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Hippocrates
Aphorisms

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


18a-proce | procr-yawni

    Section
1 VII| upon insomnolency is bad.~18a. Trembling upon lethargus 2 VII| it is a mortal symptom.~59a. In the case of a person 3 VII| involuntarily, it is a bad.~84. When in quartan fevers 4 VII| nostrils it is a bad symptom.~85. Sweats are dangerous when 5 VII| squeezing (affliction?).~86. In a chronic disease an 6 VII| from the bowels is bad.~87. Those diseases which medicines 7 VII| and the patient not be able to swallow, except with 8 III| should be in spring, have abortions from any slight cause; and 9 I | periodical paroxysms, but abstract from the accustomed allowance 10 VII| product of black bile; if abundant, of more copious, and if 11 III| people dyspnoea, catarrhs accompanied with coughs, dysuria, pains 12 IV | and the other symptoms accordingly.~72. When the urine is transparent 13 II | commencement, and afterward acquire a good appetite, get better 14 III| round worms, ascarides, acrochordon, satyriasmus, struma, and 15 IV | you wish the hellebore to act more, move the body, and 16 IV | no thirst while under the action of a purgative medicine, 17 II | case it is dangerous to administer purgatives.~36. Persons 18 I | most sustenance is to be administered; for as the belly has then 19 IV | dog-days, and before it, the administration of purgatives is unsuitable.~ 20 I | fasting most easily; next, adults; young persons not nearly 21 III| 27. To persons of a more advanced age, and now on the verge 22 IV | the body as it would be advantageous had they come away spontaneously; 23 II | be bilious, the disease affects the general system; but 24 VI | in the case of a person afflicted with hiccup, removes the 25 VII| and prolonged squeezing (affliction?).~86. In a chronic disease 26 V | generally improved by a copious affusion of cold water, which reduces 27 III| phymata), but especially the aforesaid.~27. To persons of a more 28 II | not regular, nor be much afraid of bad symptoms which occur 29 II | at the commencement, and afterward acquire a good appetite, 30 II | worse, for the bowels in aged persons are usually dried 31 III| bowels, pinches the eyes, and aggravates any previous pain which 32 III| the body, giving it tone, agility, and color, improves the 33 II | 37. Purgative medicines agree ill with persons in good 34 V | all these cases heat is agreeable, and brings matters to a 35 III| be northerly and dry, it agrees well with persons of a humid 36 I | but previously we must allow a more generous diet to 37 I | not the case, but it is allowable to give a more generous 38 I | abstract from the accustomed allowance before the crisis.~20. When 39 VII| When the dejections are allowed to stand and not shaken, 40 | alone 41 III| cough, leprosy, lichen alphos, exanthemata mostly ending 42 I | they occur every day, every alternate day, or after a longer period, 43 IV | body, and if the body be alternately cold and hot, or if one 44 II | In fevers which are not altogether slight, it is a bad symptom 45 | always 46 VII| A woman does not become ambidexterous.~44. When empyema is treated 47 II | 27. We should not trust ameliorations in diseases when they are 48 IV | induces convulsion.~17. Anorexia, heartburn, vertigo, and 49 V | in the posterior than the anterior side of the body, as from 50 V | in herpes exedens, of the anus, the privy parts, the womb, 51 VII| and the patient dies.~56. Anxiety, yawning, rigor,-wine drunk 52 | anywhere 53 III| little and new-born children, aphthae, vomiting, coughs, sleeplessness, 54 VII| part of the body become apoplectic, the affection is of a melancholic 55 III| mortifications, epilepsies, apoplexies, and quinsies; and in dry, 56 IV | occur, death is at hand.~50. Apostemes in fevers which are not 57 VI | disease.~11. Hemorrhoids appearing in melancholic and nephritic 58 IV | same mode of reasoning, applying the opposite rule to melancholic 59 VII| they recover.~51. Sneezing arises from the head, owing to 60 VI | the internal veins of the arm.~37. It is a good symptom 61 V | of the body, as from the arms and thighs; the skin there 62 V | drinking.