100th-produ | progn-zephy
Book, Section
1 1, 3| 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th; and the first period of
2 1, 3| days, is the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th,
3 1, 3| 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st.
4 2, 6| delirious towards death.~14. The form of body peculiarly
5 1, 3| the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th,
6 2, 6| troubled with bitter bile.~15. To all those which have
7 2, 6| the other constitution.~16. I look upon it as being
8 1, 3| 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st. It should
9 1, 3| crises on uneven days, is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th,
10 1, 3| 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th,
11 1, 3| 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st. It should be
12 1, 3| 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st. It should be known,
13 1, 3| 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th;
14 1, 3| 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th, 31st. It should be known, that
15 1, 3| uneven days, is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th,
16 1, 3| 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th; and
17 1, 3| crisis on even days, is the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th,
18 1, 3| uneven days, is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th,
19 1, 3| 14th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th; and the first
20 1, 3| on even days, is the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th,
21 1, 3| days, is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th,
22 1, 3| 20th, 30th, 40th, 60th, 80th, 100th; and the first period
23 1, 3| even days, is the 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, 14th, 20th, 30th,
24 1, 3| is the 1st, 3d, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 21th, 27th,
25 2, 6| while the pains did not abate, and the cough was troublesome,
26 1, 2| remissions, and after an abatement having more violent paroxysms,
27 1, 2| small rigors, insomnolency, aberration, thirst, nausea, insignificant
28 1, 2| state that were attacked had abortions, as far as I observed. The
29 2, 6| over. in the most of them abscessed ended in suppurations, and
30 2, 6| brain consequent upon her accouchement.~CASE XV. In Thasus, the
31 2, 6| the art. He ought to learn accurately the constitution of every
32 2, 6| hemorrhage, nor any other of the accustomed evacuations, to prove a
33 1, 3| exacerbated until it reaches its acme, and then remits until at
34 1, 2| strangury, and when, in addition to this, abscesses were
35 1, 3| thin, and darkish; had an affusion of warm water on the head;
36 2, 6| aversion to food in all the afore-mentioned complaints to a degree such
37 1, 2| especially, persons of the ages I have mentioned, but it
38 1, 2| happened to the daughter of Aglaidas. The greater part of those
39 1, 2| there was not a relapse agreeably to the stated order of relapses;
40 1, 3| worse, of a formidable and alarming character; fear, impatience.
41 1, 2| and these things happened alike to those who recovered and
42 2, 6| know to whom, when, and how aliment ought to be administered.~
43 1, 3| other important symptoms allied to these, part of which
44 | alone
45 1, 3| smooth; all the symptoms ameliorated; intermission of the fever;
46 2, 6| urine.~CASE VIII. In Abdera, Anaxion, who was lodged near the
47 1, 3| whole foot, and about the ankle erythema, with distention,
48 2, 6| disorder of the bowels, anorexia, with thirst and without
49 1, 2| and Philiscus the son of Antagoras. Those who had parotid swellings
50 1, 2| must be able to tell the antecedents, know the present, and foretell
51 1, 2| hemorrhage. In the case of Antiphon, the son of Critobulus’
52 2, 4| day, an abscess about the anus, which passed off by a strangury.~
53 2, 6| extremities cold; not in anywise collected; suppression of
54 2, 6| the even days.~CASE XIII. Apollonius, in Abdera, bore up (under
55 2, 6| use of these things, would appear to me not likely to commit
56 1, 3| and talking; then all the appearances worse, of a formidable and
57 2, 6| there died great numbers. It appears to me, according to the
58 1, 3| suppository having been applied, some scanty flatulent matters
59 1, 3| applications,—to the person who applies them, as that makes a difference
60 1, 3| was lodged at the house of Archigetes, being near the term of
61 1, 2| Xenophanes, the slave of Areton, and the wife of Mnesistratus.
