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A29837 A compleat treatise of preternatural tumours both general and particular as they appear in the human body from head to foot : to which also are added many excellent and modern historical observations concluding most chapters in the whole discourse / collected from the learned labours both of ancient and modern physicians and chirurgions, composed and digested into this new method by the care and industry of John Brown. Browne, John, 1642-ca. 1700. 1678 (1678) Wing B5125; ESTC R231817 164,435 436

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act contrary to the rules of nature and have unnatural effects The one again being either alimentary proper for life and growth of the body the other excrementitious more proper for cleansing its sinks and channels As the Humour is so also is generally seen its Colour for as Blood is of a pure florid rosy colour so doth it give colour to the Muscles It is this that graceth the cheeks by affording them a a share of its redness and as it is made of Chyle and Blood so also doth it send forth its white and red and by how much the red exceedeth the white by so much are the Muscles more red than the Skin Choller is citrine and yellow thin and griping and as the four Humours do work man into a good humour so this burneth him into a passion it gives a lively paint of its colour in the Jaundies Flegm is white and washy and so are they that have too much of it being very cold and subject to Oedematous Tumours Dropsies and Agues Melancholy is black and masketh the whole body with an Ashy colour this is long and tedious in executing its office it being the most heavy an dsad part of the blood but at length bringeth forth the terrifying Scrophula Corroding Cancer Scirrhous Tumours Quartane Agues and the like and we daily find when it hath hatched them up to any growth it is very long if ever before it be made to part with them Besides these there are two others one a serous Humour which serveth as a vehicle to the blood ordered by nature for thinning it that it may pass to its smallest capillary vessels Part of this is sucked up by the kidneys where having made a short stay it maketh its further progress into the bladder and there remains whilst it be loaded the which being therewith filled is let out as useless and unprofitable Besides these comes Wind taking its circuits and turns and in our bodies is occasioned and bred by ill digestions crudities and wind the former making watery Tumours whilst this maketh slatuous Tumours But that we may well understand the foundation of these Humours let us examine from whence they are bred and whence they come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Blood as it is the cheifest and of the greatest service for life so ought this to take the preheminency in our discourse It is made from the temperate part of chyle in the stomack sent through the small guts into the milky vessels in the mesentery whereby nature hath ordained it a Receptaculum commune being here planted by Divine Providence as a bag for reserve for the most part full from whence passeth this chyle along the great Artery just by it untill it reacheth the Subclavian vein from thence it marcheth into the right ventricle of the heart by the vena cava and from hence is carried into the left ventricle of the heart by the Arteria venosa from the lungs and is there elaborated and made pure blood sweet of taste and florid in colour mild and benign This sanguification is a similar action and performed by assimulation and therefore taketh this chyle aforesaid as its subject matter for this assimulation and as they dewell together so do they assimulate together and this is done by process of time never passing to the liver as the Ancients dreamed for the chyle seldom or never reacheth it This blood as the vital liquor is sent through the whole body by its veins and arteries as its proper trunks and channels And although at its first appearance it sheweth it self pure and free yet hath it alwaies these three Humours adjoined to it as three several substances as Choller Flegm and Melancholy distinguishable one from another not only in taste sapour or colour but also in their effects for as Galen observeth lib. de natur homin the melancholy humour is acid choller bitter blood sweet and flegm having little or no tast and out of those being benign and pure is bred Scirrhus Erisipelas Phlegmon Oedema It is hot and moist which are the two species of its natural and unnatural temper and as Gal. lib. de Atra bile cap. 2. it is of a very red colour in its humour and is made of the best of juices and so bred from the best of tempers made by a temperate heat and those are its natural tempers As of its unnatural its proper substance is changed as its thinner part converted into Choller as Gal. 2. de Differ where he saith the thinner part is converted into yellow choller whilst the thicker turneth into melancholy Next to this is choller called by the greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it being a humour hot bred out of the thinner and hotter part of the chyle and blood It hath but few spirits somewhat of Sulphure in it most of Salt and Earth It s parvity of spirits are evident in that it is of its own nature bitter neither hath it in it any great quantity of Sulphure for if we view its masse carefully it being neither Oleaginous or pingued neither doth it soon take fire yet it taketh Sulphure in it being principally exalted by adustion whence it bred this bitterness and although its salt excelleth in quantity yet doth it not gain preheminence It s flegmatick watery substance doth enlarge its liquid faculty its earthly parts thickeneth it and gives it the body it bears its heats and driness are sufficient signs of its being an enemy to the radical moisture and so unfit for nutriment that it is declared by all to be excrementitious This heat is the manifest cause of its bitterness made by a perpetual digestion of the blood thus milk unless oft times stirred in its boiling soon burneth and turneth bitter and as from heat and motion do colours change from white into red as Quinces being pale by boiling gain a red colour and chyle turned into blood by circulation and heat so also choller is as readily