~28. Fumigation with aromatics promotes menstruation, and 63 | around 64 I | Section I~Life is short, and Art long; the crisis fleeting; 65 II | persons in good health.~38. An article of food or drink which is 66 I | not, the contrary. And so artificial evacuations, if they consist 67 III| calculus, round worms, ascarides, acrochordon, satyriasmus, 68 VII| fever, if the neck be turned aside, and the patient cannot 69 V | the foetus, but are broken asunder.~46. Such women as are immoderately 70 V | the lungs.~14. Diarrhoea attacking a person affected with phthisis 71 II | had frequent and severe attacks of swooning, without any 72 I | those cases, then, which attain their acme speedily, a restricted 73 VI | fever come on.~52. We must attend to the appearances of the 74 I | to make the patient, the attendants, and externals cooperate.~ 75 II | phymata) form on the body, attention must paid to the secretions; 76 IV | symptom.~23. In persons attenuated from any disease, whether 77 I | and therefore an extremely attenuating diet must be used. When 78 I | to the extreme point of attenuation is dangerous; and repletion, 79 II | short duration; but the autumnal are protracted, especially 80 VI | drinking pure wine, or the bath, or a fomentation, or venesection, 81 VII| undiluted wine, plenteous bathing with hot water, and venesection.~ 82 IV | is turbid, like that of a beast of burden, in such a case 83 II | chronic diseases which do befall them generally never leave 84 I | 16. A humid regimen is befitting in all febrile diseases, 85 | beginning 86 | behind 87 III| most comfortable, and enjoy best health; in summer and during 88 VII| evacuations upward, you must bind the belly; and if you wish 89 IV | heartburn, vertigo, and a bitter taste of the mouth, in a 90 V | not end in suppuration, blackens, produces febrile rigors, 91 V | having wrapped her up in blankets, fumigate below, and if 92 VI | convulsion, or madness, or blindness.~57. Persons are most subject 93 V | because the epiploon (fat?) blocks up the mouth of the womb, 94 VII| Stupor or delirium from a blow on the head is bad.~15. 95 III| chronic.~29. To persons past boyhood, haemoptysis, phthisis, 96 III| that which is northerly, braces the body, giving it tone, 97 V | it in forty days from the breaking of it, escape the disease; 98 VI | laid down speechless, and breathe with stertor, they die in 99 VI | are not easily healed.~9. Broad exanthemata are not very 100 V | weight of the foetus, but are broken asunder.~46. Such women 101 VII| disorder in the body.~34. When bubbles settle on the surface of 102 IV | fevers complicated with buboes are bad, except ephemerals.~ 103 II | without any diminution of bulk, or to be wasted beyond 104 IV | like that of a beast of burden, in such a case there either 105 IV | cold, but the internal be burnt up, and if there be thirst, 106 VII| is filled with water and bursts into the epiploon, in this 107 III| nephritis, vertigo, apoplexy, cachexia, pruritus of the whole body, 108 VI | treatment in cases of occult cancer; for, if treated, the patients 109 III| especially when cutting the canine teeth, and in those who 110 IV | heat about the stomach and cardialgia are bad symptoms in fevers.~ 111 IV | bowels become disordered, it carries off the disease.~61. In 112 I | borne. And when proper to carry the evacuation to deliquium 113 III| nose, dimness of sight, cataract (glaucoma), and dullness 114 VII| on in a case of pregnancy causes abortion.~28. Whatever piece 115 VI | maimed, unless the part be cauterized.~ 116 VII| passage into either of the cavities, the disease will be carried 117 IV | and in all cases deafness ceases when bilious discharges 118 IV | supervening in a case of the fever ceasing, is bad, for the disease 119 VI | in the head, with intense cephalalgia, pus or water running from 120 VI | flow rapidly all at once, certainly prove fatal.~28. Eunuchs 121 IV | hemorrhage from whatever channel, the bowels are in a loose 122 IV | excretions take place by these channels, it is bad.~48. In fevers 123 VII| vomiting, are bad.~4. A chill supervening on a sweat is 124 III| fevers, chronic diarrhoea, cholera, dysentery, lientery, hemorrhoids.~ 125 VI | exfoliation of bone, and the cicatrices are hollow.~46. Such persons 126 I | and not without proper circumspection.