100th-produ | progn-zephy
Book, Section
501 2, 6| of the critical days, and prognosticate from them accordingly. And
502 1, 2| of crisis, or pains, or prolongation of the disease, or death,
503 2, 6| in many cases was not in proportion to the drink administered,
504 2, 6| crisis, want of crisis, and protraction of the disease, but most
505 1, 3| the worst of all, for it proves fatal when it precedes an
506 1, 1| with hemorrhage, and never proving fatal. Swellings appeared
507 1, 3| after the sleep a chill, ptyalism; in the evening, great incoherence;
508 2, 6| which took place about the pubes and genital organs. Such
509 2, 6| thickness, nor concoction, nor purged properly; for in many cases
510 2, 6| slight pain, in all cases the purging of the matters about the
511 1, 3| patient’s habits, regimen, and pursuits;—to his conversation, manners,
512 1, 2| bilious, watery, slimy, purulent nature, attended with strangury,
513 1, 3| the attendants seldom putting her in mind), it was thick,
514 2, 6| nausea. She lived near the Pylates, upon the Plain. On the
515 2, 6| in quantity, and bad in quality; of persons affected with
516 1, 3| woman, who lodged on the Quay, being three months gone
517 2, 6| winter. And yet the summer in question was not of itself well constituted,
518 2, 6| thirst; passed the night quietly; slight sweats about the
519 1, 3| and is not fatal; but the quintan is the worst of all, for
520 1, 2| indeed, more so than usual. Quotidian, nocturnal, and wandering
521 2, 6| delirious; every symptom rapidly getting worn. About the
522 2, 6| sheep, and both boiled and raw, with a bad diet otherwise,
523 1, 3| is exacerbated until it reaches its acme, and then remits
524 1, 2| dark eyes, those living recklessly and luxuriously; persons
525 1, 2| crises, as far as we can recognize them, were so far similar
526 1, 2| symptoms were favorable, as I recollect having happened to Bion,
527 1, 3| On the tenth, slightly recollected. On the eleventh, slept;
528 1, 3| throughout, like that of a person recollecting himself, was rare, and large,
529 2, 6| most especially, and those recovering from them, and in all other
530 1, 2| sweats, in all cases a reduncance of humors. In many instances
531 1, 2| recovered. This humor was redundant in many cases, since in
532 1, 3| these observations one must regulate the regimen accordingly.
533 1, 2| Clazomenae. The circumstances relating to crises, as far as we
534 2, 6| to food; the jaw became relaxed; alvine discharges small,
535 2, 6| became somewhat collected; remembered nothing that had happened
536 1, 2| protracted, and did not remit until the equinox. The spring
537 1, 3| reaches its acme, and then remits until at and about the crisis.
538 1, 3| crisis took place; fever remitted. On the fifth day afterwards,
539 2, 6| summer, and summer coming on removes the diseases of winter.
540 1, 1| of disease, so as not to require medical assistance.~2. Early
541 2, 5| thin, acrid discharges; she required to get frequently up. She
542 1, 2| case with Pantacles, who resided close by the temple of Bacchus.
543 2, 4| urine brought about the resolution of the disease, and the
544 1, 2| the ears, which were not resolved, and brought on no crisis.
