished; hiccup
-continues very distressing; vomiting; bowels
-purged; tongue brown and dry; scarcely any sleep;
-pectoral symptoms the same; pulse 76.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Tenderness of abdomen, hiccup, vomiting,
-purging, all increased; eight stools since last report;
-much restlessness; pulse 84.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Appeared to be more easy yesterday, but
-relapsed into his former state to-day. Died following
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes vascular; arachnoid thickened
-and opake; substance of brain vascular; more fluid
-than natural in the ventricle. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of bronchi vascular; other viscera healthy.
-<em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous membranes of small intestines
-vascular; [peritoneum universally and greatly inflamed;
-that covering the intestines coated with a
-layer of coagulable lymph, by which their convolutions
-were united into one diseased mass; false
-membranes were formed by this exudation which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>extended from the under surface of the liver to the
-right iliac fossa, where they formed a cyst, in which
-eight ounces of purulent matter were contained; the
-peritoneum covering the abdominal surface of the
-diaphragm inflamed; liver enlarged,] but its substance
-appeared healthy; other viscera natural.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CVIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Turner</span>, æt. 26, servant. Admitted
-on the 15th day of fever: no account to be obtained
-of previous symptoms: at present extremely restless;
-much delirium; almost constant talking or moaning;
-no sleep; mind quite confused and wandering;
-when roused to answer a question she seems sensible
-for a moment, but immediately lapses into low
-muttering incoherence; if asked whether she has
-any pain in the head she points to the forehead;
-says she has no pain in chest or abdomen; no
-cough; abdomen not tender.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. No sleep; constant restlessness; almost unceasing
-incoherent talking; incapable of answering
-when spoken to; tongue cannot be protruded;
-stools in bed; pulse too feeble and indistinct to be
-counted. Died in the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater along the course of the longitudinal
-sinus very adherent to the arachnoid; arachnoid
-and pia mater white and opake; surface and
-substance of brain highly vascular; surface of cerebellum
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>vascular; substance healthy; pituitary gland
-suppurating; more fluid than natural in the ventricles;
-an ounce at the base. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous
-membrane of bronchi highly inflamed; bronchial
-tubes filled with mucus mixed with pus; [pleura
-costalis of right side vascular; slight effusion into
-right pleural cavity, and into parenchyma of right
-lung; lower lobe much inflamed; pleuræ of left
-side adherent; that covering left side of diaphragm
-much inflamed; substance of left lung partly inflamed,
-partly consolidated.] <em>Abdomen.</em> Mucous
-membrane of small intestines inflamed; in that of
-ilium numerous large, raised ulcers; [liver adherent
-by several unnatural connexions to diaphragm, spleen
-and transverse arch of colon, but its substance was
-healthy; appendix vermiformis likewise adherent to
-abdominal peritoneum;] head of pancreas enlarged;
-[internal inguinal glands much enlarged, and some
-of them impacted with calcareous matter;] other
-viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CIX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. W——</span>, æt. 50. The progress of this case
-having been observed with great care from the commencement
-to the termination of the disease, and
-affording an excellent illustration of the insidious
-manner in which the mixed form of fever sometimes
-attacks, and of the silent but rapid progress it makes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>without exciting alarm, until, at last, symptoms the
-most formidable, and which, to those who are not
-acquainted with the nature of the malady, appear to
-be most sudden, supervene, it may be useful to give
-a detailed account of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This gentleman had been out of health six months
-previously to the present attack of fever: he had
-been observed to be gradually losing flesh, and fading;
-yet he laboured under no complaint that could
-be ascertained, excepting that his appetite failed;
-that he could digest well no kind of food; that he
-was badly nourished and, therefore, weaker in body
-and less vigorous in mind than usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>About three weeks before the fever commenced,
-his stomach-complaints became worse, and for these
-he requested the advice of his friend Mr. Chaldecott.
-During this gentleman’s attendance, his patient was
-one day attacked with slight chilliness, an unusual
-degree of lassitude, together with pains in the limbs:
-but the chilliness never amounted to rigor; the general
-pains were not severe; there was no pain whatever
-in the head; yet the sudden debility which
-affected both mind and body was very striking.
-Still the mind was perfectly distinct; the sleep was
-sound; the expression of the countenance was natural;
-the tongue, however, became loaded with white
-fur; there was some thirst; the pulse varied from
-84 to 96, while the temperature and the softness of
-the skin remained in a healthy state. In this manner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>he went on about eight or ten days, and, during
-the whole of this period, he was daily questioned
-by his medical attendant and examined with much
-anxiety relative to the condition of the organs in the
-head, chest and abdomen; but he was steady in
-affirming that he was free from all uneasiness in the
-head, and that he had no pain in the chest; nor
-could any pain be excited by the fullest pressure,
-either in the epigastrium or in any part of the abdomen.
-It was observable, however, that he had
-some cough without expectoration, and that his respiration
-was short and hurried. His appearance,
-too, indicated more disease than his sensations; he
-was obviously worse than he expressed, or than
-could be accounted for from the apparent affection
-of any organ, and this excited alarm both in his
-family and in his medical attendants; and it is always
-a truly alarming condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the 11th day a remarkable change took place:
-for two or three hours he was chilly; to this succeeded
-heat of skin and flushing of the face; what
-was very alarming, the colour of the flash was purple,
-while that of the whole face was dusky; there
-was no cough, but the respiration was short and
-hurried; the mind was confused and dull, though a
-coherent answer might still be obtained to any question
-that was asked; the pulse now rose to 120,
-there was little or no sleep, but great restlessness
-during the night, in the course of which delirium
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>appeared, and the next morning there came on muscular
-tremor. As the day advanced the flushing and
-heat disappeared; the mind became quite distinct,
-and the pulse fell to 96. Towards evening he again
-became restless, the pulse rose to 104, and about
-one o’clock, a.m. the increased heat, the flushing of
-the face, the purple colour of the cheek, the dusky
-appearance of the skin, the short and hurried respiration,
-and the convulsive action of the muscles all returned,
-and in a greater degree, while the pulse again
-rose to 120. From this state he never recovered in
-the least degree, but became more and more dull,
-and at length nearly insensible; his debility rapidly
-increased until it became extreme; he lay quite
-prostrate on the back, with his arms extended, as if
-lifeless; the muscular tremor increased; the respiration
-became extremely short and hurried; the
-tongue became dry, red, glazed, and sticky; the
-bowels torpid; the pulse 130; and with these symptoms
-he expired on the 13th day of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Dura mater healthy; arachnoid thickened
-and opake; much gelatinous effusion between it and
-the pia mater; substance of brain highly vascular
-and firm; lateral ventricles distended with fluid,
-much also at the base. <em>Thorax.</em> Mucous membrane
-of bronchi universally of a dark red colour
-and lined with a tenacious fluid, which was slightly
-sticky; bronchial tubes filled with frothy mucus;
-substance of lungs perfectly healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>Mucous membrane of small intestines generally inflamed;
-lower part of ilium and commencement of
-colon filled with large and raised ulcers, some of
-which were just forming, while others had penetrated
-through a thick mass of adventitious deposit
-to the muscular coat of the intestine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before closing these illustrations of the pathology
-of fever, it may be proper to give an example of the
-modifications which take place when this disease
-proves fatal in the state of gestation. If fever attack
-during pregnancy, there is the greatest possible
-danger of miscarriage, and the great majority of
-those who miscarry die. There is no complication
-which requires a more delicate and cautious management;
-and the management which experience
-shews to be the best will be stated in the proper
-place: in the mean time, the following case is given
-as an illustration of the morbid appearances which
-are found (and the appearances are very uniform)
-when abortion is the precursor of death.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CX.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Cutler</span>, æt. 37, married. Admitted on
-the 5th day of fever, in the commencement of which,
-in addition to the ordinary symptoms, there was much
-nausea; this feeling continues at present, and is now
-accompanied with vomiting; epigastrium tender;
-cannot lie without pain in the left side; cough frequent,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>and exciting uneasiness in the chest; tongue
-white and dry; bowels bound; some pain of head,
-especially in the forehead; scarcely any sleep; much
-pain in the extremities; pain of throat with difficult
-deglutition; pulse 122; skin warm; six months
-pregnant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Much retching and vomiting; tenderness of
-the epigastrium and abdomen; bowels very loose;
-tongue white in the middle, red at the edges; severe
-pain in the chest; great dyspnœa; constant, urgent
-cough with difficult mucous expectoration; severe
-pain in the head; no sleep; great restlessness; pulse
-150, sharp but compressible. V. S. ad ℥xij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Buff on blood extremely firm; retching and
-vomiting gone; pain of side entirely removed; less
-cough; dyspnœa diminished; pain of head better;
-slept much better; pulse 120.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. After a tolerable night, attacked this morning
-with urgent dyspnœa, soon became perfectly insensible;
-was delivered of a fœtus six months old; at
-present, nearly insensible; respiration hurried and
-laborious; tongue brown and dry; one stool; pulse
-110; skin moderately warm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Free lochial discharge; all the symptoms
-greatly improved; tongue white; moist; pulse 84, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Lochial discharge nearly ceased; no pain
-in head, abdomen, or any where, except the face
-which is attacked by erysipelas; tongue continues
-moist and is nearly clean; pulse 108.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>14th. Erysipelas increased and extending; tongue,
-has again become brown and dry; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Erysipelas extending; severe pain in epigastrium
-and over abdomen, much increased on
-pressure; distressing sense of nausea but no vomiting;
-tongue the same; pulse 96, weak and irregular.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Pain of abdomen increased; stools in bed;
-no sleep; extreme restlessness; respiration hurried
-and wheezing; pulse 130, weak. Died in the
-evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Head.</em> Membranes of brain vascular. <em>Thorax.</em>
-[Pleuræ covering right lung coated with a layer of
-coagulable lymph; in both pleural cavities a large
-quantity of serum mixed with flakes of lymph
-and pus; that part of the pleura of the right side
-which lines the diaphragm highly inflamed;] substance
-of both lungs healthy. <em>Abdomen.</em> Peritoneum
-in general more vascular than natural; patches
-of it in a state of intense inflammation; peritoneal
-sac contained much serum mixed with flakes of
-lymph and pus; pelvis of right kidney inflamed;
-ovaria and uterus of very dark colour and intensely
-inflamed; other viscera healthy.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c007'>It would be easy to multiply cases to an indefinite
-extent, but, since those which have been cited exhibit
-a complete view of the pathology of fever, as far
-as it has yet been ascertained, any further details
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>would fatigue the reader without instructing him.
-And what is this pathology? What are the events,
-the detail of which has occupied us so long? The
-account of the pathology of fever is the history of
-inflammation, and the description of the individual
-changes that take place in the organs that constitute
-the febrile circle, is an enumeration of various products
-of inflammation which are formed within
-them. There is scarcely a fatal case of fever which
-does not afford, in one or other of the organs of that
-circle, some inflammatory product; there is no considerable
-number of fatal cases which does not furnish
-a specimen of every inflammatory product.
-And what are the severest cases of fever, and why
-are they the severest? With the single exception
-immediately to be stated, the severest cases are those
-in which, together with a severe primary affection
-of the nervous system, this inflammatory action is in
-the greatest degree of intensity, and is seated in the
-greatest number of organs; and they are the most
-severe, not only on account of the severity of the
-primary affection of the nervous system, but also because
-it is in them that the inflammation is the most
-intense, and because that inflammation attacks the
-system at one and the same time in the greatest
-number of points. From among the preceding
-cases, fix upon any one in which the powers of life
-were, from the commencement, the most completely
-overwhelmed, and in which they were the most rapidly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>exhausted, and when the brief struggle for existence
-is over, examine the changes that have taken
-place in the internal organs—what is it that is found?
-traces of inflammation, legible, deep, extensive;
-while, in almost every case, these traces are thus
-legible, deep, and extensive, in proportion to the
-apparent intensity of the fever, and to the rapidity
-with which it extinguished life. In this point of
-view, how important, how instructive, how invaluable
-is the lesson which the mixed cases of fever
-afford! With few and rare exceptions (and in all
-diseases some exceptions occasionally occur to what
-appear to be the best established and the most invariable
-laws) these are the cases in which the symptoms
-are the most urgent, and in which they run
-their course with the greatest rapidity; these are
-the cases in which the debility is the most striking;
-in which it comes on the most early, and proceeds
-to the greatest degree of prostration; these are the
-cases which are the most purely typhoid, the most
-truly adynamic; these are the cases which, in general,
-commence with the most sudden and alarming
-deprivation of physical and mental power; in which
-all pain and uneasiness are soonest lost in stupor,
-in which the stupor most rapidly increases to insensibility;
-in which delirium comes, perhaps, as early
-as the third or fourth night, accompanied with its
-attendant, muscular tremor, and too often with its
-most formidable ally, erysipelas: in which, at this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>early period, the respiration is short and hurried, the
-skin dusky, the colour of the cheek purple, the
-tongue brown and dry, the lips and teeth sordid, the
-abdomen tender, and the stools loose; in which, in
-a day or two more, the abdomen is swollen, tense,
-and tympanitic, the stools passed in bed, the patient
-prostrate on his back, completely senseless and powerless,
-while the pulse is 120 or 130, and so feeble
-that it can scarcely be distinguished. But what is
-this debility? in what does this adynamic state consist?
-It consists of a peculiar affection of the nervous
-system, followed rapidly by intense inflammation
-of the brain or of its membranes, or of both:
-by intense inflammation of the mucous membrane
-of the bronchi, and by intense inflammation or extensive
-ulceration of the mucous membrane of the
-intestines. And why is the patient weak or adynamic?
-Because he is not only assailed by an affection
-of the nervous system, which deprives the organs
-of the stimulus necessary to enable them to
-perform their functions with due vigour, but, at the
-same moment, inflammation is set up in three of
-the great systems, the healthy action of which is
-most essential, not only to strength but to life: thus
-the citadel is attacked at one time at three of its capital
-points. It is not asserted that inflammation
-alone constitutes the state of fever, nor that the danger
-of the patient is always in exact proportion to
-the degree of the inflammation. How it differs from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>inflammation, and what is superadded to the inflammatory
-state, will be shewn immediately; but it is
-a most important fact, that the degree of the debility
-is most intimately connected with the intensity and
-the extent of the inflammatory action. Now and
-then, as has been already stated, the intensity of the
-nervous affection is so great, and so rapidly destructive
-of life, that there is no time for an inflammatory
-process to be set up, much less for an inflammatory
-product to be formed. The patient is struck dead
-as if by lightning, or by Prussic acid, or by apoplexy.
-In this country, he does not actually die as
-instantaneously as he might be destroyed by the
-electric fluid or by poison, although there are countries,
-seasons, and particular spots, in which the
-concentration of the febrile poison appears to be
-sufficiently great to extinguish life instantaneously;
-and even in this country, life is sometimes destroyed
-by a stroke of fever as rapidly as it is by a stroke of
-apoplexy, when the latter does not prove fatal in the
-first few hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now the peculiarity in these cases is, that the
-internal organs, after death, exhibit no signs of
-inflammation, unless vascularity be inflammation.
-The organs which, in ordinary cases, are inflamed,
-are in these cases turgid with blood. Are the terms
-debility or adynamia appropriate expressions to designate
-even this condition of the organs? Just as
-appropriate as they would be to express the condition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>of a person who is struck dead by lightning,
-whose muscles are incapable of contraction, and
-whose blood will not coagulate. Those who apply
-these terms even to such forms, and, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">à fortiori</span></i>, to
-any other forms of fever, must be ignorant either of
-the nature of the disease, or of the constitution of
-the human mind. If they know the disease, they
-know that the patient appears to be weak because
-the primary operation of the disease is upon the
-nervous system—an operation which, as has just
-been stated, while it disturbs that due and equal
-distribution of nervous influence which is necessary
-to the healthful action of the organs, and, therefore,
-to the general strength of the system, is not incompatible
-with, but promotive of an excitement of the
-vascular system, which terminates in inflammation.
-Debility is the last, the ultimate result of the disturbance
-of the functions of a certain series of organs,
-but part of this very disturbance of function,
-and a most important part, a part which exerts the
-greatest influence over the progress of the disease
-and the life or death of the patient, consists not in
-the weakened, but in the augmented strength and the
-increased activity of the vascular system. To designate
-the ultimate result upon the system by a
-term which gives an entirely false view of the individual
-processes in the economy, by which that
-ultimate result is produced, must, we repeat, arise
-either from an ignorance of the true nature of those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>processes, or from not reflecting on the influence
-which words exert over the manner in which the
-human mind conceives of things. For the sake of
-the progress of the science of medicine, for the sake
-of rendering the language of medicine the correct
-expression of the knowledge which the science has
-actually attained, and, above all, for the sake of
-accomplishing the great object of medicine, the
-preservation of human life, it is high time that these
-terms with which physicians have so long allowed
-their minds to be abused, should be banished from
-medical nomenclature, or, at any rate, from that
-part of its nomenclature which appertains to fever.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Pathology of the Fluids in Fever.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The pathology of the solids in fever, derived from
-inspection of the fatal cases after death, has already
-acquired, as we have seen, a high degree of perfection.
-The pathology of the fluids is scarcely at all
-known, and the difficulty of arriving at exact and
-certain results is great. Why the investigation of
-the morbid changes that take place in the fluids
-should be a much more arduous task than that of
-tracing the changes produced in the structure of the
-organs, is too obvious to need to be pointed out;
-but those only who have actually engaged in researches
-of this nature can form a just conception
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>of the number of repetitions that are requisite of the
-same analysis, of the care required in conducting
-each, and consequently, of the labour and time it is
-necessary to devote to the investigation, before satisfactory
-results can be obtained. The analysis of the
-animal fluids in their healthy state is far from being
-perfect; yet their composition in the state of health
-must be ascertained, as far as it can be ascertained,
-as a preliminary step: and, in order to discover the
-morbid changes that take place in the blood, in the
-urine, in the products of respiration, and in those of
-transpiration, and still further to determine the nature
-and extent of such changes in the different
-types and stages of fever, it is obviously necessary to
-examine the respective fluids and gases in a great
-number of cases, and to vary the experiments in a
-great variety of modes. Experiments of this kind,
-on an extensive scale, have been undertaken by my
-friend Mr. Cooper; and, when this work was commenced,
-they had already advanced so far that there
-appeared to be a prospect that, before its completion,
-they would be sufficiently matured to justify us in
-laying the results before the reader. And that deviations
-from the state of health, and some of them of
-great importance, do take place in these fluids, and
-especially in the blood and the urine, is ascertained.
-What they are, with what degree of constancy they
-occur, how far they are respectively connected with
-the cerebral, the thoracic, the abdominal, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>mixed affections, with different degrees of intensity
-in these affections, and with different stages of their
-progress, we hope, at no distant period, to be able to
-lay fully before the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the mean time, it is of some importance to
-bear in mind the true place which the results of
-such experiments, be those results what they may,
-and be they established with all the clearness and
-certainty that can be desired, must always hold.