~25. If the matters which 127 II | 10. Bodies not properly cleansed, the more you nourish the 128 V | after pleurisy, if they get clear of it in forty days from 129 V | heavy smell when poured upon coals, and if the hairs of the 130 VII| case it is situated in the coats of the liver;) but if it 131 VII| less when the disease is cognate to the constitution and 132 VI | gout until he indulges in coition.~31. Pains of the eyes are 133 V | it is not heated so as to collect in its proper place (seminal 134 VII| deficient, of less copious collections of it.~70. The sputa in 135 III| to them in age are most comfortable, and enjoy best health; 136 II | succeeding night generally more comfortably.~14. In fluxes of the bowels, 137 V | the uterus cold and dense (compact?) do not conceive; and those 138 I | intervals. Something must be conceded to habit, to season, to 139 IV | cases of fever very viscid concretions form about the teeth, the 140 VII| carried off.~58. In cases of concussion of the brain produced by 141 VII| filled with humors; the air confined in it then is discharged, 142 V | Such parts as have been congealed should be heated, except 143 VI | eyelids, and if this be not connected with diarrhaea or severe 144 I | such a diet.~17. We must consider, also, in which cases food 145 VI | moris.~5. It deserves to be considered whether the pains in the 146 I | artificial evacuations, if they consist of such matters as should 147 V | subsaguineous color, and consisting of fresh blood, in these 148 VII| copious sweat, hot or cold, constantly flowing, indicates a superabundance 149 III| particularly fat, and have constipated bowels.~26. To persons somewhat 150 VII| of them, when immoderate, constitute disease.~73. In fevers which 151 III| cases melancholy.~15. Of the constitutions of the year, the dry, upon 152 III| coryzae, and in some cases consumptions.~14. But if the autumn be 153 III| and quinsies; and in dry, consumptive diseases, ophthalmies, arthritic 154 III| summer, certain of these, and continued, ardent, and tertian fevers, 155 IV | whether hot or cold, flowing continuously, indicates, the cold a greater, 156 II | diseases are cured by their contraries.~23. Acute disease come 157 IV | in a loose state during convalescence.~28. In all cases whatever, 158 IV | those of the jaws.~32. In convalescents from diseases, if any part 159 V | his speech, he will die convulsed, unless fever come on, or 160 II | evacuate, fill up, heat, cool, or otherwise, move the 161 V | quickly heated and quickly cooled.~27. When persons have intense 162 I | attendants, and externals cooperate.~2. In disorders of the 163 VI | must necessarily become corrupted.~21. In maniacal affections, 164 V | any obvious cause, their cotyledones are filled with mucosity, 165 VII| Delirium upon division of the cranium, if it penetrate into the 166 VII| when they do not occur on critical days, when they are strong, 167 V | woman, apply as large a cupping instrument as possible to 168 III| diarrhoea, especially when cutting the canine teeth, and in 169 II | insensibility, but not quite dead, those do not recover who 170 V | when the consequences of a debauch pass off.~6. Such persons 171 IV | seize a person already much debilitated, it is mortal.~47. In fevers 172 I | experience perilous, and decision difficult. The physician 173 VII| of more copious, and if deficient, of less copious collections 174 V | the pain; for a moderate degree of numbness removes pain.~ 175 I | should be reduced without delay, that the body may again 176 V | understanding, hemorrhages, deliquia, and, along with these, 177 III| northerly, women whose term of delivery should be in spring, have 178 V | have the uterus cold and dense (compact?) do not conceive; 179 V | semen, or, owing to its density, the fluid (semen?) does 180 III| 25. At the approach of dentition, pruritus of the gums, fevers, 181 I | more generous diet, we may depart as far from the severity 182 VII| the skin?) if the body has departed slightly from its natural 183 VI | seed watery, have rather a deranged state of health; but those 184 VI | hair, are mali moris.~5. It deserves to be considered whether 185 V | if they can sleep off the desire of drinking.~28. Fumigation 186 VI | venesection.