62 2, 5| who lodged in the house of Aristion: her complaint began in
63 1, 2| Heraclides, who was lodged with Aristocydes: this person, though he
64 1, 2| namely, a loathing of all articles of food, more especially
65 2, 4| the seventh, mouth drawn aside. On the eighth, all the
66 1, 1| as not to require medical assistance.~2. Early in the beginning
67 1, 2| hemorrhage; these had also rigor associated.~9. Some were attacked with
68 2, 6| children, and all who had not attained to puberty; and the most
69 1, 3| grows, as it were, and attains its full strength, and rises
70 1, 2| these cases, one must always attend to the seasonable concoction
71 1, 3| urine with spasms, (the attendants seldom putting her in mind),
72 1, 3| fatal. But one ought to pay attention, and know in these seasons
73 2, 5| on the fifth day is to be attributed to a phrenitis, with unfavorable
74 2, 6| disposition to sleep, and again awaked, started up, and could not
75 1, 3| oily; slept a little, upon awaking was somewhat comatose; slight
76 1, 2| resided close by the temple of Bacchus. Those who had a crisis
77 2, 6| greatly in excess; and the badness of the urine voided was
78 2, 6| Larissa, a man, who was bald, suddenly was seized with
79 2, 4| floating in it, like coarse barley meal, or semen. On the third,
80 2, 6| complexion. Having eaten beef, and drunk unseasonably,
81 | begin
82 2, 6| withstanding, it proved beneficial by producing a change on
83 1, 2| sixth day, but these were benefited either by an urinary purgation,
84 | beside
85 2, 6| for some time, without betaking himself to bed. His viscera
86 2, 5| nausea, much tossing about, bewilderment, delirium; extremities livid
87 2, 6| those who were troubled with bitter bile.~15. To all those which
88 1, 2| zephyr usually begins to blow, severe winterly storms
89 2, 6| lentil; the reddish, the blue-eyed, the leucophlegmatic, and
90 2, 6| goats and sheep, and both boiled and raw, with a bad diet
91 2, 6| parts, and ulcerations, boils (phymata), externally and
92 1, 3| lived near the Canal of Bootes, was seized with fever after
93 2, 6| silent, she fumbled, picked, bored, and gathered hairs (from
94 2, 6| by the affection of the brain consequent upon her accouchement.~
95 1, 2| small concretions, generally breaking with difficulty, in most
96 1, 1| these the fevers, after a brief interval, relapsed again;
97 1, 2| but most seldom in them, bringing no alleviation, but, on
98 1, 3| II. Silenus lived on the Broad-way, near the house of Evalcidas.
99 2, 6| even a very small wound, broke out all over the body, especially,
100 1, 3| with distention, and small bullae (phlyctaenae); acute fever;
101 2, 5| a small suppuration, and burst at the crisis. After the
102 1, 3| exacerbated every day, and bursts forth with all its heat
103 | can
104 1, 3| Erasinus, who lived near the Canal of Bootes, was seized with
105 | cannot
106 2, 6| There were many attacks of carbuncle (anthrax) through the summer,
107 1, 3| from itself, but it also carries off other great diseases.
108 2, 6| and the passages did not carry off the pains, but yielded
109 1, 1| settling favorably, but casting down a crude and unseasonable
110 1, 3| urine resembled that of cattle, as far as I observed. About
111 1, 1| in swellings from other causes. They were of a lax, large,
112 1, 2| relapsed, and they did not cease until late in autumn. During
113 1, 2| died. The crisis, however, changed, and happened to the greater
114 2, 5| unfavorable evacuations.~CASE II. Charion, who was lodged at the house
115 1, 3| rigor; redness about the cheeks; slight delirium. On the
116 2, 6| the hairs of the head and chin, the bones were laid bare
117 1, 2| happened to Hermippus of Clazomenae. The circumstances relating
118 1, 3| commencement.~CASE X. The Clazomenian who was lodged by the Well
119 1, 3| eightieth day.~CASE VI. Cleonactides, who was lodged above the
120 1, 3| urine darkish, had a darkish cloud floating in it, of a scattered
121 2, 4| substances floating in it, like coarse barley meal, or semen. On
122 2, 6| time of the paroxysms, were colder than natural; they slowly
123 1, 2| art, and the patient must combat the disease along with the
124 1, 1| neither did any of them come to suppuration, as is common
125 1, 3| fatal. The true tertian comes quickly to a crisis, and
126 1, 3| while in others, again, it commences mildly, increases, and is
127 2, 4| the first day, trembling commencing from his hands; acute fever,
128 2, 6| appear to me not likely to commit any great mistake in the
129 2, 6| flatulent, and of a whitish complexion. Having eaten beef, and
130 1, 1| when near death. So much concerning the phthisical affections.~
131 1, 2| critical abscesses. The concoctions indicate a speedy crisis
132 1, 2| unconcocted discharges, small concretions, generally breaking with
133 1, 1| unaccompanied by fever so as not to confine the patient to bed; in all
134 1, 1| the disease then became confirmed; in these the constitution
135 2, 6| derangement of the intellect, confusion, and much tossing about.