-Changes in the fluids can only be second in the series
-of morbid events; they can never hold the first
-place in that series; they can never be primary antecedents
-or first causes, but merely sequents or effects.
-To assign the reason of what must be so obvious to
-every one who is acquainted with the elements of
-physiology, would be entirely out of place here, because
-it would suppose the reader to be wholly ignorant
-of the functions of the animal economy. Our
-knowledge of the pathology of fever can never be
-complete, until we know the morbid changes that
-take place in the fluids as perfectly as we are acquainted
-with the alterations of structure that are
-produced in the solids, and we ought, therefore, to
-spare no labour to render our knowledge of the former
-as exact and certain as it is of the latter. But,
-as far as we can at present see, when this is accomplished,
-we shall have acquired little that is of practical
-utility. There is but slight, if there be any
-ground to hope that, when the humoral pathology
-shall have arrived at the greatest possible degree of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>perfection, it will furnish us with any additional
-means of preventing, curing, or even mitigating the
-severity of the disease. With that disorder of the
-system over which we have some control, with those
-morbid actions which we possess some means of
-subduing or changing, we are already well acquainted.
-In our knowledge of the invariable tendency
-there is to the production of certain changes
-in the structure of certain organs; in our knowledge
-of the vascular action by which those alterations are
-effected, we may be said, in a practical point of view,
-to be already in possession of the most important
-part of knowledge which we can ever hope to acquire,
-unless, indeed, we may indulge the expectation,
-of which it would be truly melancholy to be
-deprived, that we may discover a more sure and effectual
-mode of preventing these organic changes,
-or of restoring to a sound state the organs that may
-become diseased. It is this part of the pathology
-of fever alone that can afford a clear and steady light
-to conduct us to the safe and effectual treatment of
-the malady. Every step we take without this invaluable
-guide must be taken in the dark, and will
-be, therefore, not only likely to be false, but very
-likely to be fatal. When, on the contrary, we undertake
-the management of fever under the direction
-of this faithful guide, in every measure we venture
-to adopt we, at least, know at what we aim: we
-propose to ourselves a definite object which we endeavour
-to accomplish by an instrumentality with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>the powers of which we are in some degree acquainted:
-we may not succeed, but we fail because we
-want the means to do what we clearly see requires
-to be done: if we do not arrest the progress of the
-disease, at least we do not add to its strength by the
-adoption of violent and desperate expedients, because
-we feel called upon to do something, yet know not
-what to attempt; we do not destroy, if we cannot
-save. The physician, enlightened by the pathology
-of the disease, who prescribes for a patient in fever,
-is like a skilful surgeon, who is guided in the performance
-of a difficult and delicate operation by a
-knowledge of anatomy so intimate, that every touch
-of his scalpel exposes a tissue with which he is acquainted,
-and discloses the site of a vessel with
-which he is familiar; the object aimed at by the
-operation may not be obtained, but, at least, the
-cause of its failure is not that the operator wounds a
-structure which he ought to have avoided, or opens an
-artery, of the situation and distribution of which he is
-ignorant. On the contrary, the physician who prescribes
-for a patient in fever, without knowing the
-pathology of the disease, is like a Charlatan, who
-plunges his instrument boldly into the chest or the
-abdomen, without knowing where it goes or caring
-what it wounds; it may possibly open a tumour and
-let out the disease, but it is more likely to pierce
-some vital organ and to let out life.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of the Relation between the Phenomena of Fever;
-or the Theory of the Disease.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the preceding chapters it has been shown what
-are the real events which take place in fever, the
-assemblage of which constitutes the disease: it has
-also been shown in what order these events succeed
-each other, and upon what conditions of what
-organs they depend. To assign further the true
-relation between these events, is to establish the
-theory of fever in the only philosophical sense of
-the term theory: and that relation must already
-have suggested itself to the mind of the attentive
-reader.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have seen that the first indications of disease
-are clearly traceable to the nervous system: that
-the disorder of the functions of the brain and spinal
-cord with which the attack always commences,
-demonstrates that these organs form the primary
-seats of the malady: that the derangement in
-the functions of these organs is truly <em>invariable</em>,
-and is invariably the first morbid condition that
-is observed to take place: that there never was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>a case of fever, from the slightest to the most severe,
-in which these organs were not in a greater
-or less degree in a disordered state, and in which
-that disordered state did not precede every other.
-This affection of the nervous system then, the invariable
-antecedent of all that follows, is the primary
-essential event in the morbid series which
-constitutes fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What the real nature of this primary affection of
-the nervous system is, we are wholly ignorant, and
-we ought at once to confess our ignorance. We
-have already entered into some considerations, derived
-from the difference in the order in which the
-phenomena of fever and of inflammation succeed each
-other, to show that these two diseases are not identical.<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a>
-When these phenomena are still more attentively
-considered, other differences are observable
-between them, which confirm the opinion that the
-two diseases are not the same. Not only is derangement
-in the nervous and the sensorial functions
-invariably the first in the series of morbid events in
-fever, while it is not the first in inflammation, but
-that derangement is always much greater in the
-former than in the latter, and proceeds in a regular
-and determinate course, such as has been fully explained
-in the preceding pages, and to which there is
-nothing analogous in the progress of inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the condition of inflammation a peculiar but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>an unknown condition of the blood-vessels appears
-to be indispensable. To the state of fever, no such
-condition of any part of the vascular system, as
-far as we have the means of judging, is absolutely
-indispensable, although it be very commonly coincident.
-No such condition appears to be present,
-at least no such condition has yet been ascertained
-to be present, either in the very mildest or in the
-severest form of the disease: at the latter extreme of
-the scale, at least, we might expect to find the most
-striking and unequivocal indications of the existence
-and operation of inflammation, were that agent really
-present; and yet it is precisely here that the ordinary
-signs of inflammatory action are completely
-absent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Moreover, we have no example of instantaneous
-death by the sudden excitement of inflammation
-in any organ, or in any number of organs:
-inflammation is a process: a certain number of
-events take place in a certain order; and there is
-always, as far as has been hitherto observed, some
-interval between these events. A case is recorded
-in which inflammation of the bowels (acute enteritis)
-proved fatal, as was supposed, in eight hours from
-the commencement of the attack; but so rapid was
-the process, that the intelligent surgeons who witnessed
-it doubted whether the time when the disease
-began could have been noted accurately: at all
-events, it does not accord with the best-established
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>facts relative to the process of inflammation, that it
-should prove fatal without the lapse of some hours.
-Fever, on the contrary, does not need as much as a
-single hour to complete the work of death. It is
-well known that the poison which, in a certain state
-of concentration, produces fever with the ordinary
-period of duration, in a higher state of concentration
-produces instantaneous death; and that, in certain
-climates and seasons, it is not uncommon for persons
-previously in sound and vigorous health, on exposure
-to that poison, to sicken and to die in a shorter
-space of time than is requisite, under ordinary circumstances,
-for the mere formation of the inflammatory
-process. The state of the system, in the
-primary attack of fever, and the state of the system
-in inflammation, do not, therefore, appear to be identical.
-The truth is, that we do not know what the
-real state of the system is in either case, but we
-see that the phenomena of the one differ from those
-of the other; to conclude, therefore, that the states
-are the same is not a sound induction. While, then,
-we are constrained to admit that we know nothing
-of the nature of the primary affection of the nervous
-system in fever, the closest consideration of all the
-phenomena alike constrains us to conclude, that that
-affection is peculiar and specific.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This peculiar and specific affection appears to be
-much more analogous to the condition into which
-the nervous system is brought by the application of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>certain poisons, than to that which is proper to
-pure inflammation. The more closely and extensively
-the subject is investigated, the more clear
-and satisfactory the evidence becomes, that the
-great primary cause of fever is a poison, the operation
-of which, like that of some other poisons, the
-nature of which is better understood, and the action
-of which has been more completely examined, is
-ascertained to be upon the nervous system. How
-these poisons act upon the nervous system we do
-not know, nor can we possibly know, as long as we
-remain so profoundly ignorant of the nature of the
-action of the nervous system in the state of health.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It may be considered then as established, that the
-primary morbid condition of the body, in fever, consists
-of an affection of the nervous system, which
-there is reason to believe is of a peculiar and specific
-nature, although that nature be at present wholly
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This specific derangement of the nervous system
-having continued for some time, the vascular system
-becomes disturbed. How the nervous system so
-influences the vascular as to bring it into the morbid
-condition into which it passes, is as unknown to us
-as the peculiar affection of the nervous system itself.
-That there is the most close and intimate connexion
-between these two systems, and that they
-exert over each other the most important influence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>both in the state of health and of disease, are in the
-present state of our knowledge ultimate facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With two apparent exceptions, (whether these
-two cases form real exceptions may still admit of
-doubt) the vascular derangement connected with,
-and dependant upon nervous derangement, passes
-sooner or later into true inflammation. Of this we
-have the most complete and indubitable evidence—evidence
-derived both from changes, the known results
-of inflammatory action, produced in the structure of
-organs; and from the generation of new products,
-such as are formed by no other known process but
-that of inflammation. Almost every change of organic
-structure which inflammation is ascertained
-to be capable of producing, is found to take place
-in fever: almost every product which inflammation
-is ascertained to be capable of forming, is observed
-to be generated in fever: it is not possible to doubt,
-therefore, that the morbid condition into which the
-vascular system is brought in the progress of fever,
-is that of inflammation. In what circle of organs
-inflammation is peculiarly liable to be excited in
-this disease, by what particular character febrile
-inflammation is distinguished, and what remarkable
-differences it exhibits in intensity and extent, have
-been fully illustrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It follows, then, that the second event that takes
-place in the morbid series constituting fever, is inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>But however really and constantly inflammation
-may take place in fever, and in whatever intensity,
-and to whatever extent it may be carried, yet the
-inflammation is never pure or simple: the condition
-of the inflamed organs is never the same as that
-into which they are brought by mere phlegmasia:
-there is always inflammation, and <em>something else</em>:
-and if what we have so much insisted on be true,
-this must necessarily be the case, because the state
-of inflammation succeeds to another, a distinct,
-and a pre-existing condition of the system: that
-something else is the unknown, but the peculiar
-and specific affection of the nervous system, which
-has already been stated to be the invariable antecedent
-of whatever subsequent affection may take
-place. Thus this affection of the nervous system is
-not only the invariable antecedent of every other
-condition, but it is omni-present with every other
-condition, and its presence is a most powerfully
-influential presence; it operates at every instant,
-in every organ, and every function of the economy,
-although, as we have seen, its operation is peculiarly
-great, and, as far as we can perceive, specific
-in certain organs and functions. The combination
-of this nervous affection with inflammation, and the
-influence which this combination exerts over the
-inflammatory state, we express by saying that the
-inflammatory state in fever is modified: we see that
-inflammation is present, but we see that it is not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>the same as inflammation in a pure phlegmasia:
-we see, as has just been stated, that there is inflammation,
-and something else superadded; namely,
-a peculiar affection of the nervous system, which
-gives to the febrile inflammation a peculiar character,
-or which modifies it in a specific manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has been stated that there appear to be two
-exceptions to the universality of the presence of
-inflammation. Of these exceptions, one is exemplified
-in the mildest form of the disease. In
-every case of fever, the function of the vascular
-system is disturbed in a greater or less degree, as
-has been fully shown: but the doubt is whether
-that disturbance invariably pass into the state of
-inflammation. Since the morbid condition of the
-nervous system, in the mildest case, remains only
-for a certain period, and then uniformly gives place
-to the return of health, there seems to be no
-possible means of determining this question. And
-even in the second case, where the intensity of the
-nervous affection is incompatible with life, and death
-follows with extreme rapidity, the real condition of
-the vascular system appears to be equally doubtful.
-In both, that condition may possibly be a modification
-of one and the same state, and that state
-may be identical with inflammation—inflammation
-existing in different degrees of intensity. On the
-other hand, both may differ essentially from the
-state of inflammation. The nervous affection in
-the first may be too slight to excite inflammatory
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>action, while in the second it may be so overwhelming
-as completely to oppress every function
-of the economy, and therefore, instead of exciting,
-may paralyse the capillary blood-vessels; and consequently
-paralysis of the capillary vessels, instead
-of intense excitement of them, may possibly be the
-real condition of the vascular system, for example,
-in congestive fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But however this may be, the only difficulty in
-the subject relates to these two forms of the disease—the
-very mildest and the very severest. In all
-the intermediate cases, the condition of the vascular
-system is clear and certain. In all these, there can
-be no more doubt that that system is in a state of
-true inflammation, than there can be that the capillary
-vessels of the pleura are in a state of inflammation
-in pleuritis. Yet, as we have just stated,
-in fever the inflammation is never the same as it is
-in pleuritis. In fever there is a combination of a
-specific affection of the nervous system, with that
-specific affection of the vascular system, which constitutes
-the state of inflammation: in pleuritis there
-is the specific affection of the vascular system, without
-the specific affection of the nervous; and this
-combination of the two affections in fever modifies
-the nature of febrile inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This view of the constitution of fever appears
-to explain in the most luminous and complete
-manner every peculiarity of the febrile state: to
-reconcile all its apparent anomalies, with which few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>who have studied the subject have not been perplexed:
-to establish the true distinction between
-fever and inflammation; and to show why the phenomena
-exhibited by these two affections are so
-essentially different, and why therefore each requires
-a different mode of treatment. In this
-point of view no theory was ever more eminently
-practical, or led to a more guarded practice. Inflammation
-does not lose its nature by being combined
-with that peculiar affection of the nervous
-system which converts it into fever; it only modifies
-its state: the remedies proper for fever do not
-differ from those which are effectual in inflammation;
-they only require to be modified in accordance
-with the modified nature of the disease.
-He who believes fever to consist of an affection of
-the nervous system alone, every other affection that
-may be combined with it being accidental, will
-rarely think of using the lancet: he who believes
-fever to consist of inflammation alone, and overlooks
-the presence of the nervous affection, will be
-apt to carry the employment of the lancet too far:
-he alone who embraces the view of both, brings
-within his own all the phenomena: he alone adopts
-a sound theory of the disease, and we now see that
-he alone is likely to be led to a sound practice.
-When the theory of a disease collects, arranges
-and points out the true relation between all its
-phenomena, there is good reason to conclude that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>that theory is sound; but when it moreover directly
-leads to that treatment of the malady which
-experience shows to be the most safe and the most
-effectual, its truth is established by every test that
-can be applied to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The consideration of the diseased states of the
-other systems and functions that take place in fever,
-need not detain us long. The respiratory appears
-to be the next function that becomes deranged.
-The intimate and inseparable connexion which
-physiology teaches us subsists between the respiratory
-and the circulating systems, might lead us
-to anticipate the fact which pathology demonstrates.
-We know that the respiratory system is constructed
-for the circulating: that the form, the extent, the
-complication of the respiratory apparatus depend
-entirely upon the quantity of blood that is to be
-regenerated, and the degree of perfection with which
-that regeneration is to be accomplished. It is
-therefore impossible that any considerable derangement
-in the function of one of these systems should
-continue long, without being accompanied with a
-proportionate derangement in the other. The function
-of respiration cannot be materially deranged,
-without producing a morbid condition of the blood,
-that vital fluid which it is the specific object of the
-process to purify and regenerate. The function
-of secretion depends upon the quality of the blood
-conveyed to the secreting organ, upon the action of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>the capillary vessels of that organ, and upon the
-supply of nervous influence received by those vessels;
-it follows, that in a disordered state of the
-nervous, the circulating and the respiratory organs
-must be attended with a derangement in the process
-of secretion; while the excreting being necessarily
-connected with the secreting processes, the
-vitiation of the one cannot fail to occasion a corresponding
-deterioration of the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus we see that the organs and functions deranged
-in fever are closely and inseparably connected:
-that no continued disorder can take place
-in the one, without producing a proportionate disorder
-in all the others: that a peculiar and specific
-affection of the first, according to the established
-laws of the vital economy, invariably produces a
-peculiar and specific affection of the second, and
-the second, a third, and so on throughout the circle.
-And now we see why a certain number of organs are
-invariably affected in fever; why these organs invariably
-become affected in a certain order; why
-the nature of their affection is invariably the same;
-and why, finally, the ultimate condition of the system,
-the general result of these individual morbid
-changes, never varies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Writers on fever in general have confined their
-account of the phenomena of this disease to an explanation
-of the relation between the cold and the
-hot fits. Were their success in establishing that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>relation as complete as it is defective, they would
-still have done little or nothing, by a view so incomprehensive,
-towards establishing the theory of
-fever. Both the cold and the hot fits, about the
-exposition of which such a theory is alone concerned,
-are themselves accidents, since in the most
-formidable and dangerous forms of fever, the supposed
-relation between these phenomena is not only
-constantly disturbed, but often the phenomena themselves
-do not occur, it being one of the very characters
-of some of the intensest fevers, that the
-temperature is little changed, and that the diminished
-temperature which may be, or which may
-have been present, is never succeeded by any increase
-of heat. The true theory of this, as of
-every other disease, must be sought in the study
-of its pathology, and can be found only by comparing
-the pathology of the organs ascertained to
-be affected with their physiology. The cold stage
-of fever, when it exists, is produced by a disturbance
-of the functions of the circulation and of the
-respiration, and these functions are disturbed, because
-the organs in which they have their seat no
-longer receive their accustomed and their requisite
-supply of nervous influence from the nervous system.
-The hot stage, when it exists, arises from
-a disturbance of the same functions: and the
-reason why we cannot assign with precision why
-the same cause produces in the one case a diminished,
-and in the other an increased temperature,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>or why the temperature is disturbed at all, is because
-we do not know with precision on what
-circumstances in the animal economy the generation
-of heat depends: when the physiologist has clearly
-and completely ascertained all the circumstances
-upon which this process depends, the pathologist
-will probably have but little difficulty in tracing
-with equal clearness and completeness the connexion
-between the disturbance of that process,
-and the commencement of the febrile state.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In conclusion, then, the doctrine of fever which
-appears to approximate most nearly to the truth,
-may be summed up in few words. The immediate
-cause of fever is a poison, which operates
-primarily and specifically upon the brain and the
-spinal cord. The diseased state into which these
-organs are brought by the operation of this poison,
-deprives them of the power of communicating to
-the system that supply of stimulus (nervous and sensorial
-influence) which is requisite to maintain the
-functions of the economy in the state of health. The
-organs, the seats of the functions, deprived of their
-supply of nervous influence, become deranged, the
-derangement in each taking place in a fixed order,
-and in a determinate manner. Subsequently to
-the nervous and the sensorial, the organs the next
-to suffer are those of the circulation; then those
-of respiration; and, ultimately, those which belong
-to secretion and excretion. The condition of the
-nervous system which produces this derangement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>in this circle of organs, occasions further, in that
-portion of the circulating system which consists of
-the capillary blood-vessels, that peculiar state which
-constitutes inflammation: hence inflammation is
-almost always established in one or more of the
-organs comprehended in the febrile circle, and sometimes
-in all of them. The peculiar and primary affection
-of the nervous system, which is here assigned
-as the cause of inflammation, does not become identical
-with inflammation, but superadds the morbid
-condition of inflammation to its own; does not lapse
-into or terminate in the inflammatory state, but
-accompanies it, and by this combination modifies
-in a peculiar manner the inflammatory process.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The great practical conclusion to be deduced from
-this doctrine of fever is, that while the inflammatory
-processes that are thus set up in so many important
-organs, greatly aggravate the severity of the disease,
-and ought to be constantly kept in the view of
-the practitioner, both on account of their own
-peculiar danger, and also because they are perhaps
-the only real states over which he has any control,
-yet that these inflammatory processes do not alone
-constitute fever; that their removal, though essential
-to the cure, will not complete the cure; that
-another, a primary, and a most formidable disease,
-is at the same time to be contended with, and that
-the presence of this distinct and primary disease
-requires very important modifications in the treatment
-of the inflammatory condition.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of the Causes of Fever.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The causes of fever are of two kinds; first, those
-which immediately produce the disease, and secondly,
-those which bring the system into a condition
-capable of being affected by the first: the former,
-are called the exciting, the latter, the predisposing
-causes: a third has been spoken of in relation to
-this as well as to other diseases, namely, the proximate.