~23. If a fright or despondency lasts for a long time, it 187 VI | melancholic affections, determinations of the humor which occasions 188 VI | this be not connected with diarrhaea or severe purging, it is 189 | did 190 VII| with water and the patient dies.~56. Anxiety, yawning, rigor,- 191 VI | and in the other parts, differ much from one another.~6. 192 I | transgressions of it more difficultly. For this reason, a slender 193 II | body to remain without any diminution of bulk, or to be wasted 194 V | delirium, but when these disappear suddenly, if situated behind, 195 VII| becomes divided there is great disorder in the body.~34. When bubbles 196 V | the body, the pneuma is dissipated outwardly, so as not to 197 II | accustomed to, usually give less disturbance; but a change must sometimes 198 VII| which the urine becomes divided there is great disorder 199 VII| is bad.~24. Delirium upon division of the cranium, if it penetrate 200 IV | 5. About the time of the dog-days, and before it, the administration 201 II | thing to another.~52. When doing everything according to 202 II | aged persons are usually dried up.~54. Largeness of person 203 III| Acute diseases occur in droughts; and if the summer be particularly 204 VII| Anxiety, yawning, rigor,-wine drunk with an equal proportion 205 V | hypercatharsis is bad.~5. If a drunken person suddenly lose his 206 II | very fat are apt to die earlier than those who are slender.~ 207 II | more you injure.~11. It is easier to fill up with drink than 208 II | attack of apoplexy, and not easy to remove a weak attack.~ 209 VII| Dysentery, or dropsy, or ecstacy coming on madness is good.~ 210 V | produces the following bad effects on those who use it frequently: 211 V | of it. It is particularly efficacious in fractures of the bones, 212 V | occurs between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five years.~10. 213 II | indicative of the seventh; the eighth is the commencement of the 214 VI | which spread down to the elbows are removed by venesection.~ 215 | else 216 | ending 217 V | those who use it frequently: enervation of the fleshy parts, impotence 218 III| changes of the season mostly engender diseases, and in the seasons 219 I | spring.~19. Neither give nor enjoin anything to persons during 220 I | restricted diet should be enjoined at first; but in those cases 221 III| are most comfortable, and enjoy best health; in summer and 222 III| quartan, and irregular fevers, enlarged spleen, dropsy, phthisis, 223 VI | purged in spring.~48. In enlargement of the spleen, it is a good 224 IV | with buboes are bad, except ephemerals.~56. Sweat supervening in 225 III| bowels, mortifications, epilepsies, apoplexies, and quinsies; 226 III| maniacal, melancholic, and epileptic disorders, bloody flux, 227 III| more chronic fevers, and epistaxis.~28. Young people for the 228 VII| rigor,-wine drunk with an equal proportion of water, removes 229 I | fevers in old persons are not equally acute, because their bodies 230 VI | certainly prove fatal.~28. Eunuchs do not take the gout, nor 231 | everything 232 V | bad wounds, it is a great evil.~67. In such cases, the 233 I | during the paroxysms.~12. The exacerbations and remissions will be indicated 234 I | supervening symptoms; as, for example, in pleuritic cases, expectoration, 235 VII| must proceed from violence, excess of pain, and prolonged squeezing ( 236 IV | But if none of the proper excretions take place by these channels, 237 V | ulcers from cold; in herpes exedens, of the anus, the privy 238 I | during paroxysms, for to exhibit food would be injurious. 239 IV | of the intermittent type, expectorations which are livid bloody, 240 I | long; the crisis fleeting; experience perilous, and decision difficult. 241 V | of those which have been exposed, and most especially in 242 VII| bad.~19. Erysipelas upon exposure of a bone (is bad?).~20. 243 V | side.~49. To procure the expulsion of the secundines, apply 244 I | patient, the attendants, and externals cooperate.~2. In disorders 245 IV | intermittent type, if a lip, an eye-brow, an eye, or the nose, be 246 VI | seen between the closed eyelids, and if this be not connected 247 I | most food. The well-known facts with regard to young persons 248 VI | Ulcers, attended with a falling off of the hair, are mali 249 I | generous diet, we may depart as far from the severity of regimen 250 VII| head.