136 2, 5| hopes of herself. She had a congenital tendency to phthisis.~CASE
137 1, 2| attended with strangury, not connected with disease of the kidneys,
138 2, 5| quantities of urine without consciousness. On the ninth, all the symptoms
139 1, 3| hemorrhoids;—from these, and their consequences, we must form our judgment.~
140 2, 6| the affection of the brain consequent upon her accouchement.~CASE
141 1, 3| described afterwards, from a consideration of which one may judge,
142 1, 3| no sediment; in color and consistence, the urine resembled that
143 1, 2| or to do no harm. The art consists in three things—the disease,
144 2, 6| question was not of itself well constituted, for it became suddenly
145 1, 3| are peculiar modes, and constitutions, and paroxysms, in every
146 1, 3| mad, so that he could not constrain himself; extremities cold,
147 1, 3| persons who are already consumptive. There are peculiar modes,
148 2, 6| copious evacuations of the contents of the guts, and yet much
149 2, 5| Philistes had headache of long continuance, and sometimes was confined
150 2, 5| the house of Demaenetus, contracted a fever from drinking. Immediately
151 1, 2| alleviation, but, on the contrary, doing mischief. Much cold
152 1, 3| regimen, and pursuits;—to his conversation, manners, taciturnity, thoughts,
153 1, 2| greatest dangers, was the conversion of it to a strangury, and
154 2, 6| abscesses; jaw on the right side convulsively retracted; comatose, was
155 1, 1| The spring was southerly, cool, rains small in quantity.
156 1, 2| time, and she had also a copinous hemorrhage from the nose,
157 1, 3| after drinking water pretty copiously, had proper evacuations
158 1, 2| good. Small rashes, and not corresponding to the violence of the disease,
159 1, 3| and the nature of each country;—to the patient’s habits,
160 1, 1| phthisical affections.~3. In the course of the summer and autumn
161 2, 4| morning, extremities cold, was covered up with the bedclothes,
162 1, 2| upon the bladder. But in Cratistonax, who lived by the temple
163 2, 6| with furious delirium; loud cries, much talking, again composed,
164 1, 2| of Antiphon, the son of Critobulus’ son, the fever ceased and
165 1, 3| time of death.~CASE IX. Criton, in Thasus, while still
166 2, 6| cases; for winter coming on cures the diseases of summer,
167 1, 2| them violently speedily cut them off, or again, did
168 2, 6| Phrenitis.~CASE XIV. In Cyzicus, a woman who had brought
169 1, 2| protracted, but free from danger, unless in those who were
170 2, 6| who had brought forth twin daughters, after a difficult labor,
171 1, 3| which one may judge, and decided in each case, whether the
172 1, 1| had been long gradually declining, took to bed with symptoms
173 2, 4| below, had no sediment; by degrees he became collected. On
174 2, 5| was lodged at the house of Demaenetus, contracted a fever from
175 1, 1| unseasonable sediment. Sputa small, dense, concocted, but brought
176 1, 3| fever; he became furiously deranged; alvine discharges bilious,
177 2, 6| pain of the thigh ceased; derangement of the intellect, confusion,
178 2, 5| food, nor had the least desire of anything; had no thirst,
179 2, 6| internally, called fig, which destroyed the sight of many persons.
180 2, 6| looseness of the bowels; a determination downwards of all matters
181 2, 6| lodged above the Temple of Diana was seized with an acute
182 1, 1| bore up well, and did not die of the other fevers.~
183 1, 3| applies them, as that makes a difference for better or for worse,—
184 2, 6| but passed nothing; when directed, drank a little; urine thin
185 1, 2| disappeared, after their disappearance there was a sense of weight
186 1, 2| the disease, and quickly disappearing, or swellings occurred about
187 2, 6| was silent, sullen, and disobedient; urine thin, and devoid
188 2, 6| one drank unseasonably or disobeyed injunctions.~10. The urine
189 1, 2| troublesome, went on in a very disorderly and irregular form, and,
190 2, 6| attended with pains; most had disorders of the bowels, attended
191 1, 2| so far similar and so far dissimilar. Thus two brothers became
192 2, 6| but of a good color; no disturbance about the bowels. On the
193 2, 6| state of nausea, somewhat disturbed; passed urine of the appearance
194 2, 6| paroxysms of the fever diversified, and for the most part irregular.