-But what is really meant by the proximate
-cause of disease (if the term have any meaning) is
-the condition of the organ, or of the system, produced
-by the operation of the exciting cause: this
-term, therefore, designates an effect, not in any
-proper sense, a cause: it relates to the disease itself,
-not to that which produces it.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>I. <span class='sc'>Of the Immediate, or Exciting Cause of Fever.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The immediate, or the exciting cause of fever is a
-poison formed by the corruption or the decomposition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>of organic matter. Vegetable and animal
-matter, during the process of putrefaction, give off a
-principle, or give origin to a new compound, which,
-when applied to the human body, produces the
-phenomena constituting fever. What this principle
-or compound is, whether it be one of the constituent
-substances which enter into the composition
-of organised matter, or whether the primary elements
-of organised matter, as they are disengaged
-in the process of putrefaction, enter into some new
-combination, and thus generate a new product, we
-are wholly ignorant. Of the composition of the
-poison, of the laws which regulate its formation, and
-of its properties when generated, we know nothing
-beyond its power to strike the human being with
-sickness or death. We know that, under certain
-circumstances, vegetable and animal substances will
-putrify: we know that a poison capable of producing
-fever will result from this putrefactive process,
-and we know nothing more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the conditions which are ascertained to be
-essential to the putrefactive process of dead organic
-substance, whether vegetable or animal, those of
-heat and moisture are the most certain, and as far as
-we yet know, the most powerful. Accordingly, in
-every situation in which circumstances concur to
-produce great moisture, while the heat is maintained
-with some steadiness within a certain range, there
-the febrile poison is invariably generated in large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>quantity, and in great potency. Wherever generated,
-we have no means of ascertaining its existence
-but by the effects it produces on the
-human body. Now and then circumstances arise
-which illustrate these effects in an exceedingly
-striking manner. This is the case when large
-numbers of men, previously in a state of sound
-health, are simultaneously exposed to it. Examples
-of such occurrences, as numerous and as
-complete as can be desired, were long since recorded,
-among many others, by one very accurate
-observer, who is of the number (no small one) of
-those who have given valuable lessons to the
-world, which have been forgotten, and to which it
-is a useful labour to recall the attention of the
-present age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In the beginning of June, 1742,” says Sir John
-Pringle, in his Observations on the Diseases of the
-Army, “the British troops began to embark for
-Flanders. There were in all, of foot and cavalry,
-about 16,000: the winds were favourable, the
-several passages short, the men landed in good
-health, and went into their several garrisons. The
-head-quarters were at Ghent. During the Summer
-and Autumn the weather was good, the heats moderate,
-and the country in general healthy. The
-British officers continued well, but many of the
-common men sickened. Ghent is situated between
-the high and the low division of Flanders; one part
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>of the town called St. Peter’s Hill, is much higher
-than the rest, and in this, the barracks, having
-drains and free air, were quite dry; so that the
-soldiers who lay there enjoyed perfect health. But
-those who were quartered in the lower part of the
-town (mostly on the ground-floors of waste houses,
-unprovided with drains, and of course damp) were
-sickly. The battalion of the first regiment of guards
-was a remarkable instance of this difference of
-quarters. Two of the companies lay on St. Peter’s
-Hill; the remaining eight in the lower part of the
-town, in rooms so very damp, that they could
-scarce keep their shoes and belts from moulding.
-In the month of July, the sick of this battalion
-amounted to about 140; of which number only
-two men belonged to the companies on the hill,
-and the rest to those in the lower town.”<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is further stated, that in the end of August,
-Ostend having surrendered, the garrison, consisting
-of five battalions British, was conducted to Mons,
-where they continued about three weeks: that
-these men had been so healthy that, when they
-marched out, upon the capitulation, they left only
-ten sick; but that the same corps having been put
-into damp barracks at Mons, while the town was
-surrounded with an inundation, fever immediately
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>appeared, and prevailed to such an extent, that in
-this short space of time 250 were seized with the
-disease.<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the campaign in 1748, it is stated that the
-troops had scarcely been a month in the cantonments,
-when the returns of the sick amounted to
-2000: that afterwards the number became much
-greater: that those who were near the marshes
-suffered by far the most, both in the number and
-the violence of the symptoms; that the Greys,
-cantoned at Vucht (a village within a league of
-Bois-le-duc, surrounded with meadows, either then
-under water, or but lately drained) were the most
-sickly; that for the first fortnight they had no
-sick, but, after continuing five weeks in that situation,
-they returned about 150; after two months,
-260, which was about half the regiment; and at the
-end of the campaign, they had in all but 30 men
-who had never been ill: that a regiment at Nieuland,
-where the meadows had been floated all
-Winter, and were but just drained, returned sometimes
-above half their number: that the Scotch
-Fuzileers at Dinther, though lying at a greater
-distance from the inundations, yet being quartered
-in a low and moist village, had above 300 ill at one
-time, while a regiment of dragoons, cantoned only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>half a league south-west of Vucht, were in a good
-measure exempted from the distress of their neighbours,
-such was the advantage even of that distance
-from the marshes, of the wind blowing mostly from
-the dry grounds, and of a situation upon an open
-heath, somewhat higher than the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the troops were in Zealand, where the
-poison was in a high degree of concentration, they
-had not been a fortnight in the cantonments, before
-several of the men belonging to those regiments
-which were stationed nearest the inundations,
-were seized simultaneously with lassitude and
-inquietude, a sensation of burning heat, intense thirst,
-frequent nausea, sickness and vomiting, aching of
-the bones, pain in the back, and violent headache.
-There were some instances of the head being so
-suddenly and violently affected that, without any
-previous complaint, the men ran about in a wild
-manner, and were believed to be mad, till the solution
-of the fit by a sweat, and its periodic return,
-discovered the true nature of their delirium.
-Most of the men were first taken ill upon their
-return from forage. The regiment being cantoned
-close upon the inundations, and many of the
-quarters being above two leagues from the place
-where the magazines were kept, the men were
-obliged to set out about four in the morning, in
-order to get back before the greatest heat of the
-day. At this early hour, the meadows and marshes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>on each side of the road were covered with a thick
-fog, of an offensive smell. The party generally
-returned before noon; but several of the men, even
-before they could get back to their quarters, were
-already in a violent fever; some, in this short space
-of time, were actually delirious; and a few, on
-their way home, were so suddenly taken with a
-phrenzy, as to throw themselves from their trusses
-into the water, imagining they were to swim to their
-quarters. One man, on reaching home, was suddenly
-seized with intense headache, got out of his
-quarters, and ran about the fields like one distracted.
-Three years after this sickness, it was
-found that two of the men who were thus suddenly
-affected with phrenzy, though they recovered of
-their fever, had ever since been epileptic, and that
-all the rest who had been ill, remained exceedingly
-liable to returns of an intermitting fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The suddenness with which fever sometimes attacks
-individuals on board a ship, or even an entire ship’s
-crew, on the approach of the vessel to a shore where
-this poison is generated in large quantity, and in a
-high state of concentration, illustrates its operation,
-perhaps, in a still more striking manner. Dr. Maculloch,
-who has laboured with great ability and zeal
-to recal attention to the most important and long-forgotten
-subject of malaria, relates an instance of
-some men on board a ship, who were seized, while
-the vessel was five miles from shore with fatal cholera,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>the very instant the land-smell first became
-perceptible. Several of these men, who were unavoidably
-employed on deck, died of the disease in
-a few hours. The armourer of the ship, who, before
-he could protect himself from the noxious blast, was
-accidentally delayed on deck a few minutes, to clear
-an obstruction in the chain cable, was seized with
-the malady while in that act, and was dead in a few
-hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dr. Potter states<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a> that he witnessed the rise of a
-most malignant yellow fever, in a valley in Pennsylvania,
-which contained numerous ponds of fresh water,
-and which, from the heat and dryness of the season,
-emitted a most offensive smell: that the fever prevailed
-most, and with the greatest degree of malignity
-among the people who lived nearest these ponds; and
-adds an exceedingly instructive case, illustrative of
-the generation and operation of this cause of fever,
-recorded by Major Prior, in his account of a fever
-which attacked the army of the United States at
-Galliopolis. The source of the malady was clearly
-traced to a large pond near the cantonment. When
-the disease was most severe, it assumed the continued
-form, and was accompanied with yellowness
-of the skin: when proper means were taken to
-destroy the pond, the fever immediately lost its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>continued form, and became first remittent, then
-intermittent, and ultimately disappeared. “The
-fever,” says this intelligent officer, “was, I think,
-justly charged to a large pond near the cantonment.
-An attempt had been made two or three years before
-to fill it up, by felling a number of large
-trees that grew on and near its margin, and by
-covering the wood thus fallen with earth. This
-intention had not been fulfilled. In August, the
-weather was extremely hot, and uncommonly dry:
-the water had evaporated considerably, leaving a
-great quantity of muddy water, with a thick slimy
-mixture of putrefying vegetables, which emitted a
-stench almost intolerable. The inhabitants of the
-village, principally French, and very poor, as well
-as filthy in their mode of living, began to suffer
-first, and died so rapidly, that a general consternation
-seized the whole settlement. The garrison
-continued healthy for some days, and we began to
-console ourselves with the hope that we should
-escape altogether: we were, however, soon undeceived,
-and the reason of our exemption heretofore
-was soon discovered. The wind had blown the air
-arising from the pond from the camp; but, as soon
-as it shifted to the reverse point, the soldiers began
-to sicken: in five days, half the garrison was on
-the sick list, and in ten, half of them were dead.
-They were generally seized with a chill, followed by
-headache, pains in the back and limbs, red eyes,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>constant sickness at stomach, or vomiting, and generally,
-just before death, with a vomiting of matter
-like coffee-grounds. They were often yellow before,
-but almost always after death. The sick died generally
-on the seventh, ninth, and eleventh days,
-though sometimes on the fifth, and on the third.
-As some decisive measures became necessary to save
-the remainder of the troops, I first thought of
-changing my quarters, but as the station was in
-every respect more eligible than any other, and had
-been made so by much labour and expense, I determined
-to try the experiment of changing the
-condition of the pond, from which the disease was
-believed to have arisen. A ditch was accordingly
-cut; what little water remained was conveyed off,
-and the whole surface covered with fresh earth.
-The effects of this scheme were soon obvious. Not
-a man was seized with the worst form of the fever
-after the work was finished, and the sick were not a
-little benefitted, for they generally recovered, though
-slowly, because the fever became a common remittent,
-or gradually assumed the intermitting form.
-A few cases of remitting and intermitting fever
-occurred occasionally, till frost put an end to it in
-every form. As soon as the contents of the pond
-were changed, by cutting the ditch, the cause, whatever
-it was, seems to have been rendered incapable
-of communicating the disease in its worst form.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dr. Potter further states that, on one occasion,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>he saw a lady, who had been confined three days
-only, and whom he found in the agonies of death,
-with the skin of a deep orange colour, the eyes
-red and prominent, the pulse intermittent, and
-ejecting copiously from the stomach every eight or
-ten minutes, the secretion now known by the name
-of the black vomit; that she expired in a convulsion,
-while he sat at her side; that petechiæ
-appeared immediately after death, and that putrefaction
-succeeded so rapidly, that it was necessary
-to order immediate interment: that, shortly
-afterwards, he was called to a gentleman who had
-been ill five days, and who, having expired in an
-hour or two after his visit, was removed into the
-coffin with the utmost difficulty, the flesh literally
-dropping from the bones: that, in one family residing
-in a house which stood on a level piece of ground,
-apparently beyond the reach of noxious exhalation,
-there being no stagnant water, as was supposed,
-within a mile of it, he found the mother labouring
-under a bilious remitting fever, which had continued
-eleven days; the daughter, seventeen years of age,
-suffering from a similar fever; two sons, the one between
-eight and nine, and the other six, ill with
-dysentery; and the father, on the brink of the
-grave, from a most malignant fever. There being
-no apparent cause for the condition of this afflicted
-family, the immediate neighbourhood of the house
-being free from the ordinary sources of malaria,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>and the adjacent country being not unhealthy,
-the condition of the house itself was minutely investigated.
-The cause of the evil was manifest.
-It appeared that the present family had resided in
-the house only about five weeks; that immediately
-preceding their occupation of it, a man had died
-suddenly in it; that he himself (Dr. Potter) was
-seized with nausea and general lassitude, immediately
-on leaving the house after his first visit; and
-that a fever, as he supposes, was arrested by a
-strong dose of tartarized antimony, which operated
-violently by vomiting and purging. On examining
-the premises, it was found that the cellar contained
-water about two feet deep, which had remained
-there from the first week in June, the country
-having been then inundated by torrents of rain.
-The cellar being useless, the door had been closed,
-and the only vent for the pestiferous gases was
-through the floor, which was open in several places.
-The family being immediately removed, all the
-sick became convalescent from the time they ceased
-to breathe the air of the place. The owner of the
-house hired two men to empty the cellar. These
-men having ripped up the floor, and placed a pump
-in the deepest part of the water, evacuated the
-cellar to the dregs in one day. On the second day
-after the execution of this task, one of these men
-was seized with a chilliness, succeeded by an ardent
-fever, which terminated with the usual symptoms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>of yellow fever; namely, hæmorrhages, yellow skin
-and petechiæ, and proved fatal on the third day from
-the attack: the day following the seizure of the
-first, the second man was attacked with similar
-symptoms, and died on the seventh day of the disease,
-with the black vomit, in addition to the ordinary
-symptoms of the yellow fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These examples may suffice to illustrate the
-operation of that febrile poison which arises chiefly
-from the decomposition of vegetable matter. The
-poison derived from the putrefaction of animal matter
-is still more pernicious: its effects are more powerful
-in degree, and worse in character; it operates more
-intensely on the nervous system, and less on the
-vascular; and the fevers it produces are invariably
-of the typhoid type, and of the continued form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Without doubt, a febrile poison, purely of animal
-origin, in a high degree of concentration, would kill
-instantaneously; and when not intense enough to
-strike with instantaneous death, it would produce a
-continued fever with the typhoid characters, in the
-greatest possible degree of completeness and perfection.
-And this appears to afford the true solution
-of the origin of the plague. The more closely the
-localities are examined of every situation in which
-the plague prevails, the more abundant the sources
-of putrefying animal matter will appear, and the
-more manifest it will become, not only that such
-matter must be present, but that it must abound.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>And this also is one of the truths which was known
-to the observers of former times, but which has been
-forgotten. Were it not that the professional reading
-of an age, is bounded by as strict a line as that
-which divides century from century; were it not that
-no one reads back beyond the authority which happens
-to give to the day its prevailing doctrines; were it
-not that the great repository of facts treasured up
-in the volumes of the close observers, though sometimes
-the bad reasoners of former days, thus becomes
-neglected for the dogmas of some modern writer,
-who reasons as ill, and who observes less, the notion
-that vegetable malaria produces only intermittent
-fever, never could have become so prevalent as it is
-at present, nor could the influence of animal malaria
-ever have been so entirely overlooked. But it chanced
-that Cullen, in his definition of intermittent fever,
-assigned the miasma of marshes as the origin of
-the disease, while he makes no mention of animal
-malaria in his definition of any of the forms of
-fever; and as this author superseded all former authorities,
-by becoming the great authority of the
-age, few of his successors are acquainted in the
-slightest degree with the writings anterior to his
-period: whence it has happened that the numerous
-and invaluable facts observed and recorded by his
-predecessors, relative to the cause of fever, have
-been disregarded until they have become wholly
-unknown. To cite the antient and the more modern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>authorities who have observed and recorded
-the influence of animal malaria in the product of
-plague, would be to enumerate every distinguished
-writer, from Pliny and Diodorus Sicculus, down
-to Galen, from Galen to Mead, and from Mead to
-Pringle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In assigning the reason why Grand Cairo, in
-Egypt, is the birth-place and the cradle of the
-plague, Mead states that this city is crowded with
-vast numbers of inhabitants, who live not only poorly,
-but nastily; that the streets are narrow and close;
-that the city itself is situated in a sandy plain, at
-the foot of a mountain, which keeps off the winds
-that might refresh the air; that consequently the
-heat is rendered extremely stifling; that a great
-canal passes through the midst of the city, which at
-the overflowing of the Nile is filled with water;
-that on the decrease of the river, this canal is gradually
-dried up, and the people throw into it all manner
-of filth, carrion, offal, and so on; that the stench
-which arises from this, and the mud together, is
-intolerably offensive; and that, from this source, the
-plague constantly springing up every year, preys
-upon the inhabitants, and is stopped only by the
-return of the Nile, the overflowing of which washes
-away this load of filth: that in Ethiopia the swarms
-of locusts are so prodigious, that they sometimes
-cause a famine, by devouring the fruits of the
-earth, and when they die, create a pestilence, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>the putrefaction of their bodies; that this putrefaction
-is greatly increased by the dampness of the
-climate which, during the sultry heats of July and
-August, is often excessive; that the effluvia which
-arise from this immense quantity of putrefying animal
-substance, combined with so much heat and moisture,
-continually generate the plague in its intensest
-form; and that the Egyptians of old were so sensible
-how much the putrefaction of dead animals contributed
-towards breeding the plague, that they worshipped
-the bird Ibis, from the services it did in
-devouring great numbers of serpents, which they observed
-injured by their stench when dead, as much
-as by their bite when alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nothing can be more striking than the cases
-recorded by Pringle, and which daily occurred to
-him of the production of fever, exquisitely typhoid,
-(according to the language of that day, jail and
-hospital fever) and of the sudden transition of intermittent
-and remittent into the continued and
-typhoid type, from the presence of a poison clearly
-and certainly of animal origin. Whenever wounded
-soldiers, with malignant sores, or mortified limbs,
-were crowded together, or whenever only a few of
-such diseased persons were placed in a room with the
-sick from other diseases, with those labouring under
-intermittent and remittent, for example, a severe and
-mortal typhus immediately arose; nay, whenever
-men, previously in a state of sound health, were too
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>much crowded together for any considerable time,
-typhus (jail or hospital fever) was sure to be produced.