~31. When there is a farinaceous sediment in the urine during 251 VII| the scum on the surface is fatty and copious, it indicates 252 III| away about puberty, or in females about the commencement of 253 V | these temperaments prove fertile.~63. And in like manner 254 II | palatable.~39. Old have fewer complaints than young; but 255 IV | they set in on the third, fifth, seventh, ninth, eleventh, 256 VII| and occasions pain, as not finding a passage into either of 257 V | weak; but if the breasts be firm, it indicates that the foetus 258 IV | illness, there the disease fixes.~34. If a person laboring 259 I | fuel, as it were, to the flame, for it would be extinguished 260 V | are not very subject to flatulence.~ 261 IV | there be an eruption of flatus or a copious evacuation 262 I | and Art long; the crisis fleeting; experience perilous, and 263 II | should put the body into a fluent state.~10. Bodies not properly 264 V | owing to its density, the fluid (semen?) does not pass outwardly; 265 II | do not recover who have foam at the mouth.~44. Persons 266 VI | wine, or the bath, or a fomentation, or venesection, or purging.~ 267 VII| are strong, and quickly forced out of the forehead, either 268 II | fevers occur rather at the formation of pus than when it is already 269 VI | dropsical persons, ulcers forming on the body are not easily 270 V | with tetanus die within four days, or if they pass these 271 V | particularly efficacious in fractures of the bones, especially 272 VII| age who are affected with frenzy, do not readily recover; 273 II | 41. Persons who have had frequent and severe attacks of swooning, 274 V | color, and consisting of fresh blood, in these cases it 275 VI | by venesection.~23. If a fright or despondency lasts for 276 I | therefore they require little fuel, as it were, to the flame, 277 III| and those who reach their full time, bring forth children 278 V | wrapped her up in blankets, fumigate below, and if it appear 279 V | desire of drinking.~28. Fumigation with aromatics promotes 280 IV | those cases where there are furfuraceous particles discharged along 281 III| seasons which are regular, and furnish the productions of the season 282 V | sores, but when it is, it furnishes the greatest test of their 283 IV | crisis in seven periods at furthest.~60. When in fevers there 284 V | hip-joint suppurate, it gets into a state requiring to 285 III| northerly, braces the body, giving it tone, agility, and color, 286 III| dimness of sight, cataract (glaucoma), and dullness of hearing.~ 287 V | hydromel to drink when she is going to sleep, and has not taken 288 V | it is, it furnishes the greatest test of their being free 289 V | with fevers, and who are greatly emaciated, without any ( 290 I | particularly lively spirit.~14. Growing bodies have the most innate 291 V | as is obvious from the growth of hair on them.~70. Persons 292 IV | When the urine is thick, grumoss, and scanty in cases not 293 IV | summer season.~8. We must be guarded in purging phthisical persons 294 III| dentition, pruritus of the gums, fevers, convulsions, diarrhoea, 295 II | are accustomed to endure habitual labors, although they be 296 VII| be seated internally.~37. Haematemesis, without fever, does not 297 IV | symptoms occur, death is at hand.~50. Apostemes in fevers 298 V | 20. Cold pinches ulcers, hardens the skin, occasions pain 299 III| affections of the throat, hardness of the bowels, dysuria attended 300 VII| the more you give the more harm you will do.~69. Crude dejections 301 III| autumn rainy and southerly, headaches occur in winter, with coughs, 302 VI | the body are not easily healed.~9. Broad exanthemata are 303 VI | bladder, of the brain, of the heart, of the diaphragm, of the 304 IV | convulsion.~17. Anorexia, heartburn, vertigo, and a bitter taste 305 I | When the disease is at its height, it will then be necessary 306 IV | easily purged upward by the hellebores, should have their bodies 307 V | torpor of the understanding, hemorrhages, deliquia, and, along with 308 | hence 309 V | and ulcers from cold; in herpes exedens, of the anus, the 310 | herself 311 | him 312 | himself 313 V | in the breasts, or in the hip-joints, or in the eyes, or in the 314 III| in winter, with coughs, hoarsenesses, coryzae, and in some cases 315 VI | but if not treated, they hold out for a long time.