195 1, 2| until near the season of the Dog-star. After the Dog-days, until
196 1, 2| alleviation, but, on the contrary, doing mischief. Much cold of the
197 | done
198 1, 1| many cases formerly of a doubtful character the disease then
199 2, 6| bowels; a determination downwards of all matters collected
200 2, 4| reddish. On the seventh, mouth drawn aside. On the eighth, all
201 1, 3| sound sleep at night, but dreaming and talking; then all the
202 1, 3| sleep, and sometimes his dreams, what and when they occur;—
203 2, 6| passed no urine; small drinks were retained. On the twenty-fourth
204 1, 3| away.~CASE XI. The wife of Dromeades having been delivered of
205 2, 6| cases both forearm and arm dropped off; and in those cases
206 2, 4| color of verdigris; a few drops of pure blood ran from the
207 1, 2| in some cases, there were dropsies, with or without these complaints.
208 2, 6| Having eaten beef, and drunk unseasonably, he became
209 1, 2| equinox, the spring northerly, dryness, rains few and cold. About
210 1, 3| in the right eye, sight dull. It went away.~CASE XI.
211 2, 6| troublesome, and attended with dyspnoea. On the eighth, I opened
212 1, 1| voice. In some instances earlier, and in others later, inflammations
213 2, 4| lived by the Temple of the Earth, on the first day, trembling
214 2, 6| whitish complexion. Having eaten beef, and drunk unseasonably,
215 2, 5| have been brought on by eating grapes. After an intermission
216 2, 6| putrefaction” (seps); also large ecthymata, and large tetters (herpetes)
217 1, 2| and older children, until eight or ten years of age, and
218 2, 6| I opened a vein at the elbow, and much blood, of a proper
219 1, 2| not the hemorrhage died: elderly persons had jaundice or
220 2, 4| in the head and loins; an empty distention of the hypochondrium;
221 1, 1| difficulty; and in those who encountered the most violent symptoms
222 1, 1| and mostly those who were engaged in the exercises of the
223 2, 6| About the twenty-fourth, enjoyed a calm; other matters in
224 | enough
225 2, 6| same; fever not leaving her entirely, but having paroxysms in
226 1, 2| constitution. Philiscus, Epaminon, and Silenus, indeed, who
227 1, 2| on the sixth day, as with Epaminondas, Silenus, and Philiscus
228 1, 3| died.~CASE V. The wife of Epicrates, who was lodged at the house
229 2, 6| continued palpitation in the epigastric region throughout; passed
230 1, 2| hour (they were brothers of Epigenes, and lodged near the theatre),
231 1, 3| discharge with lumbrici: night equally painful. In the morning
232 1, 3| after the crisis.~CASE VIII. Erasinus, who lived near the Canal
233 1, 2| happened to the slave of Eraton, and to Mullus, who had
234 2, 6| continual, of chronic, of erratic, of fevers attended with
235 1, 3| sneezing, hiccup, respiration, eructation, flatulence, whether passed
236 2, 6| greater number of these erysipelatous cases took place in the
237 1, 3| foot, and about the ankle erythema, with distention, and small
238 2, 5| CASE III. The daughter of Euryanax, a maid, was taken ill of
239 1, 2| a crisis, as happened to Evagon the son of Daetharses. Those
240 1, 3| Broad-way, near the house of Evalcidas. From fatigue, drinking,
241 2, 6| administered, but greatly in excess; and the badness of the
242 2, 6| character, with pains; fungous excrescences of the eyelids, externally
243 1, 2| discharge of tears, you may expect a nasal hemorrhage unless
244 2, 6| he was thirsty, and the expectorations were not good. On the twenty-seventh
245 1, 3| began, and she immediately expired.~CASE XII. A man, in a heated
246 2, 6| and proceeding from an external cause; but the same things
247 1, 2| left flank extending to the extremity of the hip, and pain setting
248 2, 6| fungous excrescences of the eyelids, externally and internally,
249 2, 6| and rigors; redness of the face; pain of the eyes; heaviness
250 1, 1| phthisical. Many, and, in fact, the most of them, died;
251 2, 6| There were many cases of failure of crisis, and many of unfavorable