-The instances of such occurrences that are
-detailed, are too numerous to be cited, but they are
-so clearly stated, and so striking, that they well
-deserve to be consulted by whoever is desirous of
-clearly tracing the operation of this great cause of
-fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But by far the most potent febrile poison, derived
-from an animal origin, is that which is formed by
-exhalations given off from the living bodies of those
-who are affected with fever, especially when such
-exhalations are pent up in a close and confined apartment.
-The room of a fever-patient, in a small and
-heated apartment in London, with no perflation of
-fresh air, is perfectly analogous to a stagnant pool
-in Ethiopia, full of the bodies of dead locusts. The
-poison generated in both cases is the same; the
-difference is merely in the degree of its potency.
-Nature, with her burning sun, her stilled and pent-up
-wind, her stagnant and teeming marsh, manufactures
-plague on a large and fearful scale: poverty in
-her hut, covered with her rags, surrounded with her
-filth, striving with all her might, to keep out the
-pure air, and to increase the heat, imitates nature but
-too successfully; the process and the product are the
-same, the only difference is in the magnitude of the
-result. Penury and ignorance can thus at any time,
-and in any place, create a mortal plague. And of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>this no one has ever doubted. Of the power of the
-living body, even when in sound health, much more
-when in disease, and above all, when that disease
-is fever, to produce a poison capable of generating
-fever, no one disputes, and the fact has never been
-called in question. Thus far the agreement among
-all medical men, of all sects, and of all ages, is
-perfect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it happens that there is another form of
-animal matter capable of producing fever: namely,
-a matter secreted by the living body, constituting
-not only a poison, but a peculiar and specific poison.
-This specific poison produces not merely fever, but
-fever with a specific train of symptoms. In the
-acknowledgment of this fact, also, the agreement
-among all medical men is equally perfect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But some contend that the poison generated in
-the first case, and that generated in the second, may
-both be properly called contagions: others maintain
-that the application of the same term to two
-cases so specifically different, destroys a distinction
-which it is useful to preserve, and that it would be
-more correct, as well as more conducive to clearness
-of conception, to call the poison generated in
-the first case an infection, and to restrict the term
-contagion, to designate the poison generated in the
-latter. Vast and immeasurable as the difference appears
-to be between the contagionists and the anti-contagionists,
-if regard be had merely to their language,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>yet if attention be paid only to their ideas, to this, and
-to this only, narrow as the compass is, the whole
-controversy is reduced. It resolves itself wholly into
-the question, whether one word shall be used to express
-two cases which differ from each other in some
-important circumstances, or whether it may not be
-more convenient to employ two terms, and strictly
-to appropriate each to designate its own specific
-class. It must be manifest that, since both sects are
-perfectly agreed about the facts, the dispute can be
-only verbal. If the one would consent to restrict
-their use of the term contagious, for which there is
-the best authority and ancient custom, to those diseases
-which arise from a specific contagion, and
-would call those which arise from every other poison
-infectious, there would be an end to this apparently
-interminable, and in many respects mischievous,
-controversy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Is the febrile poison, whether of vegetable or
-animal origin, or whether composed of both, capable
-of adhering to clothes, apparel, and other
-substances, in such a manner as truly to infect them,
-so that when applied to the bodies of the healthy, at
-any distance of place, and at some distance of time,
-the specific effects of the poison are produced?
-That such substances may be so imbued with
-the poison of the small-pox, all admit: that the
-evidence should not be as complete relative to
-the power, or the inability of such substances to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>convey and communicate the poison of ordinary continued
-fever, is alike disgraceful to the state of our
-science, and injurious to the cause of humanity.
-There is no reason why the question should not be
-settled with absolute certainty; there is no manner
-of difficulty in determining it. Experiments
-the most direct, complete, and decisive, might be
-performed, which, if observed, during their progress,
-by competent witnesses, and duly authenticated,
-might ascertain the point with sufficient clearness
-and certainty, to satisfy not only the present age,
-but future generations. Once, for all, the full trial
-might be made, and if the trial were really full, it
-need never be repeated. A series of experiments
-completely decisive of the question, as far as regards
-the fever of our own country, which might be easily
-extended to the plague, were some time ago drawn
-out, and exertions were made to carry them into effect;
-but in the prevailing state of public opinion
-and feeling, it was found absolutely impossible to institute
-them on a scale at all adequate to render them
-decisive, without the aid of Government. There
-seems to be no possible mode of performing them
-effectually, unless Government will co-operate, by
-granting a free pardon to such convicts, as will voluntarily
-allow themselves to be made the subjects of
-them. The risk to them would be slight, the evil
-to the community none; while the danger, the suffering,
-the disease, the mortality that would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>prevented, to say nothing of the expense that would
-be spared by the decision of the question, would be
-incalculable. It is earnestly to be hoped that those
-who have it in their power to afford the means of
-putting this question at rest, will not allow it to
-remain in its present unsettled state. Science, commerce,
-humanity, alike demand that the truth should
-be ascertained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This subject, it is my intention to take up, and
-to discuss fully in a future publication, in which
-will also be investigated some inquiries, which it
-has been found impossible to include in the present
-volume; such as whether the vegetable and animal
-poison we have been considering, be the only true
-exciting cause of fever; by what means its general diffusion
-is effected; on what conditions its propagation
-depends; by what measures its extension may be
-checked, and its power diminished or destroyed;
-what circumstances in the modes of life, in the habits
-of society, in the structure of houses, in the condition
-of the public streets and the common sewers,
-in the state of the soil over large districts of the
-country, as influenced by the mode of agriculture,
-drainage, and so on, favour or check the origin and
-propagation of this great curse of civilized, no less
-than of uncivilized man. It is obvious that these
-inquiries will include the investigation of several exceedingly
-curious and important statistical questions;
-and the object of these researches will be accomplished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>should they lead to the establishment of any
-useful principles of extensive application.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a></p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Of the Remote or Predisposing Causes of Fever.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>The remote or the predisposing causes of fever have
-been stated to be those circumstances which bring
-the body into a condition capable of being affected
-by the immediate or the exciting cause. Whatever
-diminishes the vigorous action of the organs, impairs
-their functions, and so weakens the general
-strength of the system, is capable of becoming a
-predisposing cause of fever; and every predisposing
-cause acts in one or other of these modes, and becomes
-a predisposing cause only and in proportion
-as it lessens the energy of the system, or disturbs
-the balance of its actions, which in fact is to render
-some portion of it weak. During a state of vigorous
-health the body is endowed with the power of resisting
-the influence of noxious agents, which in a
-less perfect state of health are capable of producing
-intense and fatal disease; and the action of all predisposing
-causes is to lessen this resisting power, or
-to weaken the energies of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>Of all predisposing causes, the most powerful is
-the continued presence and the slow operation of the
-immediate or the exciting cause. It is a matter of
-constant observation, that the febrile poison may be
-present in sufficient intensity to affect the health,
-without being sufficiently potent to produce fever.
-In this case the energy of the action of the organs
-is diminished, their functions are languidly performed,
-the entire system is weakened, and this increases,
-until at length the power of resistance is less than
-the power of the poison. Whenever this happens,
-fever is induced; not that the power of the poison
-may be at all increased; but the condition of the
-system is changed, in consequence of which, it is
-capable of offering to the noxious agent that assails
-it less resistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have seen that the vegetable or animal poison
-may exist in sufficient intensity to produce fever on
-the slightest exposure to it, without the operation
-of any predisposing cause, in a body in the state of
-the soundest health, and endowed with the greatest
-degree of strength. Examples of this kind are but
-too frequent in tropical climates. In countries where
-the temperature never rises so high, and seldom
-continues so long, it is rare that fever is produced
-immediately, on exposure to the exciting cause. Concentrated
-and potent as that poison is in many parts of
-Flanders, yet Sir John Pringle states that, in removing
-to an unhealthy situation, the men rarely became
-ill at once; that they generally continued in tolerable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>health for some days; and that recruits recently
-arrived in the country, resisted the noxious agent
-longer than the men who had been long there. Dr.
-Potter gives a remarkable example of the same fact,
-with regard to the yellow fever, which fell under his
-own observation, and states other facts, strikingly
-illustrative of the influence and operation of the
-predisposing causes. Strangers, from certain countries,
-he informs us, are insusceptible of yellow
-fever in America. In the most malignant and
-protracted epidemics which afflict that country,
-these strangers uniformly escape: emigrants from
-the West Indies, and other warm latitudes, for example,
-invariably resist the cause which produces
-these maladies in the native inhabitants. But the
-curious fact is, that such persons are unable permanently
-to resist the operation of the exciting
-cause; for, after a residence in America of some years,
-their constitution is so completely assimilated by the
-influence of the climate to that of the American,
-that they become equally sensible to its febrile miasma,
-and are as exquisitely impressed by them, as
-the American citizens themselves. The illustration
-is equally striking and instructive, if the position
-be reversed. The natives of northern climates
-are extremely susceptible to the influence of these
-miasma; that susceptibility is in exact proportion
-to the latitude of their country: those from the
-north of Europe scarcely ever escape an attack; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>natives of Great Britain are nearly as susceptible to
-the influence of the poison, while persons even
-from the more northern countries of the United
-States are more liable to the disease than the citizens
-of the southern and middle states.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dr. Potter performed some experiments, to show
-that the continual presence of the exciting cause
-not only operates upon the general system, but
-actually produces a morbid change in the blood,
-before it induces fever. During the prevalence of
-an epidemic, it was observed that, in all the cases in
-which the patients were bled, the general appearance
-of the blood was precisely the same; that the
-coagulum was either of a yellow, or of a deep orange
-colour, and that a portion of the red particles was
-invariably precipitated. It occurred to Dr. Potter
-that, if the cause of the disease were contained in
-the common atmosphere, the blood of those who had
-inhaled it a certain time would exhibit similar phenomena;
-and that, should this be the case, it would
-prove that the cause, before actually producing the
-disease, brought about a state of the system, which
-predisposed it to be affected by the poison. To ascertain
-the appearances of the blood in persons who were
-exposed to the febrile poison, but who still remained
-apparently in perfect health, he drew a quantity of
-blood from five persons, who had lived during the
-whole epidemic season in the most infected parts of
-the city. To external appearance and inward feeling,
-each of these persons was in sound health.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>Their blood could in no respect be distinguished
-from the blood of those who laboured under the
-most intense forms of the prevailing fever. As it
-was necessary to the conclusiveness of the experiment
-that their blood should be compared with the
-blood of those who lived in an atmosphere unquestionably
-pure, Dr. Potter selected an equal number
-of persons who dwelt on the hills in Baltimore country,
-and drew from each of them ten ounces of blood.
-The contrast was most manifest. The serum was
-neither of a yellow, nor of an orange colour; there
-was no red precipitate; the appearances were such
-as are found in the blood of persons in perfect health.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A young gentleman having returned to the city
-from the western part of Pennsylvania, on the 10th
-of September, in a state of sound health, Dr. Potter
-drew a few ounces of blood from a vein, on the day
-of his arrival; it exhibited no deviation from that
-of a healthy person. He remained in the family
-until the 26th of the month, that is sixteen days.
-On the 16th day the bleeding was repeated. The
-serum had assumed a deep yellow hue, and a copious
-precipitation of red globules had likewise fallen to
-the bottom of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these experiments, the blood in six persons
-indicated the operation of the morbid cause, while
-each remained in a state of apparent health. Of
-these six persons, four were actually seized with
-yellow fever during the prevalence of the epidemic;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>and the other two, though they escaped any formal
-attack, did not escape indisposition. They were
-affected with headache, nausea, and other indications
-of disease, like hundreds besides, who were never
-absolutely confined to the house, and who never
-took any medicine, but who still experienced in
-nausea, giddiness, headache, pain in the extremities,
-and so on, abundant intimations of the presence of
-the poison.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These examples may suffice to show how the exciting,
-may itself become a most powerful predisposing
-cause. The predisposition to subsequent
-attacks, after the system has once suffered from the
-disease, is very remarkable; that predisposition remains
-for a considerable period after convalescence
-and apparent recovery. Of this, striking examples
-continually occur both with regard to intermittent,
-and to continued fever. In fact, the disposition to
-relapse, remains until the constitution has recovered
-its previous strength and vigour, however distant
-that period may be. The influence of cold, moisture,
-fatigue, intemperance, constipation, anxiety, fear,
-and all the depressing passions, are likewise extremely
-powerful predisposing causes. They enable a less
-dose of the poison to produce fever, and they increase
-the intensity of the fever when it is established.
-They all act by weakening the resisting power inherent
-in the constitution, that is, by enfeebling the
-powers of life.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>Of the Treatment of Fever.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>We have seen that the first indication of disease in
-fever is traceable to the nervous system; that the
-nature of this primary affection of the nervous
-system is unknown; that it may possibly be the
-commencement of inflammation, modified by the
-nature of the nervous substance, in which the inflammatory
-action has its seat, and by the nature of
-the cause that excites it, namely, a peculiar poison:
-or, on the other hand, it may possibly be something
-distinct from inflammation, but having a peculiar
-tendency to excite it. In either case, the inflammation
-that is present in fever, is peculiar and specific,
-differing essentially from ordinary or simple inflammation.
-Whether the affection of the nervous system
-consist merely of inflammation of the nervous substance
-excited by a peculiar poison; or whether it
-consist of some unknown condition of the nervous
-system to which inflammation is superadded, and
-by which the character of that inflammation is
-modified, the great practical result is the same,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>namely, that febrile inflammation and ordinary inflammation
-are not identical, and that the difference
-between the two affections is such as to require a
-very considerable modification in the treatment appropriate
-to each.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The only morbid condition of fever, of which we
-have any knowledge, and over which the medical art
-has any control is that of inflammation. Although,
-as has been so often stated, inflammation be not the
-primary febrile affection, as far as regards the order
-of events, yet it is, at least, the primary affection,
-as far as regards the treatment, if it be not the sole
-affection that admits of treatment. The remedies
-proper for febrile inflammation do not differ from
-those which are adapted to ordinary inflammation;
-but they differ materially in the mode in which they
-ought to be applied, and the extent to which they
-ought to be carried. They can be understood neither
-in their mode nor measure, until the following questions
-are determined; namely, What is the precise
-object that should be aimed at in the treatment of
-fever? What is it which it is most important to do,
-and which it is in the power of the medical art to
-accomplish? An exact and true answer to these
-questions will afford an invaluable guide in practice:
-it will point out with clearness what is to be attempted;
-and it will put a stop to useless and pernicious
-aims.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>It is in vain to hope to terminate fever by a stroke of
-art. The pursuit of a remedy, so long and so earnestly
-sought, endowed with the power of cutting short
-the disease, is to the physician what the search after
-the philosopher’s stone was to the alchymist, with
-this difference, that the alchymist, engaged in a vain
-pursuit, lost only his time and labour; but the physician,
-engaged in a pursuit equally hopeless, will
-often, in addition, lose his patient. Fever cannot
-be cured instantaneously; and to bring a fever patient
-under the influence of agents capable of exciting
-a powerful influence upon the system, in the
-expectation of at once removing fever, is pregnant
-with danger; and the expectation upon which such
-practice is adopted, must appear fallacious to whoever
-has studied the nature of the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fever cannot be cured instantaneously: it may be
-moderated; it may be gradually subdued; from being
-violent and dangerous, it may be rendered mild and
-safe: the physician may bring it to this condition;
-and this is all that he can accomplish. If it come
-under his care early, and he know with promptitude
-and decision at what to aim, he will rarely fail in his
-efforts to secure this object.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Since the various forms or types of fever differ in
-nothing but the degree of their intensity, in detailing
-the treatment, it will be necessary only to state first
-of all, the remedies which are appropriate to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>disease; and, secondly, the modification of these
-remedies, which may be required by the different
-degrees of intensity in which it is commonly found
-to exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. The common continued fever of this country,
-in its mildest form, requires little or no treatment.
-There is no affection of any organ intense enough to
-need the application of a powerful remedy. All the
-organs which constitute the febrile circle are deranged
-in their functions, but that derangement is so slight
-that a cure takes place spontaneously in the course
-of a few days. Confinement to the bed; the abstraction
-of stimuli; fever diet; a calomel purgative
-at night, consisting of one or two grains of calomel
-with six or ten of rhubarb, followed in the morning
-with half an ounce of castor oil; and these remedies
-repeated every day, or every alternate day, constitute
-the whole treatment which is required.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Whenever the fever passes beyond this, its
-mildest form, it becomes a serious disease. It is
-never for a moment to be trifled with; never for a
-moment to be neglected. Because it is moderate
-in the commencement, it is not to be presumed that
-it will continue moderate through its subsequent
-course: it may become most formidable; if the proper
-remedies are not applied early and vigorously, it
-generally does become truly alarming; the train only
-is apparent; the mine is concealed; the only safety
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>for the patient is to prevent the train from being
-kindled; if that be once kindled, it may be no longer
-possible to save the patient from destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the mildest case of fever passes to a severer
-form, what is the event that happens? What is the
-change that takes place in the organs? The preceding
-pathology will, indeed, have been written in
-vain, if there can now be any doubt in the mind of
-the reader on that point. The great value of the
-facts there disclosed is, that they teach us what happens
-in organs which we cannot see, and declare to
-us by the external signs or symptoms, the internal
-actions that are going on. Out of the hundred cases
-which have now been recorded, and the history of
-which has been made known from its commencement
-to its termination, take any one, or fix upon
-any number, in which the symptoms from being slight
-became moderate, and from moderate severe, or, in
-which the symptoms were severe from the beginning,
-what is found after death? Inflammation, in general,
-rising in degree, and increasing in extent, or both,
-in proportion to the intensity of the febrile affection.
-If this, which may be justly considered as the law
-of the disease, be not absolutely constant and uniform,
-it may be safely affirmed, at least, that there
-are as few apparent exceptions to it, as to any general
-law that can be named.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The object to be aimed at in practice, then, is
-clear: it is to prevent, or to remove inflammation.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>Accomplish this, the fever will not be cured at
-once; it will still go on for some time; but it will
-come sooner to a close, and it will proceed mildly
-and safely to its termination. Fail to accomplish
-this, and the fever, however mild at first, will increase
-more and more in severity until it become
-truly formidable, and death take place at last, in consequence
-of the destruction of the organs by the
-process of inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If excitement be set up in an organ which has as
-invariable a tendency to terminate in inflammation
-as a stone to fall to the ground, what is the proper
-remedy to prevent the transition of excitement into
-inflammation? Bleeding. Before we can say that
-inflammation is established we may foresee that it
-will come: if the preceding excitement be not
-stopped, we know that it will as surely come as that
-blood will flow from a wounded blood-vessel. Because
-we cannot tell the precise moment when increased
-vascular action passes into actual inflammation,
-are we quietly to look on and do nothing until
-we have made that discovery? We know that inflammation
-is at hand; we know what will prevent
-it, or, at any rate, what has a powerful tendency to
-prevent it: shall we not bring into immediate and
-vigorous use our means of prevention, or shall we
-wait until the inflammatory action shall have given
-unequivocal and alarming indications of its presence
-and operation before we interfere? To trifle in such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>a manner, to lose these precious moments when we
-have such a fearful, such an active, and, if once it be
-allowed to become active, such a masterless enemy
-to contend with as fever, is as great a folly as it
-would be when a building is on fire to stand idle by
-as long as the fire is smouldering, and to take no
-measure to extinguish it until it has burst into
-flame, nay, not until the flame has spread from the
-floor to the ceiling, and from the ceiling to the roof.