545 2, 6| It is probable that the restoration of health on the twentieth
546 1, 3| laughter, singing, he could not restrain himself. On the fourth,
547 2, 6| the twentieth day was the result of the evacuation of urine.~
548 1, 2| that any harm or good ever resulted from the cough.~3. The most
549 2, 6| urine; small drinks were retained. On the twenty-fourth he
550 2, 5| deafness, acute fever; retraction of the right hypochondrium;
551 1, 2| ophthalmies set in, with rheums, pains, unconcocted discharges,
552 1, 3| attains its full strength, and rises to its most dangerous pitch,
553 1, 2| about the crisis, but the risings about the ears disappeared,
554 1, 3| application of a suppository, rose to stool, and passed copious
555 1, 2| persons with shrill, or rough voices, who stammered and
556 2, 6| coma, and with nausea when roused; not very thirsty; about
557 2, 6| pains of all the inferior rule, that either the fever and
558 2, 6| and there were excessive runnings; and these symptoms happened
559 | s
560 2, 6| woman who was lodged in the Sacred Walk was seized with an
561 1, 2| symptoms in particular proved salutary; either a hemorrhage from
562 2, 6| In this case, as far as I saw, the bowels were disordered;
563 2, 6| extremities, that is to say, the hands and feet, at
564 2, 6| leucophlegmatic, and that with the scapulae having the appearance of
565 2, 6| exacerbated, and of the food taken scarcely any portion worth mentioning
566 1, 3| occur;—to his picking and scratching;—to his tears;—to the alvine
567 1, 2| and in the maid servant of Scymnus the fuller, it turned to
568 1, 2| recovered, and I did not see a single instance of death
569 1, 3| diseases. In what is called the semi-tertian, other acute diseases are
570 1, 2| disappearance there was a sense of weight in the left flank
571 2, 6| bones were laid bare and separated, and there were excessive
572 2, 6| called “the putrefaction” (seps); also large ecthymata,
573 1, 3| passes into phthisis. The septan is protracted, but not fatal;
574 2, 6| instances.~8. And many and serious complaints attacked many
575 1, 2| copious hemorrhage, which settled down into dysentery, and
576 1, 3| and well colored. On the seventieth, fever gone for ten days.
577 | shall
578 2, 6| milk, that of goats and sheep, and both boiled and raw,
579 1, 3| respiration rare and large. Shortly afterwards spasms from the
580 1, 2| luxuriously; persons with shrill, or rough voices, who stammered
581 1, 1| away without any critical sign. They seized children, adults,
582 1, 3| flatulence, whether passed silently or with a noise;—to hemorrhages
583 1, 3| much talking, laughter, singing, he could not restrain himself.
584 2, 6| ought to be administered.~Sixteen Cases of Disease~CASE I.
585 2, 6| especially, in persons about sixty years of age, about the
586 1, 3| the spleen diminished in size; quite collected; had pain
587 2, 6| And to a person who is skilled in these things, it is easy
588 1, 2| having smooth bodies, white skins, straight and black hair,
589 1, 2| continued and copious rains; the sky tempestuous and clouded;
590 2, 6| accident was neglected in the slightest degree; and this happened
591 1, 2| pain, of a bilious, watery, slimy, purulent nature, attended
592 2, 6| were great fallings off (sloughing) of the flesh, tendons,
593 1, 3| throughout, the respiration was slow and large; there was a constant
594 2, 6| colder than natural; they slowly and imperfectly became warmed,
595 1, 2| these fevers attacked the smallest numbers, and the patients
596 1, 3| coldness, rigor, cough, sneezing, hiccup, respiration, eructation,
597 1, 2| winter, about the winter solstices, and until the equinox,
598 2, 6| insomnolency, thirst; tongue sooty and dry; urine of a good
599 2, 6| fatal to many; many had sore-throat and loss of speech. There
600 2, 6| cases when attended with sores, and proceeding from an
601 2, 6| was not like pus, but a sort of putrefaction, and the
602 1, 3| uncomfortable state; had no sound sleep at night, but dreaming
603 2, 6| seasons of the year, the south winds towards the rising
604 1, 3| rigor; acute fever; much spasm, with pain; talked much,
605 2, 4| perfectly collected; could not speak, tongue dry, without thirst;
606 1, 2| these things, and have two special objects in view with regard
607 2, 6| affected with every one of the species which have been mentioned,
608 1, 1| they continued throughout spitting crude matters. Their fauces,
609 2, 5| mentioning; was silent, and never spoke a word; despondency; had
610 2, 6| and the erysipelas quickly spread all over. in the most of