~39. 316 VI | and the cicatrices are hollow.~46. Such persons as become 317 VII| with hiccup the case is hopeless.~48. Strangury and dysuria 318 I | bowels are naturally the hottest, and the sleep most prolonged; 319 IV | paroxysms, if at the same hour that the fever leaves it 320 | how 321 VII| indicates a superabundance of humidity; we must evacuate then, 322 VI | affections, determinations of the humor which occasions them produce 323 VI | Such persons as become hump-backed from asthma or cough before 324 I | transgress are thereby more hurt (than in any other?); for 325 V | be with child, give her hydromel to drink when she is going 326 V | to a woman affected with hysterics, and in difficult labor, 327 | I 328 V | things, such as snow and ice, are inimical to the chest, 329 II | Section II.~1. In whatever disease 330 III| Section III.~1. The changes of the season 331 IV | persons in fevers, or in other illnesses, shed tears voluntarily, 332 II | the dejections also are immediate.~19. In acute diseases it 333 II | nourishing to the body either immediately or shortly, the dejections 334 V | asunder.~46. Such women as are immoderately fat, and do not prove with 335 VI | whose speech has become impaired are likely to be seized 336 III| of the head, and vertigo, impairs the movements of the eyes 337 V | enervation of the fleshy parts, impotence of the nerves, torpor of 338 V | and sprains, are generally improved by a copious affusion of 339 III| tone, agility, and color, improves the sense of hearing, dries 340 V | inflammatory affections, inclining to a red and subsaguineous 341 II | unbecoming; but in old age it is inconvenient, and worse than a smaller 342 VII| are to be reckoned wholly incurable.~ 343 III| affections of the tonsils, incurvation of the spine at the vertebra 344 II | not turn out agreeably to indication, we should not change to 345 II | everything according to indications, although things may not 346 III| expected.~5. South winds induce dullness of hearing, dimness 347 IV | to move more about, and indulge less in sleep and repose. 348 VI | not take the gout until he indulges in coition.~31. Pains of 349 VI | symptom when the liver becomes indurated.~43. When persons having 350 I | well; and most especially infants, and of them such as are 351 V | the blood flows; and in inflammations and inflammatory affections, 352 V | and in inflammations and inflammatory affections, inclining to 353 II | you nourish the more you injure.~11. It is easier to fill 354 I | the bowels, nor make any innovation in the treatment, either 355 II | neck, and are in a state of insensibility, but not quite dead, those 356 VII| venesection; open the vein on the inside.~49. It is a good sign when 357 V | apply as large a cupping instrument as possible to the breasts.~ 358 VII| the abscess will be seated internally.~37. Haematemesis, without 359 I | smaller quantities, and at intervals. Something must be conceded 360 I | country, and to age.~18. Invalids bear food worst during summer 361 VI | outwardly to be determined inward; but for it to be determined 362 VI | exanthemata are not very itchy.~10. In a person having 363 IV | Section IV.~1. We must purge pregnant 364 VI | the slender part of the jaw, or prepuce, are cut out, 365 IV | especially those of the jaws.~32. In convalescents from 366 I | The evacuations are to be judged of not by their quantity, 367 I | We must form a particular judgment of the patient, whether 368 I | crisis, or when they have just passed it, neither move 369 V | upon suppuration of the kidney, and hiccup upon inflammation 370 VII| medicines do not cure, iron (the knife?) cures; those which iron 371 V | the nostrils and mouth, know that of herself she is not 372 IV | disease fixes.~34. If a person laboring under a fever, without any 373 II | whatever disease sleep is laborious, it is a deadly symptom; 374 VI | head, and straightway are laid down speechless, and breathe 375 III| of the head, torpor, and languor; when these prevail, such 376 II | are usually dried up.