-We may not be able to see a single spark, but if we
-see the smoke and feel the heat, we know that there
-is fire somewhere, and that however concealed at
-present it will soon make itself visible enough, and
-that it will consume not only the structure in which
-it originates, but others with which it may come in
-contact if it be not put out. With equal certainty
-we know that fever, though apparently mild in the
-commencement, will excite inflammation in vital
-organs, and that that inflammation, if it be allowed
-to establish itself, will place the fabric of the body
-in the most imminent danger. The physician, in
-the first stage of fever, armed with his lancet, is to
-his patient what the fireman with his engine, before
-the flames have had time to kindle, is to a building
-that has taken fire. At this early stage, the former
-can check inflammation with almost as much ease
-and certainty as the latter can prevent the flames
-from bursting out. On the contrary, the physician
-who is called to treat inflammation in the later stage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>of fever is in the position of the man who arrives
-with the apparatus for saving the house when its
-stories have been already consumed and its roof has
-fallen in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bleeding in fever cannot be performed too early.
-The very first moment of excitement, could that be
-discovered, is precisely the moment when the employment
-of this powerful remedy would produce
-the greatest effect. The earlier the bleeding, the
-greater will be the impression made upon the disease,
-and the less upon the patient; or, the more
-effectually will the inflammatory action be stopped
-by the loss of the smallest quantity of blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When inflammation has actually come on, there
-is then not a moment to be lost; that inflammation
-must be stopped; the accomplishment of this object
-is the great end which the practitioner should
-aim at in every thing he attempts; until he has
-done this he has done nothing; until he has done
-this he ought to give neither sleep to his eyes nor
-slumber to his eye-lids; until he has done this he
-ought to feel that there should be no rest for himself,
-because there is no safety for his patient. Until
-the inflammation is subdued blood must be taken;
-be the quantity it may be necessary to abstract, in
-order to accomplish this object, what it may; be
-the bleedings it may be requisite to repeat what they
-may; the vein must be allowed to flow, and it must
-be opened again and again until this object is secured.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>If this golden opportunity be allowed to
-escape, and this object be not obtained, the risk is
-most imminent. During this early period the physician
-is master over the disease; if he allow it to
-pass away without obtaining the victory, the disease
-becomes master over the physician. From that
-moment his control over it is gone. Never can he
-regain his lost advantage. Fever is a process that
-advances with a step as steady as time, and like
-time it never retraces a step. At a subsequent period
-its progress may be sometimes retarded, and now
-and then it may be weakened; but, after the lapse
-of a few days, this is all which the most complete
-success is then capable of accomplishing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mere relief of inflammation is nothing; to render
-a severe inflammation a less severe inflammation is
-to do nothing; because the less severe inflammation
-may be fatal just as certainly as the more severe:
-the inflammation must be subdued, or the case, if
-not wholly lost, becomes dangerous and doubtful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The abstraction of blood must be carried to the
-extent of subduing the inflammation: there is no
-other limit to the quantity to be taken but that
-which is adequate to subdue the inflammation. To attempt
-to measure the quantity by drachms or ounces
-is wholly vain; because, if the remedy be properly
-employed, the quantity will vary in every individual
-case. To take an ounce more than the subdual of
-the inflammation requires is injurious; to take an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>ounce less is still more pernicious; to take the quantity
-necessary to accomplish the object, and no
-more, is to use the lancet—that powerful instrument,
-so dangerous in rash hands, and no less dangerous
-in weak, with the discernment and decision
-of a master. He who with a knowledge which gives
-and which justifies boldness and decision, is able
-thus to employ this great remedy, is a skilful physician,
-who has derived from study and experience
-the best fruit they can yield: he who has not yet
-reached this perfection of his art, (and who among
-us can pretend to the attainment?) must still go on
-to observe and to learn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The object to be accomplished then is clear;
-that means of obtaining it are known; and when
-these means are promptly, boldly, and effectually
-employed, what is the result of experience? That
-after all, the quantity of blood it is necessary to abstract
-is not large. The tendency of the preceding
-observations is not to countenance frequent and
-large abstractions of blood in fever, but to save
-the blood of the patient, by taking the due quantity
-at the proper time. Smaller bleedings will subdue
-febrile than pure inflammation. Febrile inflammation,
-as has been so often stated, is a modified
-inflammation, the modification consisting in less
-activity in the vascular system and greater depression
-in the nervous. Whence a moderate bleeding
-will make an impression upon febrile inflammation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>which can be equalled in pure inflammation only by
-a large bleeding. He who takes away sixteen ounces
-of blood in fever adopts a bolder and more decisive
-practice, and brings more effectual relief to his patient,
-than he who abstracts thirty ounces of blood
-in some other forms of inflammation; and he who
-takes away six ounces of blood in one febrile case,
-does more than he who takes away sixteen in another.
-But the question never can be whether the
-bleeding should be small or large: that is nothing.
-The thing to be considered is the condition of the
-organs, the state of the system; not the ounces of
-blood to be taken, nor the number of periods at
-which it is to be removed. Abstract blood to the
-subdual of the inflammation—that is the rule; abstract
-blood at the very commencement of the inflammatory
-action; if you are in time to do it, at
-the very commencement of the febrile excitement.
-Then little blood will be lost, and the patient will
-be safe. And when this is done, nothing of importance
-remains to be done. The practitioner who
-has been thus active in the commencement will be
-idle during the future progress of the disease. Daily
-as he repeats his visit he will find that his interference
-is not required, and will admire to see with
-what ease a disease of frightful power is disarmed,
-and rendered innoxious, if it be attacked in infancy,
-and not neglected or trifled with until it be nurtured
-to maturity, and allowed, at last, to put forth unchecked
-the strength of that maturity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>If, after the abstraction of sixteen ounces of blood
-at the commencement of the attack, the vascular
-excitement be not completely subdued, in the course
-of three or four hours the same quantity must be
-again taken; and if, the next morning, that excitement
-continue, it will probably have already passed
-into inflammation; and, therefore, the vein must be
-once more opened, and the blood allowed to flow
-until the pain, wherever seated, be entirely removed.
-To check the disease, instead of subduing it, does
-not in the least diminish its future strength, and, by
-weakening the powers of life, it even hastens the
-period of mortality. Nothing is more common than
-the appearance of typhoid symptoms, on the second
-or third day after bleeding has done nothing
-but lessen the inflammatory action; whereas, had it
-been carried somewhat, and generally only a little,
-farther, the patient would have been convalescent at
-the very period when his danger becomes most imminent.
-In cases where general bleeding produces
-a decided impression on the inflammation, but does
-not stop it, cupping, or even leeches, will often complete
-what the lancet commenced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A due impression having been made upon the inflammation
-by bleeding, the subsequent treatment
-should consist of purgative medicines, given to the
-extent of producing three, or at most four stools in
-the twenty-four hours: beyond that number no advantage
-is obtained by purging; more frequent evacuations,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>indeed, weaken the patient, but not the
-disease. The best purgatives consist of one or two
-grains of calomel, with six or eight of rhubarb,
-repeated every night, or every other night, and followed
-the next morning by two drachms, or half an
-ounce of castor oil, or by the common senna draught.
-Cold sponging, if the skin be hot; acidulated drink,
-if there be thirst; perfect quiet, a dark room, a silent
-nurse, affording prompt attendance, with a noiseless
-step, a cheerful countenance, and no words—this,
-together with three tea-cups full of thin arrowroot
-or gruel, in the twenty-four hours, given in divided
-portions, at intervals of about two or three
-hours, comprises all else that will be required, or
-that will be useful, until the period of convalescence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such is the simple, but most efficient treatment
-appropriate to the common fever of London and its
-neighbourhood (and I do not speak of the treatment
-proper for any forms of the disease as it exists elsewhere,
-and which I have not seen) in its ordinary
-degree of severity.<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>Suppose, however, the proper treatment not to
-have been applied; suppose the case to have been
-neglected or mismanaged; either not to have been
-seen at all, or to have been too much contemned;
-suppose the pain in the head to have been not severe;
-that no complaint was made of it; or that giddiness
-only was felt; that the skin was not burning
-hot, but moderately warm; that the pulse was neither
-strong, nor bounding, nor hard; but of moderate
-strength, and soft; that the mind was tolerably distinct,
-and the restlessness not great: why should blood
-be drawn? what indication is there for the employment
-of so violent a remedy in so mild a case? No
-symptom is prominent; no symptom is urgent; the
-case will do well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such is the view that would be taken by the great
-majority of practitioners of this kind of case, and their
-treatment, without doubt, would be correspondingly
-inert. And this is the true origin, in many cases, of
-typhus symptoms; of adynamic fever. The disease is
-allowed to take its own course; and the product of
-every fever, at a certain stage of its process, is adynamia:
-the physician does not perform his office;
-the disease advances; the restlessness increases; there
-is no sleep; delirium comes on; muscular tremor
-begins to be perceptible; the pulse rises; the sensibility
-diminishes; and stupor, if it be not already
-present, is close at hand. And now the disease, it
-is sufficiently obvious, is severe; now, it is admitted,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>it calls for a powerful remedy; and, now for the first
-time, the lancet is thought of. But the bleeding
-relieves no symptom; it increases some; the progress
-of the inflammation is not checked; the adynamic
-symptoms are more fully developed; the
-patient is more prostrate, and the fever, in all respects
-of a worse character: the inference is, that
-bleeding is a most inefficient and dangerous remedy
-in fever; and this inference is deduced from experience;
-those who draw the conclusion, judge from
-what they see; they disclaim reason; they pretend
-only to understand and to respect the lessons of experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I appeal to the attentive observer, whether this be
-not a faithful history of the progress and termination
-of hundreds of fever cases; whether such a history
-may not be recorded as of daily occurrence; whether
-what has been stated be not commonly the view,
-the practice, the result, and the lesson.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I will not appeal to the different history that belongs
-to cases that are differently treated. But I do
-earnestly appeal to the pathology that has been
-stated; that, at least, is experience, and it teaches
-a lesson, which it is worse than foolish to despise or
-to forget. Every symptom just enumerated, has
-been detailed over and over again in the cases that
-have been laid before the reader: inspection after
-death must have made the conditions of the organs,
-as indicated by those symptoms, familiar to his mind.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>Of what avail can bleeding be, when the patient is
-brought into the condition which first excites alarm,
-in the case here supposed? The blood is no longer
-in its vessels; it is beneath the membranes, or
-in the ventricles, or at the base of the brain; the
-inflamed capillaries have done their work upon the
-cerebral substance and upon its membranes; and
-have left proof enough of their activity, in the
-thickening of the one, and the softening or the induration
-of the other. What can blood-letting do in
-this state of the organs? What can shaving the head,
-and applying cold do? What can blisters do?
-What can purgatives do? And above all, what can
-wine do? Nothing can be done; at least, nothing
-effectually or certainly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If there be still pain, if the sensibility be little diminished,
-if the pulse be not very quick and weak,
-it may yet be possible to check the further progress
-of the inflammation; to prevent the disorganization
-of the brain from advancing; but the means to
-accomplish this, must now be tried with the most
-extreme caution: perhaps, in the whole compass of
-medical practice, there is no case which requires a
-nicer discrimination than this, when it has arrived at
-this point. The abstraction of a few ounces of
-blood may stop the inflammatory action of the vessels
-before they have produced such a change of
-structure as is incompatible with life, and such as
-the powers of life cannot repair. But if the abstraction,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>even of this minute quantity of blood,
-at this point of the inflammatory process, do not put
-a stop to that process, the remedy will co-operate
-with the disease, to depress the powers of life, and
-will deprive the patient of what chance of recovery
-he might otherwise have had. To decide in a case
-which requires such nice discernment, and in which,
-even with the best discernment that can be exercised,
-the event must always be so doubtful, is a
-task which few physicians, who understand the
-nature of it, find either easy or agreeable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But instead of bleeding, the proper remedy may possibly
-be the very reverse: it may be requisite to afford
-a stimulus. The change of structure produced by
-the inflammatory process may not have proceeded
-to such an extent as to be absolutely incompatible
-with life; but the powers of life maybe so exhausted
-by the inflammatory excitement that, unless aid be
-brought to them, they will be overpowered, and
-sink: afford them appropriate aid, and they will
-rally, and, although slowly, ultimately repair the
-lesion which the organs have sustained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is precisely the condition, and perhaps it is
-the only condition, under which stimuli are really
-beneficial in fever. Whenever such remedies are
-indicated, the vascular action is weak, and there
-appears to be a want of due supply of arterial
-blood to the brain. Of all stimuli, wine or brandy
-is the best. If it be doubtful whether a stimulus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>can be borne, or will prove beneficial, a few ounces
-of wine may be administered. It will soon be
-manifest whether it be the appropriate remedy. If
-the restlessness, the heat, the delirium increase
-under its use, it will be obvious that it cannot be
-borne; if, after some hours, no perceptible impression
-be made upon any symptom, it is seldom of the
-least service, given to any extent, or persevered in
-for any length of time. If it be capable of doing
-any good, some improvement in the symptoms is
-commonly perceptible in a few hours after it is first
-administered. Sometimes that improvement is
-sudden and most striking; more commonly it is
-slight, slow, but still easy to be seen. If the pulse become
-firmer, and especially slower, the tremor slighter,
-the delirium milder, the sleep sounder, the skin
-cooler, and, above all, if the sensibility increase, and
-the strength improve, it is then the anchor of hope.
-It will save the patient if it be not pushed too far,
-and if it be withdrawn as soon as excitement is reproduced,
-should that happen, which it often does.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No certain indication for the administration of wine
-can be drawn from one or two symptoms alone: neither
-from the state of the pulse, nor of the skin, nor
-of the tongue; neither from the tremor, nor from
-the delirium. There is an aspect about the patient,
-an expression not in his countenance only, but in
-his attitude, in the manner in which he lies and
-moves, being, in fact, the general result, as well as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>the outward expression of the collective internal
-diseased states, that tell to the experienced eye when
-it is probable that a stimulus will be useful. Depression,
-loss of energy in the vascular system, as
-well as in the nervous and the sensorial, indicated
-by a feeble, quick, and easily compressed pulse, no
-less than by general prostration, afford the most
-certain indications that the exhibition of wine will
-be advantageous: and if the skin be at the same
-time cool and perspiring, the tongue tremulous,
-moist, or not very dry, and the delirium consist of low
-muttering incoherence, these symptoms will afford
-so many additional reasons to hope that it will prove
-useful. On the contrary, if the skin be hot, the
-eye fierce or wild, the delirium loud, noisy, requiring
-restraint, and the general motions violent, it is as
-absurd to give wine, as to pour oil upon a half-extinguished
-fire, with the view of putting out the
-yet burning embers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When wine is indicated, but does not produce a decided
-effect, brandy may be substituted. I have seen
-no benefit arise from giving either in large quantity.
-When the condition is really present in which alone
-it can be useful, a moderate quantity will accomplish
-the only purpose it can serve. In every other condition,
-wine may be administered to any extent,
-(and I have given half a pint every hour) until the
-stomach return it, by vomiting, without the slightest
-impression being made upon the disease, or any, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>scarcely any, upon the system. The malady is in
-possession of the seat of sensibility; it has destroyed
-the organ; it has abolished the function: what advantage
-can result from the application of stimuli?
-The spirit that could feel their impression, and
-answer to it, is gone: organs destroyed by overstimulation,
-cannot be regenerated by the application
-of additional stimuli: the apparatus is broken;
-the wheels are clogged; the obstruction lies in that
-part of the mechanism in which the main power
-that works the machinery is generated; that obstruction
-cannot be removed; the movements of
-the machine must cease. Even when the case is
-not thus utterly hopeless, wretched is the physician
-whose only dependence for the safety of his patient
-is in wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These considerations ought not to make us desponding,
-or inert, even under the worst circumstances,
-as long as the case is not absolutely
-desperate; but they ought to impress deeply and
-indelibly upon the mind of the practitioner who
-has the first charge of a fever patient, that the disease
-must be conquered in the very first days, or it will
-conquer, and that there are no means by which
-that conquest can be rendered sure or probable, but
-that afforded by the lancet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Very much the same observations apply to the
-exhibition of opiates. There is a condition of the
-system in which an opiate puts a stop to a state of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>exhausting agitation and restlessness; procures tranquil
-sleep; lessens delirium, and operates most favourably
-on all the symptoms. This may be when
-the skin is cool and perspiring; the tongue moist,
-or not very dry; the delirium low, and the pulse
-and the patient weak. No kind of opiate in any
-form in which it can be administered ever proves in
-the least degree beneficial whenever the skin is very
-hot, the tongue very dry, or the general motions
-and actions of the patient are violent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now and then the powers of life rally unexpectedly
-and wonderfully: they throw off a load which
-appeared to have oppressed them totally and for
-ever. It is therefore the duty of the medical attendant
-to be always at hand until the termination even
-of the most desperate case, and carefully to watch
-every change that takes place; for changes may
-suddenly occur which may give him a clue to bring
-in invaluable assistance. He may be suddenly called
-upon to give a stimulus; he may be suddenly called
-upon to check re-excited and inordinate action. To
-describe in words the countless variety of circumstances
-under which it may be necessary that he
-should take very unexpected and decided measures,
-and not a few of which may demand of him clear
-discernment and nice discrimination, is quite impossible:
-he can acquire the power of performing the
-most difficult and arduous duty he has undertaken
-only by studying the disease, and by rendering himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>perfectly familiar with the principle of its treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the inflammatory action has proceeded
-unsubdued and has terminated in some change of
-structure, probably accompanied with copious effusion,
-as indicated by the symptoms detailed under
-the cases illustrating cerebral affection, advantage is
-sometimes obtained by affecting the system with
-mercury. In this condition of the brain it is not
-easy to bring the system under the influence of mercury;
-when it can be accomplished, the patient is
-commonly, though not invariably, snatched from
-death. In several instances I have known this treatment
-successful under apparently the most hopeless
-circumstances. When the success is most complete,
-the convalescence is invariably tardy, and often
-appears to be doubtful; the mind for a long time
-remains feeble, infirm, and almost fatuous; and, as
-in the two cases recorded by Pringle, though such
-patients recover of their fever, it is long before the
-nervous and the sensorial systems are restored to a
-sound state. The best mode of exhibiting mercury
-is in the form of a pill, consisting of two grains
-of calomel with half a grain of opium, given every
-three, four, or six hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. To a fever which is severe from the commencement
-the preceding observations apply with double
-force. Then, if the most powerful remedies are not
-immediately employed, and if they are not brought to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>bear at once upon the severe symptoms in the completest
-combination, the case is wholly lost. The
-delay of an hour is pregnant with danger; the delay
-of a few hours places the efficacy of any measures
-that can be taken in great uncertainty; and the delay
-of a day or two renders their most vigorous application
-utterly useless. Whereas, knowing, as we
-now know, the condition of the organs upon which
-the severity of every case depends, and knowing remedies
-appropriate to that condition of sovereign
-efficacy, exceedingly few of such cases would be lost
-were these remedies employed with due vigour at
-the commencement of the attack. The typhoid
-symptoms with which it is commonly thought such
-cases commence would never appear. The patient
-would be convalescent, or at least would labour only
-under a mild form of fever at the period when, without
-these remedies, his condition would be hopeless.