252 1, 2| with a frequent mixture of fair weather. These things were
253 2, 6| suppurations, and there were great fallings off (sloughing) of the flesh,
254 1, 3| allowed to stand, the sediment farinaceous and white; extremities again
255 1, 3| and alarming character; fear, impatience. On the morning
256 1, 2| much delirious talking, fears, despondency, great coldness
257 1, 3| Temple of Juno, began to feel a violent pain of the head,
258 2, 6| those cases in which it fell upon the sides, the parts
259 1, 2| day after delivery. Most females had the menstrual discharge
260 2, 6| in some cases the whole femur and bones of the leg and
261 2, 5| floating in it; delirium ferox about mid-day. On the third,
262 2, 6| externally and internally, called fig, which destroyed the sight
263 1, 3| rashes with sweat, of a round figure, small, like vari, persistent,
264 1, 3| be studied, in order to find out in what periods their
265 2, 6| until the dog-days. Summer fine and hot; great suffocating
266 1, 2| hour; it then left them for five days, and from the return
267 1, 2| sense of weight in the left flank extending to the extremity
268 1, 3| respiration, eructation, flatulence, whether passed silently
269 2, 6| fallings off (sloughing) of the flesh, tendons, and bones; and
270 2, 6| of a proper character, flowed; the pains were abated,
271 2, 6| the sixth, much nausea, flushing, was chilly, and tossed
272 1, 2| tenesmus, lientery, and fluxes; but, in some cases, there
273 2, 6| for in many cases both forearm and arm dropped off; and
274 1, 2| insignificant sweats about the forehead and clavicles, but no general
275 1, 2| antecedents, know the present, and foretell the future—must mediate
276 2, 6| sleep.~12. And many other forms of fevers were then epidemic,
277 | forty
278 1, 2| equinox, the ardent fevers and frenzies prevailed, and many died.
279 1, 2| in persons attacked with frenzy, and having vomitings of
280 1, 3| it were, and attains its full strength, and rises to its
281 2, 6| bedclothes; still silent, she fumbled, picked, bored, and gathered
282 2, 6| heated, and was seized with furious delirium; loud cries, much
283 1, 2| present, and foretell the future—must mediate these things,
284 1, 3| gentle and suppressed, but gains ground and is exacerbated
285 2, 4| man who was lodged in the Garden of Dealces: had heaviness
286 2, 6| lodged near the with Thracian Gates, was seized with an acute
287 2, 6| fumbled, picked, bored, and gathered hairs (from them); tears,
288 1, 3| crisis; in others it begins gentle and suppressed, but gains
289 2, 6| delirious; every symptom rapidly getting worn. About the thirtieth,
290 1, 3| what cases food is to be given, and in what not; and when
291 1, 1| they disappeared without giving trouble, neither did any
292 2, 6| attended with much rain. Autumn gloomy and cloudy, with copious
293 1, 2| Phanocritus, who was lodged with Gnathon the fuller. During the winter,
294 2, 6| quantities of milk, that of goats and sheep, and both boiled
295 1, 1| those who had been long gradually declining, took to bed with
296 2, 5| been brought on by eating grapes. After an intermission of
297 1, 3| bilious, unmixed, smooth, greasy; urine thin, and transparent;
298 2, 6| drink administered, but greatly in excess; and the badness
299 2, 6| many watery stools of a green color; urine thin, scanty,
300 2, 6| discharges copious, watery, and greenish, and on the following days
301 1, 3| pain at first about the groin, on the same side as the
302 2, 6| and internally, about the groins. Watery ophthalmies of a
303 1, 3| and suppressed, but gains ground and is exacerbated every
304 1, 2| more violent paroxysms, and growing worse, for the most part,
305 1, 3| at the very commencement, grows, as it were, and attains
306 2, 6| persons. There were fungous growths, in many other instances,
307 2, 6| evacuations of the contents of the guts, and yet much remained behind;
308 1, 1| exercises of the palestra and gymnasium, but seldom attacked women.