611 1, 2| shrill, or rough voices, who stammered and were passionate, and
612 1, 3| which has been shaken after standing for some time, until the
613 2, 6| sleep, and again awaked, started up, and could not contain
614 1, 3| About the fourteenth day, startings over the whole body; talked
615 1, 2| relapse agreeably to the stated order of relapses; and all
616 1, 3| the head, and there was stiffness of the neck. On the first
617 2, 6| looseness of the bowels from a stimulant clyster; afterwards she
618 1, 3| himself; the bowels being stimulated, passed a watery discharge
619 1, 3| subsiding; by means of a slight stimulus, a copious discharge from
620 1, 3| been shaken after it has stood for a considerable time
621 1, 3| alvine evacuations were not stopped; thirst throughout not great;
622 1, 2| smooth bodies, white skins, straight and black hair, dark eyes,
623 1, 3| neck, and chest. She was straightway seized with acute fever;
624 2, 6| he lived near the High Street. Was seized with acute fever
625 2, 6| neglected diet, was seized with strong rigor and acute fever; tongue
626 1, 3| nonans. The most acute, strongest, most dangerous, and fatal
627 1, 3| septans, and nonans should be studied, in order to find out in
628 2, 6| bad tendency to sleep, and stupor.~7. But there were also
629 1, 2| the heat is already more subdued, these cases end in paralysis,
630 2, 6| form of body peculiarly subject to phthisical complaints
631 1, 3| he was delirious on all subjects. On the fourth, all the
632 2, 6| regard to the melancholic and subsanguineous, phrenitic and dysenteric
633 1, 2| kidneys, but one complaint succeeding the other; vomitings of
634 1, 2| four periods in regular succession from the first attack, and
635 1, 1| degree, and they did not suffer thereby in any manner worth
636 1, 2| numbers, and the patients suffered the least from them, for
637 2, 6| perspiration; he died. His sufferings were on the even days.~Explanation
638 2, 6| Summer fine and hot; great suffocating heats. The Etesian winds
639 2, 6| commencement; she was silent, sullen, and disobedient; urine
640 1, 2| the summer was not very sultry, the Etesian winds blew
641 1, 3| of phthisis, and when it supervenes on persons who are already
642 1, 2| that the patients could not support them, or unusually small,
643 1, 3| ears subsided, and did not suppurate, but were painful. About
644 2, 6| them abscessed ended in suppurations, and there were great fallings
645 2, 6| substances floating towards its surface, which did not subside;
646 1, 1| know if a single individual survived for any considerable time;
647 2, 5| the nose; she could not swallow; alvine and urinary discharges
648 1, 3| his conversation, manners, taciturnity, thoughts, sleep, or absence
649 1, 2| hemorrhage from the nose takes place, but those who have
650 | taking
651 2, 4| floating in it: he could taste nothing.~Explanation of
652 2, 6| and abscesses about the teeth. And many were attacked
653 1, 2| example, the daughter of Telebolus died on the sixth day after
654 1, 2| physician must be able to tell the antecedents, know the
655 2, 6| persons of a phlegmatic temperament. Chronic diarrhoea, acrid
656 1, 2| and copious rains; the sky tempestuous and clouded; these things
657 1, 2| the neck, heaviness of the temples, mistiness about the eyes,
658 2, 6| sloughing) of the flesh, tendons, and bones; and the defluxion
659 1, 3| Archigetes, being near the term of delivery, was seized
660 1, 2| especially to the hip-joint, terminating critically with a few, and
661 2, 6| loose state, but towards the termination in all cases with violent
662 1, 1| seized sometimes one of the testicles, and sometimes both; some
663 2, 6| large ecthymata, and large tetters (herpetes) in many instances.~
664 1, 2| Epigenes, and lodged near the theatre), of these the elder had
665 1, 3| same; urine abundant, and thickish; when allowed to stand,
666 1, 3| fever, stools more copious, thinner, frothy; urine black, an
667 2, 4| digested, had a crisis; urine thinnish about the crisis; but after
668 2, 5| painful thirst. On the thirteenth, vomitings black, fetid,
669 | though
670 1, 3| conversation, manners, taciturnity, thoughts, sleep, or absence of sleep,
671 2, 6| was lodged near the with Thracian Gates, was seized with an
672 2, 5| disease she had pain in the throat, and it red throughout,
673 2, 5| who lodged at the house of Tisamenas had a troublesome attack
674 1, 3| violent pain in the great toe; he took to bed the same
675 | together
676 2, 6| eneorema floating on the top of the urine, did not subside.