-The practitioner ought never for a moment to forget
-that it is in the power of early and active treatment
-to deprive these severe cases of all their severity
-and, consequently, of all their danger; but that,
-after the lapse of a day or two, all human skill will
-be exerted in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It remains to say a word or two relative to the
-modification of the more powerful remedies, as the
-prominent affection may have its seat in the brain,
-the lungs, or the intestines.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>I. <span class='sc'>Of the Modification of the Treatment in Cerebral Affection.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The treatment in a cerebral case of moderate severity
-has been already sufficiently explained. Blood
-must be drawn to the subdual of the inflammation,
-and if blood be abstracted early, two, or at most
-three, moderate bleedings will be all that will be
-required.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But when the attack commences with severe cerebral
-affection, the bleeding must be proportionally
-large, and early as it is copious. A bleeding adequate
-to subdue a moderate, will be utterly inert in
-a severe degree of cerebral disease. I give, as a
-specimen of what may be sometimes required, the
-case of Dr. <span class='sc'>Dill</span>. I saw my friend at the very
-commencement of his attack, and was, therefore,
-able to carry into effect what I conceive to be the
-proper treatment with due promptitude and vigour.
-I saw him before there was any pain in the head,
-or even in the back, while he was yet only feeble
-and chilly. The aspect of his countenance, the
-state of his pulse, and the answers he returned to
-two or three questions, satisfied me of the inordinate,
-I may say the ferocious, attack that was at
-hand. Having taken an emetic without delay, as
-soon as its operation was over, blood was taken from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>the arm to the extent of twenty ounces. During
-the night, severe pain in the limbs, especially in the
-loins, and intense pain in the head came on. The
-blood that was taken on the preceding evening was
-not inflamed. Early in the morning he was again
-bled to the extent of about sixteen ounces, with
-great diminution, but not entire removal of the
-pain: the pain not lessening, towards the afternoon
-he was again bled to the same extent: the pain was
-now quite gone; the blood from both these bleedings
-was intensely inflamed. During the night the
-pain returned, and, in the morning, the eyes were
-dull and beginning to be suffused, while the pulse
-continued slow and intermittent, and the respiration
-suspirious; but the face was blanched, and the
-pulse, in addition to its other characters, was weak.
-Instead of opening the vein afresh, twelve leeches
-were applied to the temples; these very much relieved,
-but still did not entirely remove the pain; for
-this reason, he was cupped to the extent of sixteen
-ounces: this operation afforded very great relief, and
-he continued easy until the following evening, when
-the pain returned, and he was again cupped on the
-temples to the same extent. Immediate relief followed
-this second operation; but, unfortunately, the
-pain returned with great violence towards evening,
-and it was now impossible to carry the bleeding
-any farther. Within twenty-four hours, it was
-plain that typhoid symptoms in abundance would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>be present, for the fur on the tongue was becoming
-brown, and there was already slight tremor in the
-hands. No more blood could be taken with any
-prospect of advantage, nor even with safety; yet,
-without the aid of some powerful remedy the case
-was lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The whole scalp was now enveloped in ice, but
-so intense was the heat of the head that it was
-melted in a few minutes, and the clothes, steeped in
-the evaporating lotion, dried with extraordinary rapidity.
-Neither of these expedients produced the
-least perceptible effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What was to be done? Recourse was had to a
-measure the efficacy of which is but little known
-and less appreciated; a remedy the power of which
-is second only, if, under some circumstances, it be
-not even superior, to that of the lancet; a remedy
-which can never supercede the lancet nor dispense
-with it, but which, when added to it, forms by the
-combination a treatment so powerful and efficacious
-that it might render death, from the acutest cerebral
-inflammation, as rare as recovery is at present.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This remedy is known by the name of the cold
-dash. It consists of pouring a column of cold water
-upon the head in a continued stream from a height of
-from six to ten feet. The mode of applying it is as
-follows. The patient is seated in a large tub; a table
-is placed at the side of the tub upon which a man
-stands, and at as great an elevation as his arms can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>reach, pours upon the naked head of the patient a
-steady but continued stream of cold or iced water,
-from a watering-pot without the rose. The stream is
-made to fall as nearly as possible upon one and the
-same spot. At first the elevation must be slight, for the
-shock is too violent if the stream be poured at once
-from the highest point. There is a record, that in
-the East, where ingenuity so long laboured for tyranny
-to invent the most exquisite modes of torment,
-the victim was placed with his bare head under a
-small stream of cold water which was so directed as
-to fall unceasingly upon one spot. In this instance
-cruelty was cheated of its object by its ignorance of
-the mode in which its expedient operated. The
-device was well adapted to kill but not to produce
-pain, for insensibility must soon have put an end to
-suffering.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Employed as a remedy, there is no degree of burning
-heat which the animal economy is capable of
-producing, no intensity of vascular action, and no
-violence of pain that can resist its continued application.
-Sooner or later, usually in from ten to twenty
-minutes, the heat, though most intense, disappears,
-the skin becomes cold, the face pallid, the features
-shrunk, while the pulse is reduced to a mere thread,
-and the pain of the head, however violent and intolerable,
-entirely ceases. After the patient has been
-wiped dry, which he should be as rapidly as possible,
-and placed in bed, the symptoms may soon return
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>in all their violence; the same process will again
-remove them, and as often as the former recur the
-latter must be repeated. Three or four repetitions
-will commonly suffice to subdue the most intense
-cerebral affection. In the case of Dr. Dill, the relief
-it brought was instantaneous and most complete.
-From a state of intense suffering it rendered
-him perfectly easy, and from a state of imminent
-danger, safe. I had no anxiety about him from the
-moment he came out of his tub, although it was
-necessary to pass him through the same ordeal three
-times; but he himself having tried this remedy on
-his sister, having in her case witnessed its efficacy,
-and now felt it in his own, was extremely desirous
-that it should be repeated as soon as he was conscious
-of any return of pain. In consequence of its
-application, together with the copious depletion that
-preceded it, at the period when under ordinary treatment,
-the most exquisite typhoid symptoms would
-have been present, he was convalescent.<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a> If we
-consider how powerful the abstraction of caloric
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>must be by every fresh current of water that falls
-upon the head, to what a mere thread the minute
-external blood-vessels must be constringed, and consequently
-to what an extent the internal must be
-affected, we shall not wonder at its efficacy. Powerful
-as the cold affusion is when exhibited in its
-ordinary mode, yet the impression it makes upon
-the brain, compared with the effect produced by
-this remedy, may be said to be what the application
-of six leeches to the temples is to the abstraction
-of thirty ounces of blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cold applications to the head, and evaporating
-or iced lotions, are useful in mild cases; they may
-keep up the effect produced by this in the more
-severe, but to hope to control the latter by their
-aid alone, is to expect to coerce a giant, by twisting
-around his arms a spider’s thread.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Of the Modification of Treatment in Thoracic Affection.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c015'>Fortunately, there is a remedy nearly as powerful
-and efficacious in intense thoracic affection, as blood-letting
-and the cold dash are in the cerebral. In
-the severe bronchial affection of fever, blood-letting
-is of little avail. It seems to have scarcely any
-control over the peculiar affection of the lining
-membrane of the bronchial tubes, or even over the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>inflammation of the substance of the lung, which
-so often accompanies the intense form of thoracic
-disease. It weakens the patient, without making a
-decided impression upon the disease. Laennec states
-that the pathology of pneumonia could scarcely be
-learnt under his practice; for that he treated the disease,
-not by blood-letting, but by tartar emetic;
-and that all his patients recovered. I thought this
-one of the exaggerated statements in which medical
-writers sometimes delight to indulge; but it immediately
-occurred to me that this remedy might prove
-exceedingly efficacious in the bronchitis of fever.
-Its efficacy has surpassed my expectation. It seldom
-fails if exhibited with promptitude and decision.
-The mode in which it is most efficiently
-administered, is in doses of two grains, dissolved in
-an ounce of water, and repeated every second, third,
-fourth, or sixth hour, according to the severity of
-the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the slight bronchial affection, which is so constantly
-present in fever, nothing is required but the
-mucilage of gum-arabic, or a little of the almond
-emulsion now and then, with the tincture of hyosciamus,
-or two or three grains of the compound
-powder of ipecacuanha, to allay the irritation of
-the cough. The inflammation of the mucous membrane,
-when slight, spontaneously subsides.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>III. <span class='sc'>Of the Modification of the Treatment in Abdominal Affection.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>No remedy at all comparable in efficacy to the
-preceding has yet been discovered for the inflammation
-of the mucous membrane of the intestines,
-which forms so constant and formidable a part of
-the organic affection of fever. General bleeding has
-but little influence over the disease. If employed
-early and with due activity, it will prevent the affection
-from occurring, but, when once it has supervened,
-large bleedings are out of the question, and
-even small and repeated bleedings are not as effectual
-as leeches. In severe cases, the abdomen should be
-covered with leeches, and they should be re-applied
-daily, until the pain and tenderness are gone, or, at
-least, have become slight, for it is often impossible
-entirely to remove the tenderness. The abdomen
-should be covered with a poultice as soon as the
-leeches fall off. Afterwards, the application of a
-linen rag, moistened constantly with the oleum terebinthinæ,
-keeps up the effect produced by the
-leeches, and, when the affection is slight, may
-supersede their use altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the purging is considerable, five grains of
-the hydrargyrum cum cretâ, with five of the pulvis
-ipecacuanhæ compositus, given every night or every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>night and morning, often checks it; if this remedy
-fail, a stronger opiate may be exhibited, and sometimes
-an anodyne enema may be administered with
-great advantage. If there be constipation, one or
-two drachms of castor oil is the proper laxative.
-Active or irritating purgatives are highly injurious.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When blood is mixed with the stools or there is
-considerable hæmorrhage from the intestines, every
-thing that can irritate the mucous membrane must
-be carefully avoided. The mineral acids sometimes
-appear to check the discharge. The infusion of
-roses rendered stronger by the addition of a few drops
-of the sulphuric acid, is a convenient mode of administering
-such medicines, and the efficacy of the
-draught is sometimes improved by the addition of
-a drachm of the tincture of hyosciamus. It is not
-uncommon for copious discharges of blood to alternate
-with constipation. In this case the mildest laxative
-must be administered with caution. The powers
-of life are sometimes so prostrate, that three or
-four stools, excited by purgative medicines, are sufficient
-to exhaust them. A tea-spoonful of castor oil,
-repeated at intervals of six hours, is all that should
-be attempted. Now and then a stimulant has a
-greater effect in checking the hæmorrhage than an
-astringent, and then the oleum terebinthinæ is the
-best remedy.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>IV. We have spoken of a fever still more intense</h3>
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>even than this, severe as it is, under the name of the
-intensest form of fever. And of this, the same may
-be said as was stated of the mildest, that there is
-little or nothing to be done. As far as regards the
-treatment, the two extremes of fever, the mildest
-and the most intense, meet, for in the first no remedies
-are required, and in the second, none are of
-any avail. In these latter cases, there is no remedy
-and no combination of remedies yet known, capable
-of affording effectual aid. The abstraction of the
-smallest quantity of blood is fatal: the application
-of the cold bath is out of the question; the warm
-bath is inert; the vapour-bath affords rather more
-prospect of benefit; but the proper remedies, if any
-exist, remain to be discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When a person has swallowed a certain quantity
-of laudanum, there are remedies which are capable
-of counteracting the poison and of saving the patient.
-When he has swallowed a larger dose, provided it
-amount to a certain quantity, no remedies will avail,
-excepting the application of the stomach-pump.
-Unless the poison be promptly expelled from the
-system, adopt with the utmost vigour the best-concerted
-expedients which the medical art can supply,
-the patient will die. A person afflicted with the intensest
-form of fever, is in the condition of a person
-who has swallowed this large dose of poison. When
-a pump is invented, capable of extracting <em>his</em> poison
-from the brain, he may be saved.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>V. <span class='sc'>Of the Treatment of Scarlet Fever.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Little modification is required in the treatment
-of scarlet fever. The most important difference
-between continued fever without and with an eruption,
-is the greater predominance of nervous affection
-in the former and of inflammatory affection in the
-latter. Accordingly, in scarlatina there is not only
-a greater tendency to inflammation than in ordinary
-fever, but the inflammation which is set up
-in the febrile circle of organs approximates more to
-the character of pure inflammation. There is greater
-vascular action, with less nervous and sensorial depression.
-The consequence is, that blood-letting
-may be carried to a greater extent, and will be attended
-with still more decided and more certain
-efficacy than in ordinary fever. After a decided
-impression has been made upon the vascular excitement
-by general bleeding, the application of ten or
-twelve leeches to the throat is of sovereign efficacy.
-If scarlatina be treated in this manner on the second
-day, or sometimes even on the third, though it commence
-with exceedingly severe symptoms, yet the
-patient will be convalescent in the course of three
-or four days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not probable that much advantage would be
-derived from the detail of numerous cases to illustrate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>the modification of treatment, and the circumstances
-under which particular remedies should be chosen.
-A few are subjoined as specimens of the ordinary
-extent to which bleeding may be carried, and of the
-usual conditions under which wine may be exhibited,
-and of the results, when favourable, produced by
-each remedy.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CXI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Ann Hunt</span>, æt. 24, servant. Admitted on
-the 14th day of fever: attack commenced with shivering,
-succeeded by heat, nausea, and head-ache;
-until last night, has had no stool for five days. At
-present, no pain of head or chest; much pain of
-limbs; sleeps well; severe pain over the epigastrium,
-increased considerably by coughing and by pressure;
-tongue thickly coated with a whitish-yellow fur,
-through which the papillæ appear large and prominent;
-much thirst; no appetite; no stool to-day;
-skin warm; catamenia regular; pulse 135, of good
-strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>V.S. ad ℥xxvj. Haust. Sennæ Sal. quam primum.
-Acid. Mist. pro potu. Mist. Acet. Amm. C. 6tâ q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Pain of limbs quite gone; that of epigastrium
-also entirely removed; no tenderness on the
-fullest pressure; tongue more clean; less thirst;
-several stools; slept well; skin cool; pulse 84, soft.
-Blood in both basons very buffy. Cont. med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>16th. Continues quite free from pain; tongue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>nearly clean; two stools; skin cool, moist; pulse
-88. Pt. med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. No return of pain; tongue clean; pulse 87;
-four stools; skin natural. Pt. med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Sat up yesterday and the day before, since
-which the skin has become more warm, the pulse
-more quick, and the tongue more loaded, but there
-is no local pain, and the bowels are open.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Pains of limbs returned; slept ill; tongue
-loaded at root; pulse 110.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Pains diminished; pulse 100; tongue still
-furred; skin warm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Pains gone; skin cool and moist; tongue
-the same; two stools; pulse 100.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>28th. Tongue more clean; skin warm; pulse 76.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>35th. Convalescent. Inf. Case. c. Senna bis.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>41st. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CXII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Eleanor Welby</span>, æt. 21, servant. Attacked four
-days ago with chilliness, shivering and pain of head.
-At present, pain of head gone; mind distinct; little
-or no sleep; eyes suffused and injected; no uneasiness
-of chest nor cough; throat sore, with difficult
-deglutition; tenderness of abdomen on pressure;
-tongue loaded on body with white fur, extremely
-red at edges and tip; lips and teeth sordid; some
-thirst; bowels regular; pulse 129, of good strength,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>yet easily compressed; efflorescence of skin of dark
-red colour, approaching to a dusky hue. V.S. ad
-xvj. Hirud. viij. gutturi. Ol. Ricini, ʒiij. quam
-primum. Mist. Acid. pro potu.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. No uneasiness of head; slept ill; eyes suffused
-and injected; face swollen; still complains of
-soreness of throat, which is undiminished; tongue
-moist; teeth sordid; lips sordid and cracked; less
-thirst; three stools; pulse 120, firm; blood very
-sizy and cupped. Rep. V.S. ad ℥xiij. et Hirudines
-viij. gutturi. Pt. Med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Expression of countenance more natural;
-face less swollen; more sleep; throat greatly relieved;
-deglutition quite easy; no tenderness of abdomen
-on full pressure; tongue more clean and
-moist; lips and teeth less sordid; pulse 111; eruption
-less distinct. Haustus Sennæ Sal. c. m.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. No uneasiness of head, throat, or abdomen;
-sleep natural; tongue beginning to clean, much less
-red; pulse 114; skin exfoliating.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Has been gradually gaining strength and is
-now quite well. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CXIII.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mary Jones</span>, æt. 33, married. Three days ago
-attacked with shivering, succeeded by glows of heat,
-severe pain in the back and lower extremities, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>much head-ache. At present, pain of head severe,
-especially over the forehead; mind distinct; scarcely
-any sleep; no uneasiness of chest; some cough;
-abdomen tender on pressure; tongue not much
-loaded; some thirst; no appetite; one stool; pulse
-108, of some power.—V.S. ad ℥xvj. Ol. Ricini, ʒiij.
-q. p. Mist. Acid. pro potu.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Hora 3tia, p. m. Pain of head diminished since
-the bleeding, but by no means removed; much pain
-of back; some of abdomen; pulse 112, strong, full,
-sharp, and not easily compressed. Blood with firm
-and thick buff. Rep. V.S. ad ℥xvj. statim. Pulv.
-Aper. Mit. h. s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4th. After the second bleeding last night, the
-pain was entirely removed: she slept well, and the
-pain continued absent until this morning, when it
-returned with great severity, or rather violence.