309 1, 2| increasing to its original habit.~4. People died of all these
310 1, 3| country;—to the patient’s habits, regimen, and pursuits;—
311 1, 2| skins, straight and black hair, dark eyes, those living
312 2, 5| acute fever; a reddish and hard swelling on both sides of
313 2, 5| In Thasus, Philistes had headache of long continuance, and
314 2, 6| and hot; great suffocating heats. The Etesian winds blew
315 1, 3| particularly to the state of the heavens, and the nature of each
316 2, 6| were attended either by heavy coma, or by short and light
317 2, 6| but in many others they held out longer. In a word, all
318 1, 3| noise;—to hemorrhages and hemorrhoids;—from these, and their consequences,
319 1, 2| hemorrhage, as in the case of Heraclides, who was lodged with Aristocydes:
320 1, 2| disease, as happened to Hermippus of Clazomenae. The circumstances
321 2, 4| the fortieth day.~CASE II. Hermocrates, who lived by the New Wall,
322 1, 3| about twenty.~CASE III. Herophon was seized with an acute
323 2, 6| day.~CASE IX. In Abdera, Heropythus, while still on foot, had
324 2, 6| ecthymata, and large tetters (herpetes) in many instances.~8. And
325 1, 1| expectoration, and accompanied with hoarseness of voice. In some instances
326 2, 5| word; despondency; had no hopes of herself. She had a congenital
327 1, 3| incoherence, and for some hours afterwards had no sleep;
328 | how
329 | however
330 1, 2| and they recovered. This humor was redundant in many cases,
331 2, 6| delirium became less. About the hundredth day, disorder of the bowels,
332 2, 6| most cases purgings were hurtful to those affected in this
333 1, 2| and distention about the hypochondriac region, not unattended with
334 2, 5| a troublesome attack of iliac passion, much vomiting;
335 2, 6| many were attacked with impairment or loss of speech; at first,
336 1, 3| alarming character; fear, impatience. On the morning of the fifth,
337 2, 6| natural; they slowly and imperfectly became warmed, and again
338 1, 3| accordingly. There are many other important symptoms allied to these,
339 2, 6| again; he used much and improper food; sleep bad; about the
340 2, 5| began in the tongue; speech inarticulate; tongue red and parched.
341 2, 5| after the rigor, had an inconsiderable rigor; the extremities cold
342 1, 3| paroxysms of the fevers inconstant and irregular; occasional
343 2, 6| pain of the hip-joint, and increase of fever. Not long afterwards,
344 1, 3| again, it commences mildly, increases, and is exacerbated until
345 2, 6| the greatest number they indicated a melting of the body, disorder
346 1, 3| than on those described, it indicates that there will be a relapse,
347 1, 1| persons who had been long indisposed, but who were otherwise
348 1, 2| the first time: in certain individuals both the hemorrhage from
349 2, 6| season of spring was most inimical, and proved fatal to the
350 2, 6| unseasonably or disobeyed injunctions.~10. The urine in many cases
351 1, 3| softish inflammation from the inner part; passed an uncomfortable
352 1, 2| would be worth while to inquire whether the watery urine
353 1, 2| aberration, thirst, nausea, insignificant sweats about the forehead
354 2, 6| the lochial discharge was insufficient, at first was seized with
355 2, 6| and the fever was more intense. On the twentieth, sweated
356 1, 2| most instances, with the intermittents, in seventeen days; and
357 1, 1| paroxysms, in general not intermitting, but having exacerbations
358 1, 3| rare, large, and suddenly interrupted. On the day following that
359 1, 2| fevers, in which there is an involuntary discharge of tears, you
360 2, 6| despondency, and insomnolency; irritability, restlessness; she was of
361 2, 6| twentieth, wild delirium, jactitation, passed no urine; small
362 2, 4| Twenty-seventh, pain of the right hip joint; urine thin and bad, a sediment;
363 1, 2| they were determined to the joints, and especially to the hip-joint,
364 1, 3| lodged near the Temple of Juno, began to feel a violent
365 1, 2| fevers, and notably infants just weaned, and older children,
366 1, 2| connected with disease of the kidneys, but one complaint succeeding
367 2, 5| the whole time loathed all kinds of food, nor had the least
368 2, 4| delirious, did not sleep; knees and legs painful; after
369 1, 2| hemorrhage from the nose, and I knew no instance of any one dying
370 1, 3| 27th, 31st. It should be known, that if the crisis take
371 2, 6| been written. For he that knows and makes a proper use of
372 2, 5| collected; had no thirst; labored under insomnolency; alvine
373 2, 6| on the first day, vomited largely of verdigris-green and thin
374 | later
375 1, 1| other causes. They were of a lax, large, diffused character,
376 1, 3| seasons what crises will lead to recovery and what to
377 2, 6| in the art. He ought to learn accurately the constitution
378 2, 6| whole femur and bones of the leg and whole foot were laid
379 1, 2| in such fevers. After a length of time, with much suffering
380 2, 6| whitish, that resembling the lentil; the reddish, the blue-eyed,
381 2, 6| reddish, the blue-eyed, the leucophlegmatic, and that with the scapulae
382 1, 2| In a few instances the lever terminated with a crisis;
383 1, 2| and those in the prime of life, and the greater part of
384 | likely
385 2, 5| especially of the lower lip; after a little time a rigor,
386 2, 6| constant pain about the liver, and then he became affected
387 1, 2| black hair, dark eyes, those living recklessly and luxuriously;
388 1, 3| near the crisis; did not loathe food, and had no thirst
389 1, 2| most of them, namely, a loathing of all articles of food,
390 2, 6| other constitution.~16. I look upon it as being a great
391 2, 6| seized with furious delirium; loud cries, much talking, again
392 1, 3| a watery discharge with lumbrici: night equally painful.
