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Cases of Intermittents, all the stages being present
Cases of Intermittent Fever of regular type and stages,
in which local inflammation is very apparent, consti-
tuting the Inflammatory Intermittents of Authors
Cases of the more usual forms of the Endemic
Cases in which the blood has undergone a remarkable
change, either having been found dark and fluid in
the vessels after death, or uncoagulable, dark and
syrupy looking when drawn from the arm during
life
Cases in which convulsions are added to Fever of dif-
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ib.
54
63
. 130
170
201
. 212
. 214
. 219
. 220
. ib.
. 221
225
Symptoms connected with the Læsions of the Stomach
and lower portion of the Esophagus
Symptoms of Enteritis
Symptoms of Læsions of the Liver
. 229
230
231
. 336
Symptoms of Læsions of the Gall-Bladder
Symptoms of Læsions of the Kidneys
Symptoms of Læsions of the Spleen
Symptoms of Læsions of the Lungs and Pleura
Symptoms of a Diseased state of the Blood
Hæmorrhage.
Symptoms of Læsions of the Encephalon and its Ap-
pendages
Symptoms not attachable to any particular Læsion
State of the Skin
State of the Tongue
State of the Urine
State of the Saliva
Yellow Suffusion
Black Vomit
Stiffness of the Articulations.
Critical Days
. 237
238
239
240
241
242
. 243
244
245
246
247
. 250
CHAPTER VI.
SEAT AND NATURE OF THE ENDEMIC FEVERS OF ST.
LUCIA
Connexion between Yellow Fever and the usual forms
of the Endemic
Symptoms of Yellow Fever
The Pathological Appearances observed in Yellow
viii
TREATMENT
CHAPTER VII.
Page
284
. 289
290
291
295
. 298
The Rational Treatment
Treatment of Febricula; Fièvre lente; Feverishness
The treatment of Intermittents in their pure form
Treatment of those Intermittents in which the blood is
found diseased
Treatment of Intermittent Inflammation
Treatment of Fevers of a remittent or subintrant tuma
Inflamm
Were we to request a man, who had travelled from the equator
to the poles, and studied what is called fever in every country,
to give us a description of this malady, we may easily con-
ceive his answer-he would tell us that each case required its
own description.
The difficulty is still further increased for want of some-
thing with which we are to compare the diseases that form the
subject of this treatise. Suppose we take the fevers of Eng-
land and France commonly called essential, those described by
authors under the name of typhus, or typhoid, gastro-ente-
rite-adynamique, dothinenthérie, enterite-folliculense, maladie
tyhoïde, &c.; we shall find the medical world split into fac-
tions about their nature, their situation in the economy, and
the causes which have produced them. Whilst some give to
them "a local habitation and a name," attributing them to an
B
Treatment of Fevers of a romittent
.
298