-She was bled to the extent of fourteen ounces with
-immediate and great relief: blood in both cups with
-firm buff and proportion of crassamentum large: at
-present, the head is quite free from pain; there is
-scarcely any pain in the back; no tenderness of the
-abdomen; tongue loaded in middle with white fur,
-moist at edges, of natural colour; four stools; pulse
-120, weak.—Pt. med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. No return of pain in the head; that of back
-continues; slept ill; tongue much more clean and
-quite moist; four stools; pulse 120, weak; skin
-warm and damp. Omit. pulv. Pt. alia med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>6th. Pain of head returned with great severity
-last night, for which she was bled to the extent of
-four ounces with only temporary relief; no sleep on
-account of the severity of the pain; skin hot; entire
-scalp extremely hot; face pallid; nothing unnatural
-in the appearance of the eye, and no intolerance
-of light; pulse 120, sharp, but easily compressed;
-tongue loaded with white fur; thirst; four
-stools; buff on blood pretty firm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>C. C. ad ℥x. nuchæ. Camphoræ, gr. v. c. Extract.
-Hyosci. gr. iij. 6ta. q. h. Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. Lotio
-frigida capiti raso.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Pain of the head entirely removed since the
-cupping, and has not since returned; slept well;
-face continues very pallid; tongue loaded with white
-fur in middle; very pallid; pulse 120, of good
-strength; feels quite easy, but very weak. Cont.
-Pilulæ. Capt. Haust. Quininæ Sulph. 6ta. q. h.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. No return of pain in the head; some in loins;
-scarcely any sleep; tongue the same; four stools;
-pulse small and extremely weak. Pt. Med. omnia.
-Capt. Vini Albi, ℥iv. in dies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Free from pain in the head, back, and every
-organ; scarcely any sleep; much restlessness; delirium;
-countenance pallid and sunk; feels very
-weak; tongue the same; four stools; pulse 120,
-not so weak as yesterday. Pt. Med. Vini Albi ad
-℥viij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. Slept ill; much restlessness and delirium;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>frequent and deep sighing; severe pain in the lower
-extremities recurring in paroxysms; she says the
-pain is as if some one were rending her limbs from
-her; tongue white, moist; four stools; pulse 110,
-weak; takes and relishes her wine. Statim capiat
-Haustus Anodynus, c. Liq. Opii Sedativi, gtts. xl.
-Augt. Vini Albi, ad ℥x. Cont. alia med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>11th. Long and tranquil sleep after the draught;
-less delirium; no sighing; no return of pains in the
-limbs; mind perfectly distinct; “feels greatly better;”
-countenance much more animated; tongue
-the same; pulse 108, more strong and firm, but
-still easily compressed. Cont. Med. Rept. Haustus
-Anodynus hora decubitus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>12th. Slept well all night; “feels very much
-better to-day;” no return of pain; complains only
-of sense of lowness; pulse 96, weak. Pt. Med.
-omnia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Continues to improve in all respects.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Feels stronger; pulse 108, of good strength;
-occasional muscular tremor. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Continues steadily to improve. Pt. Jus.
-Bov. lbj. in dies. Vini Albi, ℥vj.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>23d. Convalescent. Omit. Med. Inf. Cascaril. c.
-Senna, bis.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>33d. Free from complaint. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this case bleeding was carried to the utmost
-extent to which it could be carried with safety, and
-rather beyond it; but it was one of those cases in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>which less was to be apprehended from the bleeding
-than from the disease.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Case CXIV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Frances Jacob</span>, æt. 17, destitute. Four days ago
-seized with nausea, vomiting, headache, and other
-febrile symptoms. At present, much pain of epigastrium,
-which is extremely tender on pressure;
-throat sore; deglutition very painful; much vertigo;
-scarcely any headache; no sleep; mind confused
-through the night; some pain of chest on full inspiration;
-cough, with viscid copious sputa; very
-considerable dyspnœa; aspect of countenance leaden-coloured
-and oppressed; skin warm, of a dusky,
-unhealthy red colour; tongue very red, not much
-loaded; bowels constipated; pulse 135, tremulous
-and indistinct. Abradat. Capillitium. Hirud. viij.
-faucibus externis. Postea Empl. Emoll. Empl.
-Lyttæ nuchæ. Inhal. Vap. Aq. Calid. Garg. c.
-Borat Sodæ. Ol. Ricini ʒiij. q. p. Pulv. Aper. Mit.
-h. s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5th. No pain of head; no sleep; mind confused;
-much low talkative delirium; still uneasiness of
-chest on full inspiration; throat less painful; deglutition
-more easy; dyspnœa and cough the same;
-abdomen tender; tongue unchanged; four stools;
-pulse 120, feeble and indistinct; skin covered universally
-with very unhealthy red, dusky efflorescence.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>Pulv. Aper. Mit. h. s. Mist. Camphor, ℥iss. c. Tt.
-Hyosciami, ʒj. et Ammon. Carbon, gr. x. 4ta.
-q. h. Vini Albi, ℥vi. in dies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Much delirium; some sleep; skin of same
-colour; rather more sensible to-day; says she has
-no pain of head, but sense of severe soreness all over
-her; much cough; four stools; pulse 120, weak.
-Pt. Med. et Vin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>7th. Slept well; less delirium; “feels much better;”
-countenance greatly improved; skin more
-warm; colour much more natural; throat still painful;
-deglutition difficult; some tenderness of the
-epigastrium on full pressure; scarcely any over the
-abdomen; tongue red at edges, brown and dry in
-middle; much thirst; three stools; pulse 108, soft,
-not very weak; lips and mouth surrounded with an
-herpetic eruption; skin not abraded, but covered
-with soft scab. Pt. Med. omnia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Slept well; asleep at present; no delirium
-pulse 108, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>9th. Still more improved; pulse 96, soft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Pulse 87; other symptoms the same. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>14th. Complains more of pain of epigastrium,
-which is considerably tender on pressure; other
-symptoms the same. Catap. Sinap. epigast. Pt.
-alia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>15th. Epigastrium much relieved; other symptoms
-the same. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>18th. Convalescent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span><span class='sc'>Case CXV.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Margaret Skey</span>, æt. 37, married. Five days ago
-attacked with sense of cold, shivering, and heat, together
-with pains in the bones. At present complains
-of pain in small of back; no headache; no
-pain of chest; some cough; no tenderness of abdomen;
-tongue white and dry; much thirst; bowels
-constipated; sleeps tolerably; pulse 112. Haust.
-Sennæ Sal. q. p. et c. m. Rep. Mist. Acid. pro
-potu.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>6th. Abdomen very tender; tongue red; four
-stools; much thirst; skin warm; face flushed;
-pulse 100, easily compressed. Hirud. x. abdom.
-Postea Catap. Emoll. Rep. alia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>8th. Much delirium through the night; considerable
-muscular tremor; pain of abdomen gone;
-tongue tremulous, but not much coated; much
-thirst; four stools; pulse 100, weak; frequent
-shivering. R. Quininæ Sulph. gr. ij. Aq. Rosae, ℥j.
-M. Sit Haustus, 6tis. q. h. sumendus. Jus. Bov.
-lbj. in dies. Rep. alia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>10th. No sleep; mind confused; two stools
-passed in bed; urine in bed; respiration laborious;
-pulse 90, weak. Alcohol (brandy) ℥iv. ex Aqua
-per diem. Pt. Med.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>13th. Slept better; less delirium; two stools not
-passed in bed; pulse 96.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>15th. More power; stools not passed in bed;
-other symptoms the same. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>17th. Strength again rather diminished; tongue
-rather brown; much thirst; pulse 100; no pain.
-Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>21st. Little change, excepting that the tongue is
-more brown, dry, and tremulous; pulse 108, extremely
-feeble; mind distinct; no delirium; two
-stools. Aug. Alcohol ad ℥vj.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>22d. Tongue less brown and more moist; pulse
-108, stronger; slept well. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>24th. Countenance much more animated; tongue
-more clean, quite moist, still brown towards root;
-pulse 110. Pt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>25th. Countenance still more improved; tongue
-more clean; no longer brown; pulse 102, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>26th. Much improved; tongue nearly clean; two
-stools; pulse 108, weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>27th. Gains strength. Alcohol ad ℥iij.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>34th. Convalescent, but still very weak. Cerevis.
-lbj. Pt. alia.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>45th. Has been gradually, though very slowly
-gaining strength; tongue now clean; appetite good;
-bowels regular (Low Diet); 2 ozs. meat daily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>52d. Dismissed cured.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>II. <span class='sc'>Treatment during the Convalescence.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>The management of the convalescence is one of
-the most difficult parts of the treatment and one of
-the most unsuccessful, not because there is any thing
-which requires to be done, nor because there is any
-disease which prevents recovery, but because the
-patient is considered as well when he is only convalescent.
-Of the great tendency there is to relapse
-during the whole of this period few medical men are
-sufficiently aware, and the unprofessional attendants
-on the sick are totally ignorant of it. For a long
-time the brain, the bronchi, and the intestines remain
-so irritable that the slightest excitement is capable
-of renewing the diseased action which has recently
-subsided; but without excitement of some
-kind, that renewal never takes place. It is the duty
-of the physician and the nurse to guard the patient
-from such excitement, which they may always do
-completely; so that whenever there is a relapse, the
-physician, or the nurse, or both must be in fault:
-as long as they perform their duty with judgment
-and firmness there is no such thing; but this part
-of their duty which is extremely simple, they cannot
-be induced to believe to be of importance: no one
-who has not seen death happen over and over again
-from the neglect of it will believe it, and even those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>upon whom melancholy experience has impressed
-the truth most strongly, constantly allow themselves
-to be surprised at the slightness of the excitement
-by which, and the advanced period of the convalescence
-at which relapse may happen. It is not easy
-for a nurse to resist incessant importunity and even
-reproach; and there are suspicions to which a physician
-is subjected, which, when he sees that they
-are entertained, it requires some moral courage to
-enable him to bear. Without doubt he deserves the
-worst that can attach to him if he allow the caprice,
-or the impatience, or the injustice of his patient, or
-any earthly consideration to induce him to swerve
-from the faithful discharge of the duty he has undertaken.
-The unreasonableness of the convalescent,
-should be considered and treated as the delirium of
-the preceding stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mismanagement of the convalescence consists
-chiefly in allowing the patient to rise too early from
-bed, and to take solid food too soon and in too large
-a quantity; and these are by far the most frequent
-causes of relapse. Were I to place on record all
-the instances I have seen of fatal relapse from these
-two causes alone, the list would be frightful. Many
-patients, the very day they become convalescent,
-think they ought to be allowed to get up. They
-feel well, they think they are so; they earnestly
-declare that they are so. They are impatient of
-bed; they imagine it keeps them weak: “if you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>would but allow me to rise how thankful I should
-be; how much more it would refresh and strengthen
-me than any thing that can now be done.” Such is
-the language which is constantly addressed to the
-physician in the early period of convalescence, and
-if he be weak enough to yield to it and allow his
-patient to rise, it is a chance if he ever rise again.
-The most cautious and experienced physician sometimes
-finds himself deceived, falling into the same error
-with his patient, and thinking him stronger than
-he is. Whenever this happens, the physician has
-great reason for self-reproach, <em>because he ought to
-allow no risk to be run</em>. Often, however, in private
-practice, the physician is allowed to have no control
-whatever over the management of the convalescence—he
-is dismissed as soon as the patient is out of
-apparent and urgent danger; dismissed hastily, often
-to be more hastily recalled to witness the death of
-him whom every one thought to be well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But if merely rising from bed at too early a period
-occasion the death of great numbers, eating
-heartily of solid food is a still more frequent and
-certain cause of it. The appetite is generally keen
-immediately after fever has subsided: if animal food
-be allowed as soon as the appetite craves for it relapse
-is sure to be produced. Often and often have
-I seen fatal cerebral and abdominal inflammation
-excited in a few hours after the commission of this
-error. I do not expect, by any language at my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>command, to communicate to others my own conviction
-of its danger. I know that such a conviction
-can be produced in no one who has not an opportunity
-of observing the convalescence of large
-numbers; and I know that no one who has such
-an opportunity can be without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There are three conditions under which this danger
-is peculiarly imminent. First, when the disease
-has been unusually severe and protracted. The
-more intense the fever and the longer it has lasted,
-the more are all the organs enfeebled, and the longer
-do they retain the irritability of weakness, In
-this state, anything beyond the gentlest stimulus
-will induce vascular excitement, which will rapidly
-pass into inflammation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Secondly, when the disease was severe in the
-commencement, and has been promptly subdued by
-active treatment. Whenever copious bleeding brings
-on a precocious convalescence, that convalescence
-is invariably uncertain and infirm. It is always
-steady as long as it is properly protected, but it has
-not strength equal to its apparent health: it is as
-tender and fragile as it is sensitive: the least noxious
-agent impresses it; the least stimulus overpowers
-it. The patient is suddenly relieved from a load
-that oppressed him; the organs react with preternatural
-vigor; they have enough to do to sustain the
-reaction of the system: stimulate them still further
-by animal food and wine, and they will be sure to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>over done; and this artificial excitement will be as
-fatal as the excitement of disease. It can be of little
-consequence to the patient whether he die of malaria
-or of chicken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirdly, when the disease was slight in the commencement
-and through its subsequent progress,
-but the convalescence proved tardy and imperfect.
-In this case, animal food and wine are pernicious
-and highly dangerous, and often prove more fatal
-than a severe form of fever. Nothing is advantageous
-or safe for such a patient but perfect rest
-and quiet and the blandest farinaceous diet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I have now laid before the reader all that I have
-been able to learn of this frequent and most formidable
-disease. I am conscious that some of the
-views which have been exhibited are opposed to the
-prevalent doctrines of the day, and that some parts
-of the treatment recommended must appear to many
-unnecessary and hazardous. But since I have suggested
-no doctrine which has not been deduced from
-a long and careful study of the phenomena, and recommended
-no practice which has not been derived
-from large experience, I trust that the former will
-not be rejected without examination, nor the latter
-condemned until its failure have been witnessed. I
-have opposed with earnestness, perhaps some may
-think with vehemence, certain opinions and modes
-of practice which I conceive to be pregnant with
-evil; but as I have never intended the slightest reproach
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>or blame to the advocates of the doctrines I
-condemn, so I shall feel truly grateful to any one
-who will point out any mistake into which I may
-have fallen. Those who have studied this disease
-with the best success are the most sensible how
-much remains to be done to render our knowledge
-of it perfect and our treatment of it effectual. Many
-are the dark spots that still remain upon this part of
-the field of knowledge; many are the labourers
-that must work long and skilfully before they are
-removed; while, if the successful investigation of
-medical science in general contribute largely to
-the well-being of man, the successful study of this
-branch of it must be pre-eminently beneficial. It
-is computed that upwards of one-half of the human
-race perish by this fell disease in one or other of its
-forms: when this fact is coupled with the truth disclosed
-by the annexed tables, which shew at what
-age this malady is most prevalent and fatal, we
-become duly impressed with the importance of
-labouring to render our knowledge of this dreadful
-disease complete, that we may lessen, as far as
-possible, the suffering of our common nature, and
-extend to its utmost limit the term of human life,
-too brief when most protracted, but constantly cut
-short by this great enemy of our race, just as adolescence
-is ripening into manhood.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The annexed Tables furnish, in general, their own
-commentary. The facts established by some of
-them are curious and important. I lay them before
-the reader without observation, at present; but I
-shall have occasion to return to them hereafter.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><em>Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for 1825.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='Meteorological Table'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Weeks.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Admissions.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Deaths.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Heat.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Moisture.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Wind.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' rowspan='2'>Weather.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
-
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>32½</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>964</td>
- <td class='c019'>685</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>966</td>
- <td class='c019'>755</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>763</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50½</td>
- <td class='c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>984</td>
- <td class='c019'>711</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>839</td>
- <td class='c019'>614</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West by North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>971</td>
- <td class='c019'>783</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South-West, WbN.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>870</td>
- <td class='c019'>820</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>962</td>
- <td class='c019'>659</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>932</td>
- <td class='c019'>538</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West, North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>966</td>
- <td class='c019'>658</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Dark. C. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>862</td>
- <td class='c019'>452</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>598</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>C. H. Dark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>807</td>
- <td class='c019'>347</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>41½</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>904</td>
- <td class='c019'>522</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>844</td>
- <td class='c019'>470</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>901</td>
- <td class='c019'>553</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. D. F.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>801</td>
- <td class='c019'>538</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>907</td>
- <td class='c019'>516</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South-West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>712</td>
- <td class='c019'>516</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>765</td>
- <td class='c019'>442</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>905</td>
- <td class='c019'>466</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>81</td>
- <td class='c019'>63</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>748</td>
- <td class='c019'>449</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. North. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>59</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>774</td>
- <td class='c019'>404</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>721</td>
- <td class='c019'>421</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North-West. South.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>800</td>
- <td class='c019'>472</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North-West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>84</td>
- <td class='c019'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>937</td>
- <td class='c019'>439</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>727</td>
- <td class='c019'>437</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>63</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>850</td>
- <td class='c019'>429</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>86</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>660</td>
- <td class='c019'>357</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>793</td>
- <td class='c019'>488</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>62</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>855</td>
- <td class='c019'>660</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>793</td>
- <td class='c019'>488</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>62</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>855</td>
- <td class='c019'>575</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>76</td>
- <td class='c019'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>971</td>
- <td class='c019'>635</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>61</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>949</td>
- <td class='c019'>598</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>770</td>
- <td class='c019'>554</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>63</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>971</td>
- <td class='c019'>749</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>968</td>
- <td class='c019'>700</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>937</td>
- <td class='c019'>717</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>935</td>
- <td class='c019'>749</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>935</td>
- <td class='c019'>652</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>937</td>
- <td class='c019'>618</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>924</td>
- <td class='c019'>627</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>57</td>
- <td class='c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>879</td>
- <td class='c019'>713</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>961</td>
- <td class='c019'>705</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>557</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>943</td>
- <td class='c019'>781</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>968</td>
- <td class='c019'>767</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>790</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>762</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>967</td>
- <td class='c019'>763</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>28</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>971</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>585</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>588</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>104</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><em>Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for 1826.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='Meteorological Table'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Weeks.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Admissions.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Deaths.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Heat.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Moisture.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Wind.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' rowspan='2'>Weather.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
-
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>968</td>
- <td class='c019'>794</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>33</td>
- <td class='c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>910</td>
- <td class='c019'>612</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>963</td>
- <td class='c019'>745</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>783</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>966</td>
- <td class='c019'>709</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>702</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>968</td>
- <td class='c019'>110</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1000</td>
- <td class='c019'>680</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>940</td>
- <td class='c019'>624</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>970</td>
- <td class='c019'>698</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>963</td>
- <td class='c019'>500</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Hazy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>57</td>
- <td class='c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>81</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>58</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>59</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>69</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>59</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rainy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>59</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>66</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-East. N-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>95</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>79</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>62</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>67</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>59</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>92</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>84</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>84</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Variable.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>84</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>North-East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Variable.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>59</td>
- <td class='c019'>79</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Variable.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>79</td>
- <td class='c019'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>91</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>88</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>93</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>91</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>88</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>89</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>76</td>
- <td class='c019'>96</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>South. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>96</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>98</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>98</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>82</td>
- <td class='c019'>97</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>93</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>93</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>82</td>
- <td class='c019'>98</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='c019'>99</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>98</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>34</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>N-East. N-East.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>110</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><em>Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for 1827.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='Meteorological Table'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Weeks.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Admissions.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Deaths.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Heat.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Moisture.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Wind.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' rowspan='2'>Weather.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
-
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>85</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>96</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>95</td>
- <td class='c019'>81</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>93</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>89</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>82</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>93</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>88</td>
- <td class='c019'>77</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>97</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>58</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>89</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>58</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>88</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>Variable. Variable.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>95</td>
- <td class='c019'>79</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>59</td>
- <td class='c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>94</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>88</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>90</td>
- <td class='c019'>73</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>71</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='c019'>73</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>77</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>79</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>Variable. Variable.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>82</td>
- <td class='c019'>70</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>76</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>82</td>
- <td class='c019'>68</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>84</td>
- <td class='c019'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>84</td>
- <td class='c019'>72</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>86</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>93</td>
- <td class='c019'>74</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>90</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>93</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>96</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. Fair. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>91</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. Fair. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>64</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>91</td>
- <td class='c019'>81</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. Fair. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>64</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>87</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>95</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>64</td>
- <td class='c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>85</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>89</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>57</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>99</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>92</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>83</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>96</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>97</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>97</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>31</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>87</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><em>Meteorological Table, with reference to Admissions and Deaths, for 1828.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='Meteorological Table'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Weeks.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Admissions.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Deaths.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Heat.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Moisture.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' rowspan='2'>Wind.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' rowspan='2'>Weather.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
- <th class='bbt blt c018'>Max.</th>
- <th class='bbt c018'>Min.</th>
-
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>96</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>99</td>
- <td class='c019'>85</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Snow.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>99</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>96</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Snow.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>57</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>94</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>76</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>62</td>
- <td class='c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>94</td>
- <td class='c019'>86</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>64</td>
- <td class='c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>92</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Hail.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>92</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>82</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>95</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>61</td>
- <td class='c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>94</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>97</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>80</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>92</td>
- <td class='c019'>85</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>90</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>98</td>
- <td class='c019'>78</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>94</td>
- <td class='c019'>77</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>78</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>96</td>
- <td class='c019'>75</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fair.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>96</td>
- <td class='c019'>79</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>79</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>100</td>
- <td class='c019'>91</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>77</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>72</td>
- <td class='c019'>66</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Cloudy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>73</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>66</td>
- <td class='c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West by North. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>63</td>
- <td class='c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>64</td>
- <td class='c019'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. North. N-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>44</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>67</td>