~54. Largeness of person in youth is noble 377 V | more likely to happen, the larger the foetus.~32. Haemoptysis 378 VI | a fright or despondency lasts for a long time, it is a 379 VI | Delirium attended with laughter is less dangerous than delirium 380 V | for either, owing to the laxity of the body, the pneuma 381 | least 382 IV | same hour that the fever leaves it return again next day, 383 VII| but if it resemble the lees of oil as it flows, they 384 III| coryza, hoarseness, cough, leprosy, lichen alphos, exanthemata 385 IV | a greater, and the hot a lesser disease.~43. Fevers, not 386 VII| bad.~18a. Trembling upon lethargus is bad.~19. Erysipelas upon 387 III| asthma, pleurisy, pneumonia, lethargy, phrenitis, ardent fevers, 388 I | dangerous than one a little more liberal.~6. For extreme diseases, 389 III| hoarseness, cough, leprosy, lichen alphos, exanthemata mostly 390 V | numbness removes pain.~26. The lightest water is that which is quickly 391 VI | protrude from its socket, the limb becomes wasted and maimed, 392 I | if carried to its utmost limit, is dangerous, for they 393 I | as are of a particularly lively spirit.~14. Growing bodies 394 VI | protracted cases of dysentery, loathing of food is a bad symptom, 395 I | alternate day, or after a longer period, and by the supervening 396 V | and very hot, the semen is lost from the want of food; but 397 VI | limb becomes wasted and maimed, unless the part be cauterized.~ 398 V | like manner with respect to males; for either, owing to the 399 VI | falling off of the hair, are mali moris.~5. It deserves to 400 VI | be stopped.~30. A young man does not take the gout until 401 III| and now on the verge of manhood, the most of these diseases, 402 | many 403 V | the brain, and the spinal marrow, but heat is beneficial.~ 404 | maybe 405 I | endure. In like manner, medicinal evacuations, if carried 406 III| coryzae, and in some cases melancholy.~15. Of the constitutions 407 V | good symptom.~36. When the menstrual discharge is of a bad color 408 IV | region is affected with meteorism and borborygmi, should pain 409 I | extreme diseases, extreme methods of cure, as to restriction, 410 V | without a wound, during the midst of summer, it sometimes 411 IV | death; and along with a milder one, a protracted disease.~ 412 I | regimen as the disease, by its mildness, is removed from the extreme.~ 413 V | their fullness, she has a miscarriage.~38. If, in a woman pregnant 414 V | who are very lean, have miscarriages when they prove with child, 415 V | there is danger of her miscarrying.~35. Sneezing occurring 416 V | is prejudicial, and does mischief.~23. Cold water is to be 417 VII| patients recover; but if mixed with blood, slimy and fetid, 418 VI | complicated with fever, a moaning respiration is bad.~55. 419 IV | upward.~9. And from the same mode of reasoning, applying the 420 IV | difficult to vomit, and are moderately fat, should be purged downward, 421 II | air, of country, and of modes of life.~46. Of two pains 422 VII| evacuations downward, you must moisten the belly.~72. Sleep and 423 IV | should have their bodies moistened by plenty of food and rest 424 III| forty days, some in seven months, some in seven years, some 425 VI | attended with a serious mood.~54. In acute diseases, 426 | moreover 427 VI | off of the hair, are mali moris.~5. It deserves to be considered 428 III| and attended with less mortality.~16. The diseases which 429 VI | protrude, it necessarily mortifies and drops off.~59. In chronic 430 IV | Sailing on the sea shows that motion disorders the body.~15. 431 II | already formed.~48. In every movement of the body, whenever one 432 III| and vertigo, impairs the movements of the eyes and the whole 433 VII| them acute pains about the muscles of the back, provided these 434 V | tetanus.~21. In the case of a muscular youth having tetanus without 435 VII| because it comes through a narrow passage.~52. Fever supervening 436 III| to the same rule.