677 1, 2| the rains frequent, in torrents, and large, with snow, but
678 2, 6| rare and large; she was totally insensible; always wrapped
679 2, 6| thin and scanty; to the touch of the hand the fever was
680 1, 3| rigor; was comatose; slept tranquilly; had slight vomiting of
681 1, 2| quartans, but in no few cases a transition from other fevers and diseases
682 2, 6| happened in some who were under treatment; great inflammation took
683 2, 4| symptoms were exacerbated; the tremblings were again constant; urine,
684 2, 4| symptoms were exacerbated, the tremors remained; little sleep,
685 1, 1| disappeared without giving trouble, neither did any of them
686 1, 3| swelled upon in a round tumor, the sweats cold throughout,
687 2, 4| symptoms milder. About the twenty-ninth, pain of the right eye;
688 1, 3| symptoms exacerbated; had twice a scanty trickling of blood
689 2, 6| woman who had brought forth twin daughters, after a difficult
690 2, 6| many other instances, on ulcers, especially on those seated
691 1, 1| number on both sides, being unaccompanied by fever so as not to confine
692 1, 2| place in an irregular and uncertain manner, very rare and weak
693 2, 6| same characters, and the understanding disordered; alvine dejections
694 2, 4| dejections; slight coma; uneasiness at the times he had to get
695 2, 6| XII. In Larissa, a young unmarried woman was seized with a
696 1, 2| the time when the zephyr usually begins to blow, severe winterly
697 1, 2| these and also pains of the uterus; whereas, in elder persons,
698 2, 6| immediately became collected; utter aversion to food; the jaw
699 1, 2| the greater part, were valetudinary. At first ophthalmies set
700 1, 3| round figure, small, like vari, persistent, not subsiding;
701 1, 3| about the crisis. These varieties occur in every fever, and
702 1, 2| want of crisis and much variety as to these diseases, the
703 2, 6| restored to heat; the bowels variously constipated, and again immediately
704 2, 6| On the eighth, I opened a vein at the elbow, and much blood,
705 2, 4| interval, of the color of verdigris; a few drops of pure blood
706 2, 6| either black, scanty, and verdigrisgreen, or fatty, undigested, and
707 1, 2| have two special objects in view with regard to disease,
708 1, 2| Whatever attacked them violently speedily cut them off, or
709 1, 2| thus, in the case of the virgin daughter of Daetharses,
710 2, 6| betaking himself to bed. His viscera were enlarged, and for a
711 1, 1| accompanied with hoarseness of voice. In some instances earlier,
712 1, 2| persons with shrill, or rough voices, who stammered and were
713 2, 6| the badness of the urine voided was great, for it had not
714 2, 6| were painful tormina and volvuli of a malignant kind; copious
715 1, 2| cardialgia and nausea, vomit bilious and pituitous matters;
716 2, 6| was lodged in the Sacred Walk was seized with an ardent
717 1, 2| prevent the patients from walking about, but some cases were
718 1, 1| and acrid; they were soon wasted and became worse, having
719 1, 2| much suffering and great wasting, abscesses were formed in
720 2, 6| It is probable that the weakness produced by the fever, the
721 1, 2| and notably infants just weaned, and older children, until
722 1, 2| The whole season being wet, cold, and northerly, people
723 | whereas
724 | whoever
725 1, 2| season, with much northerly wind, snow, continued and copious
726 2, 6| having the appearance of wings: and women in like manner,
727 2, 6| and near the equinox, much wintery weather out of season; and
728 2, 6| southerly, and calm; but, not withstanding, it proved beneficial by
729 1, 2| they were protracted, as is wont with them, indeed, more
730 2, 6| symptom rapidly getting worn. About the thirtieth, acute
731 2, 6| sometimes from even a very small wound, broke out all over the
732 2, 6| phthisis, of whom we shall write afterwards.~3. Early in
733 2, 6| properly of that which has been written. For he that knows and makes
734 2, 6| upon her accouchement.~CASE XV. In Thasus, the wife of
735 2, 6| throughout. Phrenitis.~CASE XVI. In Meliboea, a young man
736 2, 5| vomited small quantities of yellowish bile; restless at night,
737 2, 6| carry off the pains, but yielded with difficulty to the means
738 | you
739 1, 2| on the sixth day, and the younger on the seventh, and both
740 1, 2| and at the time when the zephyr usually begins to blow,
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