393 1, 2| those living recklessly and luxuriously; persons with shrill, or
394 1, 3| before noon was furiously mad, so that he could not constrain
395 | made
396 1, 2| crisis on the fifth day, making in all fourteen days. The
397 1, 2| cases end in paralysis, mania, and loss of sight.~Third
398 2, 6| erysipelas, some from a manifest cause, and some not. They
399 1, 3| pursuits;—to his conversation, manners, taciturnity, thoughts,
400 2, 6| were the symptoms which marked the fatal cases of ardent
401 2, 4| in it, like coarse barley meal, or semen. On the third,
402 1, 2| foretell the future—must mediate these things, and have two
403 1, 1| disease, so as not to require medical assistance.~2. Early in
404 2, 6| Phrenitis.~CASE XVI. In Meliboea, a young man having become
405 1, 3| coming to a crisis.~CASE XIV. Melidia, who lodged near the Temple
406 1, 2| seized, but fewer than of the men, and there were fewer deaths
407 1, 2| delivery. Most females had the menstrual discharge during the fever,
408 1, 2| these symptoms occurred, but merely a trifling epistaxis; and
409 2, 6| a degree such as I never met with before, and persons
410 1, 3| perfect crisis.~CASE VII. Meton was seized with fever; there
411 1, 3| extremities livid; about the middle of the sixth day he died.
412 1, 3| dangerous of all, and the mildest and most protracted, is
413 2, 6| likely to commit any great mistake in the art. He ought to
414 1, 2| heaviness of the temples, mistiness about the eyes, and distention
415 1, 2| snow, but with a frequent mixture of fair weather. These things
416 1, 2| Areton, and the wife of Mnesistratus. But afterwards all these
417 1, 3| consumptive. There are peculiar modes, and constitutions, and
418 2, 5| miscarriage about the fifth month, the wife of Ocetes, was
419 1, 3| on the Quay, being three months gone with child, was seized
420 | moreover
421 2, 6| all other diseases of a mortal nature. Some were troubled
422 2, 6| described. Many had their mouths affected with aphthous ulcerations.
423 1, 2| slave of Eraton, and to Mullus, who had a copious hemorrhage,
424 1, 2| tears, you may expect a nasal hemorrhage unless the other
425 2, 6| calm delirium, for he was naturally of an orderly and quiet
426 1, 1| in appetite, for it was necessary to give them food (on the
427 2, 4| Hermocrates, who lived by the New Wall, was seized with fever.
428 2, 6| day.~CASE X. In Abdera, Nicodemus was seized with fever from
429 | nine
430 1, 3| passed silently or with a noise;—to hemorrhages and hemorrhoids;—
431 1, 3| protracted, but not fatal; the nonan more protracted, and not
432 1, 3| have hemorrhage from both nostrils, and this continued in an
433 1, 3| which have been already noticed, and part will be described
434 | now
435 1, 2| The tertians were more numerous than the ardent fevers,
436 1, 2| things, and have two special objects in view with regard to disease,
437 2, 6| was incoherent and talked obscurely; pains frequent, great and
438 1, 3| every disease. From these observations one must regulate the regimen
439 2, 6| cases erysipelas, from some obvious cause, such as an accident,
440 1, 3| inconstant and irregular; occasional sweats; the paroxysms generally
441 2, 5| fifth month, the wife of Ocetes, was seized with fever.