~2. Of natures (temperaments?), some are 437 V | she has been affected with nausea, you may reckon her to be 438 III| frights inflammation of the navel, watery discharges from 439 I | adults; young persons not nearly so well; and most especially 440 I | height, it will then be necessary to use the most slender 441 V | if there be any urgent necessity (or, if the humors be in 442 III| dysuria, pains of the joints, nephritis, vertigo, apoplexy, cachexia, 443 | never 444 III| complaints occur: to little and new-born children, aphthae, vomiting, 445 II | Largeness of person in youth is noble and not unbecoming; but 446 VII| discharged, and makes a noise, because it comes through 447 III| in diseases. But if the north wind prevail, coughs, affections 448 VI | symptom.~2. Persons whose noses are naturally watery, and 449 | nothing 450 II | properly cleansed, the more you nourish the more you injure.~11. 451 IV | day, the urine has a red nubecula on the fourth day, and the 452 V | for a moderate degree of numbness removes pain.~26. The lightest 453 IV | are very bad; and the more numerous and unfavorable the colors, 454 V | have milk, her menses are obstructed.~40. In women, blood collected 455 V | other cases, if it did not occasion heaviness of the head.~29. 456 III| at the vertebra next the occiput, asthma, calculus, round 457 VI | any treatment in cases of occult cancer; for, if treated, 458 IV | copious sweat after sleep occuring without any manifest cause, 459 IV | fever do not leave on the odd days, it relapses.~62. When 460 II | to take whatever food is offered to him; but the contrary 461 VII| it resemble the lees of oil as it flows, they die.~46. 462 III| 26. To persons somewhat older, affections of the tonsils, 463 VI | forty and sixty.~58. If the omentum protrude, it necessarily 464 V | straight vein in the forehead opened.~69. Rigors commence in 465 VII| In the case of a person oppressed by fever, if the neck be 466 II | change to another while the original appearances remain.~53. 467 I | most tend, by the proper outlets.~22. We must purge and move 468 VI | symptom when swelling on the outside of the neck seizes a person 469 VI | for it to be determined outward from within is good.~26. 470 II | the body, attention must paid to the secretions; for if 471 V | the skin is stretched, and parched and hard, the disease terminates 472 II | the night preceding the paroxysm uncomfortably, but the succeeding 473 IV | where there are furfuraceous particles discharged along with thick 474 I | diet.~9. We must form a particular judgment of the patient, 475 III| chronic.~29. To persons past boyhood, haemoptysis, phthisis, 476 VII| division of the cranium, if it penetrate into the cavity of the head, 477 I | crisis fleeting; experience perilous, and decision difficult. 478 I | decision difficult. The physician must not only be prepared 479 VII| causes abortion.~28. Whatever piece of bone, cartilage, or nerve ( 480 III| ill-adapted to different seasons, places, and kinds of diet.~4. In 481 VII| drinking undiluted wine, plenteous bathing with hot water, 482 IV | their bodies moistened by plenty of food and rest before 483 V | laxity of the body, the pneuma is dissipated outwardly, 484 V | a cupping instrument as possible to the breasts.~51. When 485 V | men also, rather in the posterior than the anterior side of 486 VII| tongue suddenly lose its powers, or a part of the body become 487 II | takes place pass the night preceding the paroxysm uncomfortably, 488 II | more palatable, is to be preferred to such as are better but 489 V | to a crisis; but cold is prejudicial, and does mischief.~23. 490 I | physician must not only be prepared to do what is right himself, 491 VI | slender part of the jaw, or prepuce, are cut out, the part is 492 VII| sign.~60. Fasting should be prescribed the those persons who have 493 VI | of the eyes in sleep, as presented from below; for if a portion 494 III| so that they either die presently, or, if they live, are puny 495 II | and hypogastric regions preserve their fullness; and it is 496 VI | If blood be poured out preternaturally into a cavity, it must necessarily 497 III| breast occur. When this wind prevails, all such symptoms may be 498 IV | white, it is bad; it appears principally in cases of phrenitis.~73. 499 V | woman with child, it will probably prove fatal.~44. Women who 500 VII| copious; for such a sweat must proceed from violence, excess of


18a-proce | procr-yawni

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