- <td class='c019'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-East. South. S-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Foggy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>74</td>
- <td class='c019'>63</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>East. South-East.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Rain. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>S-West. S-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>59</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. North-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c019'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>64</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. S. South-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c019'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>68</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>West. West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine. Cloudy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>57</td>
- <td class='c019'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>65</td>
- <td class='blt c020'>N-West. W. N-West.</td>
- <td class='blt brt c020'>Fine.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>52</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>0</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>36</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>69</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>S-West. S-East.</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>Foggy. Rain.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>597</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>81</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c020'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>Occupation of Patients, with reference to Susceptibility, for one year.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Servants</td>
- <td class='c022'>150</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Labourers</td>
- <td class='c022'>126</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Shoemakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>18</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Tailors</td>
- <td class='c022'>17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Fruiterers</td>
- <td class='c022'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Carpenters</td>
- <td class='c022'>10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Weavers</td>
- <td class='c022'>10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Bricklayers</td>
- <td class='c022'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Bakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Dress Makers</td>
- <td class='c022'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Painters</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Plasterers</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Sailors</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Printers</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Sawyers</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Butchers</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Porters</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Sweeps</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Chair Women</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Pot-boys</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Shop-boys</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Silversmiths</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Grocers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Furriers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Curriers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Woodmen</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Grooms</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Skinners</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Fishmongers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Gardeners</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Corkcutters</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Farmers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Braidmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Watchmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Cagemakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Guncapmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Blacksmiths</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Combmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Coppersmiths</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Firemen</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Distillers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Masons</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Cabinetmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Milkmen</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Saddlers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Ferulemakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Coachbuilders</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Mercers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Bargebuilders</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Cheesemongers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Sawmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Clockmakers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Upholstresses</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Poulterers</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Destitute</td>
- <td class='c022'>230</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c022'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c023'>Total</td>
- <td class='c022'>679</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>Sex of Patient, with reference to Susceptibility.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Sex of Patient'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' colspan='2'>1825.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1826.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1827.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1828.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>289</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>325</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>337</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>278</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>299</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>351</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>339</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>319</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>588</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>597</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>Sex of Patient, with reference to Mortality.</h3>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Sex of Patient'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' colspan='2'>1825.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1826.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1827.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c018' colspan='2'>1828.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>53</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>56</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>48</td>
- <td class='c024'>Males</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>33</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>51</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>38</td>
- <td class='c024'>Females,</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>48</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>104</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>110</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>86</td>
- <td class='bbt c018'>Total,</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c019'>81</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>Locality of Patient, with reference to Susceptibility.</h3>
-
-<table class='table2' summary='Locality of Patient'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c021'></th>
- <th class='c023'>Country Unhealthy.</th>
- <th class='c023'>Town Unhealthy.</th>
- <th class='c025'>Town Healthy.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Servants</td>
- <td class='c026'>12</td>
- <td class='c026'>31</td>
- <td class='c022'>96</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Labourers</td>
- <td class='c026'>0</td>
- <td class='c026'>88</td>
- <td class='c022'>48</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Destitute</td>
- <td class='c026'>0</td>
- <td class='c026'>43</td>
- <td class='c022'>50</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>Table of Ages, with reference to Susceptibility.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Table of Ages'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1825.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1826.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1827.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1828.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>42</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>31</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>67</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>87</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>70</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>172</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>170</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>163</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>136</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>133</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>143</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>164</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>107</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>81</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>102</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>107</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>46</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>47</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>37</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>50</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>45</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>28</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>21</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>14</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>588</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>676</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd brt c019'>597</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>Table of Ages, with reference to Mortality.</h3>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Table of Ages'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1825.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1826.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1827.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' colspan='2'>Age, for 1828.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>Under 10</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>30</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>40</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>45</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>50</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>55</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>60</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>65</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>70</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>75</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>80</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='c019'>0</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>85</td>
- <td class='brt c019'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c019'><hr /></td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c019'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>104</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>110</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd c019'>86</td>
- <td class='bbtd blt brt c018'>Total</td>
- <td class='bbtd brt c019'>76</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>
- <h3 class='c013'><em>Relation between Date of Attack, Admission and Cure, in 600 Cases.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Relation between Date of Attack, Admission and Cure'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Admitted on.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c018' colspan='2'>Dismissed on</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt brt c018' colspan='2'>Duration of Disease.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>1st Day of Fever</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>11th Day</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>11 Days</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>12</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>13</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>14</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>15</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>16</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>17</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>18</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>19</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>14</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>20</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>21</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>18</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>22</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>138</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>23</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>23</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>19</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>24</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>27</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>25</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>26</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>26</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>9</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>27</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>27</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>22</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>28</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>22</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>20</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>29</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>25</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>29</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>30</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>31</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>31</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>32</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>32</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>33</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>33</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>19</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>34</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>34</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>35</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>35</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>36</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>13</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>36</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>71</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>37</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>37</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>38</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>14</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>38</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>14</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>11</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>39</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>12</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>39</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>40</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>10</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>40</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>17</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>41</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>41</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>42</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>18</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>43</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>44</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>15</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>44</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>19</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>45</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>45</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>46</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>46</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>43</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>47</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>47</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>48</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>48</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>28</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>49</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>8</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>49</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>50</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>6</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>50</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>30</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>51</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>7</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>51</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>52</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>52</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>42</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>53</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>53</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>54</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>54</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>55</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>55</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>56</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>56</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>57</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>4</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>57</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>58</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>3</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>58</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>Unknown</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>21</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>59</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>2</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>59</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>60</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>5</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>60</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>62</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>1</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>62</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>Beyond 62</td>
- <td class='blt c019'>24</td>
- <td class='blt c024'>Beyond 62</td>
- <td class='blt brt c019'>24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c024'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c024'>Unknown</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c019'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c024'>Unknown</td>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c019'>16</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>Relation between date of Attack, Admission, and Death, for one year, comprehending 84 Cases.</h3>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
- <tr><th class='c010' colspan='2'>Admitted on</th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>3d day of fever</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>4</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>5</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>6</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>7</td>
- <td class='c022'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>8</td>
- <td class='c022'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>9</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>10</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>11</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>13</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>14</td>
- <td class='c022'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>17</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>21</td>
- <td class='c022'>16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>28</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>30</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>42</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Unknown</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c010' colspan='2'>Died on</th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>7th day of fever</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>8</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>9</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>10</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>11</td>
- <td class='c022'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>12</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>13</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>14</td>
- <td class='c022'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>15</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>16</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>17</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>18</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>19</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>20</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>21</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>22</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>23</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>24</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>25</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>26</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>27</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>28</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>29</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>30</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>31</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>32</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>33</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>35</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>36</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>37</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>40</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>41</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>42</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>60</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Unknown</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c010' colspan='2'>Died on</th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>1st day after admission</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>2</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>3</td>
- <td class='c022'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>4</td>
- <td class='c022'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>5</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>6</td>
- <td class='c022'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>7</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>8</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>9</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>10</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>11</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>12</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>13</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>14</td>
- <td class='c022'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>15</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>16</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>18</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>19</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>20</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>28</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>30</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>34</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>44</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>
- <h3 class='c013'>Proportions of Type out of 300 Cases.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Synochus</td>
- <td class='c022'>235</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Typhus Mitior</td>
- <td class='c022'>21</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Typhus Gravior</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Scarlatina</td>
- <td class='c022'>40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Intermittent</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Remittent</td>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>Proportions of Internal Characteristic Affection out of 300 Cases.</h3>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Cerebral</td>
- <td class='c022'>66</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Thoracic</td>
- <td class='c022'>79</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Abdominal</td>
- <td class='c022'>60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Mixed</td>
- <td class='c022'>95</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 class='c013'>Proportions of External Accidental Affection out of 300 Cases.</h3>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Erysipelatous</td>
- <td class='c022'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Glandular</td>
- <td class='c022'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Cynancheal</td>
- <td class='c022'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Herpetic</td>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Laryngeal</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Phlegmatial</td>
- <td class='c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt c021'>Rheumatic</td>
- <td class='bbt c022'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Miscarriage</td>
- <td class='c022'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>Preternatural Cutaneous Sensibility</td>
- <td class='c022'>4</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='c027' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>PRINTED BY G. HAYDEN, LITTLE COLLEGE STREET, WESTMINSTER.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Observations on the Treatment of Epidemic Fever, &amp;c. By
-Henry Clutterbuck, M.D., p. 3–9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Sydenham’s Works, p. 1, 2, &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Cullen, First Lines, S. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Pathological Observations, Part II. on Continued Fever, &amp;c.
-By W. Stoker, M.D. p. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Ibid. p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Pathological Observations, &amp;c. pp. 73, 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. A Practical Treatise on the Typhus or Adynamic Fever, by
-John Burne, M.D.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. Pathological Observations on Continued Fever, &amp;c. p. 110.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Practical Treatise, &amp;c. p. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. A Lecture upon Typhus Fever, by W. R. Clanny, M.D. p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Ibid., p. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of the Epidemic
-Fever, by Henry Clutterbuck, M.D. p. 5, 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. See a paper in the Medico-Chirurgical Review, for 1828,
-entitled An Eclectic Review on Fever.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. Broussais’ exposition of his own doctrine in his own words
-is as follows. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">On doit regarder comme nécessairement affectés,
-dans une maladie, les tissus dont l’irritation est constante durant la
-vie, et qui en offrent toujours des traces après la mort. Or, les
-phénomènes de la sur-excitation des muqueuses, et surtout de la
-gastrique, ne manquent jamais, dans le typhus fébrile, puisque
-leurs symptômes sont identiques avec ceux des gastro-entérites
-sporadiques; tandis que ceux des autres phlegmasies ne s’y montrent
-qu’accidentellement. Ensuite, lorsque les personnes affectées
-de typhus out le malheur de succomber, on trouve toujours
-ces membranes rouges, brunes ou noires, pendant que les autres
-tissus n’offrent d’alteration que dans certaines circonstances accidentelles:
-done l’irritation des membranes muqueuses est inséparable
-du typhus fébrile.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les typhus fébriles sont donc des gastro-entérites, ordinairement
-compliquèes de catarrhes pulmonaires; ces deux phlegmasies
-sont le résultat d’un véritable empoisonnement, plus ou moins
-analogue à celui des champignons et des poissons gâtées, et qui
-en a tous les caractères.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le foie, principal annexe du canal digestif, est irrité secondairement,
-et sa sécrétion est plus ou moins augmentée. Plus le
-miasme est actif, plus cette lésion est marquée le typhus carcéraires
-plus la chaleur est intense, plus l’irritation du foie est inflammatoire
-(la fièvre jaune.)</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le cerveau n’est inflammé primitivement que par l’effet de certaines
-circonstances qui ont fait prédominer l’action dans son
-tissu; telles sont les affections morales, la nostalgie, les chaleurs,
-etc.; mais il souffre toujours beaucoup par sympathie et quelquefois
-au point que son irritation passe au degré de la phlegmasie,
-et devient aussi grave que si elle était primitive.—<cite>Examen. de la
-Doctrine Medicale, par F. J. V. Broussais, p. 112–114.</cite></span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il n’y a de difference entre les gastrites qui sont ici dépeintes et
-ces fièvres, que celle qui dépend du degré; car les gastrites aigües
-qu’on ne peut pas arrêter arrivent toujours ou à l’ataxic ou a
-l’adynamic, dont les symptômes ne different pas de ceux du typhus.
-D’ailleurs, la gastrite dont il est ici question est déjà pour les
-ontologists, une fièvre ataxique.—<cite>Histoire des Phlegmasies, par F.
-J. V. Broussais, Vol. III. p. 39.</cite></span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of Epidemic
-Fever, &amp;c. pp. 11–12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Thus Dr. Stoker states that the remedies “may be arranged
-according to their relative importance in the treatment of fever, in
-the following order; viz. In mixed fever, 1. Cleanliness. 2.
-Ventilation. 3. Cool regimen. 4. Plentiful dilution. 5. Purgatives.
-6. Topical bleeding. 7. Antimonial or James’s Powder.
-In Typhoid Fever. 1. Yeast or barm. 2. Wine. 3. Aperients.
-4. Emetics. 5. Blisters. 6. Tepid or cold affusion. 7. Peruvian
-bark.”—<cite>Pathological Observations &amp;c., p. 111.</cite> In neither of these
-catalogues is general bleeding mentioned at all: in the first, topical
-bleeding is mentioned, but it is placed the last but one in the
-list, while in the second, allusion even to topical bleeding is wholly
-omitted. And Dr. Clanny states that the first proposition relative
-to the cure is how to restore sanguification, or how to afford fresh
-chyle to the blood; that although in full habits, at the commencement
-of typhus fever, general blood-letting is often attended with
-good effects, yet we should remember that if we take one ounce
-too much, we may thereby prevent sanguification altogether; that
-therefore it is better to have a sufficient quantity of lymphatic blood
-in the system them to run the risk of having too little of the pabulum
-vitæ, for the purpose of carrying on the functions of life, and
-that in fact venesection is not called for in nine cases out of ten
-of typhus fever. Let me caution young practitioners, he adds,
-against the repeated use of the lancet, when the buffy coat shews
-itself, for in many cases, which have come under my notice, I have
-observed the buffy coat to be present after repeated bleedings, <span class='fss'>AND
-WHICH COULD NOT BE ATTRIBUTED TO ANY OTHER CAUSE THAN DEBILITY</span>.—<cite>Lecture
-on Fever, pp. 21–2–3.</cite></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. It is remarkable that the word which expresses fever, both in
-the Greek and the Latin languages, signifies to burn or to boil, and
-it is probable that this state of the system is denoted in most
-modern languages by some term bearing a similar meaning.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. A Treatise on Fevers, &amp;c. By A. P. Wilson Philip, M.D.
-p. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. Treatise on Fever, &amp;c. By A. P. Wilson Philip, M.D. p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. Sydenham’s Works, Chap. 3, p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. Sir John Pringle on the Diseases of the Army, p. 66, &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. In scarlatina the affection of the skin modifies the febrile
-symptoms, as has just been said, considerably: in small-pox exceedingly.
-If, on this account, any one enamoured of nosological
-distinctions should wish to separate these varieties of disease, it
-might be done by dividing continued fever into—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c029'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>1. Continued fever without an eruption;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Synochus mitior, Typhus mitior,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>—— gravior, —— gravior:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>2. Continued fever with an eruption;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Scarlatina, Variola,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Synochodes, Synochodes,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Typhodes, Typhodes:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>and so on of all the Exanthemata.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although the eruption may, and without doubt does give rise to
-some peculiar symptoms and so modifies the fever, yet the true
-character of the disease, or <em>the disease as a subject of medical
-treatment</em>, depends entirely on the nature, that is in truth on the
-intensity of the fever. If, therefore, the Exanthemata can find no
-place under the genus fever consistently with the principles of
-nosological arrangement, it appears to me that these artificial
-distinctions ought to be abandoned: because it is better to reject
-nosology, than to overlook or to mistake pathology.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. Observations on the Prevention and Treatment of Epidemic
-Fever, by Henry Clutterbuck, M.D. p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. See pathology—chest cases. John Potter.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. See page <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. See page <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. See page <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. Those morbid appearances which, not being constant in fever,
-must be considered as accidental, are placed in brackets throughout
-this chapter.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. See Case L.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. See page <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>. et seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Observations on the Diseases of the Army, by Sir John
-Pringle, Bart., p. 11. et seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. Observations on the Diseases of the Army, by Sir John
-Pringle, Bart., p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. See a Memoir on Contagion, more especially as it respects
-the Yellow Fever, &amp;c., by N. Potter, M.D., Baltimore.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. In pursuing these researches, I hope to have the advantage of
-the co-operation of my friend Dr. Dill.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. It would be trifling, while treating of so momentous a subject
-as the proper management of fever, which requires the prompt,
-vigorous, and yet cautious exhibition of the most powerful remedies,
-to spend any time in discussing the merits of saline, refrigerant,
-diaphoretic, antimonial medicines, and the rest of the
-apparatus, which unfortunately continues to hold the place of direct,
-honourable, and well-earned (if any thing can be well-earned)
-remuneration to the practitioner.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Watchful of the convalescence as experience had taught us
-it is necessary to be after so severe an attack, still he was allowed
-to put himself too forward. When to all appearance recovered,
-though still weak, he undertook a journey of fifty miles, that he
-might the more completely re-establish his health in the country.
-He had not arrived at his journey’s end an hour before he relapsed.
-He was again bled, and the cold dash was applied a second time
-with success. From the commencement to the termination of the
-disease, 120 pounds of blood were abstracted in this case.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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