442 | often
443 2, 6| urine of the appearance of oil; at night, much agitation,
444 1, 2| infants just weaned, and older children, until eight or
445 2, 6| on the genital organs; of ophthalmia, anthrax, disorder of the
446 1, 1| spring, from the preceding opposite and northerly state, ardent
447 2, 6| for he was naturally of an orderly and quiet disposition; skin
448 | our
449 2, 6| probable that the cure was owing to the bilious evacuations
450 1, 1| in the exercises of the palestra and gymnasium, but seldom
451 2, 6| on both sides; continued palpitation in the epigastric region
452 2, 6| fever did not leave him; palpitations over the whole body, at
453 1, 2| fever, as was the case with Pantacles, who resided close by the
454 2, 5| died.~CASE VII. A woman of Pantimides, from a miscarriage, was
455 1, 2| subdued, these cases end in paralysis, mania, and loss of sight.~
456 1, 3| the power of speech; was paralyzed in the right hand, with
457 2, 6| Disease~CASE I. In Thasus, the Parian who lodged above the Temple
458 1, 2| Antagoras. Those who had parotid swellings experienced a
459 2, 6| the pains greater; had a paroxysm; in the evening the bowels
460 2, 6| her; the pain of her feet partly remained; in other respects
461 1, 2| most of them had difficult parturition, and after labor they were
462 1, 3| much tossing about; no passage from the bowels, urine suppressed,
463 2, 6| remained behind; and the passages did not carry off the pains,
464 1, 3| protracted, and in some cases passes into phthisis. The septan
465 1, 2| dejections; and many, after passing through the other crises,
466 2, 5| troublesome attack of iliac passion, much vomiting; could not
467 1, 2| who stammered and were passionate, and women more especially
468 1, 3| fatal. But one ought to pay attention, and know in these
469 2, 6| death.~14. The form of body peculiarly subject to phthisical complaints
470 2, 6| disease.~CASE VI. In Abdera, Pericles was seized with a fever
471 1, 3| figure, small, like vari, persistent, not subsiding; by means
472 1, 3| Upon the application of a pessary all these symptoms were
473 1, 2| not like the servant of Phanagoras, who had none of these symptoms,
474 1, 2| seventh day, as happened to Phanocritus, who was lodged with Gnathon
475 1, 3| In Thasus, the wife of Philinus, having been delivered of
476 2, 5| Sect. II~CASE I. In Thasus, Philistes had headache of long continuance,
477 1, 2| died. But the daughter of Philo, who had a copious hemorrhage
478 1, 2| other; vomitings of bile, phlegm, and undigested food, sweats,
479 2, 6| troubled young persons of a phlegmatic temperament. Chronic diarrhoea,
480 1, 3| distention, and small bullae (phlyctaenae); acute fever; he became
481 2, 6| many cases of ardent fever, phrensy, aphthous affections of
482 1, 3| was lodged by the Well of Phrynichides was seized with fever. He
483 2, 6| and ulcerations, boils (phymata), externally and internally,
484 2, 6| still silent, she fumbled, picked, bored, and gathered hairs (
485 1, 3| when they occur;—to his picking and scratching;—to his tears;—
486 1, 3| rises to its most dangerous pitch, but is diminished about
487 2, 6| food taken scarcely any portion worth mentioning was passed
488 1, 3| she immediately lost the power of speech; was paralyzed
489 2, 5| day was the unseasonable practices mentioned above. An acute
490 1, 3| it proves fatal when it precedes an attack of phthisis, and
491 1, 1| in the spring, from the preceding opposite and northerly state,
492 1, 2| properly. But all those in the pregnant state that were attacked
493 1, 3| slightly collected, but presently became again delirious.
494 2, 6| in spring, along with the prevailing cold, there were many cases
495 1, 2| with fever, and did not prevent the patients from walking
496 2, 6| having prevailed during the previous seasons of the year, the
497 1, 2| bowels, if they happened previously to have watery discharges
498 1, 2| persons and those in the prime of life, and the greater
499 2, 6| attended with sores, and proceeding from an external cause;
500 2, 6| it proved beneficial by producing a change on the other constitution.~
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