discharged of its first taste by adustion and perpetual digestion As to its uses Aristotle will grant it no waies useful Coryngius and some others do as much cry up its value offering that it serveth to warm the liver and to help digestion Helmontius calls it the balsom of the blood deduced from the liver to the mesentery but this is contrary to Anatomy for Anatomy teacheth that this humour is carried out from the liver not brought into it but onely sucked up by the Parenchyma thereof as through a strayner Others there are also as Zerbus amongst the rest that offer that if the bladder or gall be removed from the liver the substance of the liver would soon be dissolved and melted And to conclude this it s most proper use is to render the excrements fluxile The third is Flegm by the Greeks called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this also is of two sorts natural and not natural The natural humour is cold moist crude in substance white in
these most properly ought to be opened being nearer related to the affected part where more good may be expected than from the Arm. Should these be stopped they breed a Consumption in the Lungs a Dropsie in the Liver by suffocating the Liver as it were in its native heat and if they flow immoderately the Blood being evacuated the Liver is cooled thereby is excited a Dropsie and a decay of the whole Body For this immoderate Flux take these ℞ pulv Alo. Thur. Balaust Sangu Dracon an ℥ ss misce cum albumine Ovi fiat Vnguentum Or this ℞ ol Rosar Cer. alb nov an ℥ j. Axung Porcin ℥ ij pulv Plumb alb ℥ iss liquefiant praedicta supra marmoream injiciantur tunc adde plumbum Or this ℞ Axung Porcin ol Lin. an ℥ ij succ Taps Barbat Cynogloss an ℥ ij coquantur ad succorum consumptionem postea adde Sacchar Saturn ℥ ss cum pulv sem Lin. q. s fiat Vnguentum Or this ℞ Tuth praeparat Coral rubr Plumb an ʒiij Lap. Calaminar Lithargyr aur an ℥ ss ol Rosar ℥ iss succ Taps Barbat ℥ iss misce fiat Vnguentum Or if Pain Heat or Acrimony be urgent you may use some ot these ℞ ol Rosar ℥ ij Ceruss ℥ ss Lithargyr aur ʒij Cer. nov ʒiij Opii ℈ ss vel ℈ j. misce fiat Vnguentum Or this ℞ Thur. Myrrh Croc. an ʒj Opii ℈ j. fiat Vnguentum cum ol Rosar Mucilag sem Psyl addendo vitellor Ovor. no. j. Or this ℞ ol Rosar Olivar Myrtin an ℥ ij succ Plantag Milii an ℥ ij Acet ℥ j. coquantur ad succorum consumptionem tunc adde Bol. Armen Sangu Dracon Thur. Chalyb praeparat pulv an ʒj Cer. flav q. s fiat Vnguentum Or this ℞ Vitellor Ovor. no. j. ol Rosar Violar an q. s fiat Vnguentum addendo Vnguent Rosat Popul an ʒiij misce Amatius Lusitanus Cura 3. Cent. 5. writeth of a man about 45 years of age who was formerly vexed with a Venereous Disease from whence came from him every moneth Blood through his Hemorrhoids as the Menstrues in Women elsewhere He had such a plentiful Evacuation of Blood the which when he failed of his accompanied time performing its duty by these Veins he vomited much Blood out of his mouth being of a yellowish red without Cough or Fever and for the preventing of which evil he comes to advise with Lusitanus who advised him to be chearful and to the parts he orders 4 Leeches to be applied the which extracted six Ounces of Bloud after this prescribed him a good Diet and cooling Syrups as Syrups of Endive Fumitory Woodsorrel and the like for some days together and taking a purging Potion of Manna Rhubarb with Diaphoenicon c. with this order the Blood followed its former course and the Patient grew well Oethius writes also of one who when his Flux was obstructed below he did every moneth spit Blood at the mouth as you may have it lib. Observat CHAP. LXVII Of an Aneurism THis is a soft Tumour yielding to the Touch made by Dilatation or Relaxation of an Artery Every Artery except those which are dispersed through the Brain have allowed them a double Coat the inward of which being either corroded or rent the outward may extend so much as to cause an Aneurism Aneurisms may be made by Anastomasis Diapedesis Ruption Erosion or Wound of the Arteries It happeneth in most parts of the Body but chiesly in the Throat It is a Swelling encreasing by degrees and hath the same colour with that of the Skin a continual Pulsation If it be small it easily yieldeth to the Touch. It is difficult in Cure If it be large and in the Axillaries or Inguens in which the Vessels are large here expect no cure Incision very oft times causeth such a Flux of Blood and Spirits that it both dischargeth Art and Life very speedily This too often happens by the imprudence of an ignorant Chirurgion by pricking of an Artery instead of a Vein and so occasioning this Pulsation Pain and Tumour Some allow inward Causes as Intension of the Spirits Contusions Concussions Obstructions these being accounted as the chief of the inward Causes Some also do adde Melancholy Blood to be a Cause hereof lodged in the Veins and Arteries but the most usual sign of its Causes is drawn from the ignorant Chirurgion who by pricking too deep does wound the inward Artery the which is not easily to be cured by reason of its Spermatick Substance and Motion and thus the Blood by degrees is percolated out of the Arteries and making a Cavity for it self formeth this Aneurism the Matter hereof being a Spirituous Blood made by Dilatation the outward Matter is made by Grumous Blood thus raised together It generally receives these two Methodical Scopes in its Cure viz. Pharmacy and Chirurgery and where the one takes not the other must be attempted The first are Repellers and Restringents and convenient Ligatures or Lead strictly bound over the part or such an Astringent as this may serve the turn as ℞ Pulv. Bol. Armen Terr sigillat an ℥ ij Pulv. Rosar rub Sang. Dracon an ʒij Gallar immatur nuc Cupress an ʒi misce cum Albumine Ovi parum Aceti Oleo Rosarum fiat Restrictivum Let this remain on for two or three days These are to be used in smal Aneurisms but in large Aneurisms not happening in the Head or in the Groins they are accounted Mortal according to Aetius lib. 15. cap. 10. Some Artists do tie up the Artery both above and below and then divide between these two Ligatures but this Operation is dangerous painful and troublesom and seldom bringeth any benefit But to preserve Life I would rather if it happen in a place where it may lawfully be performed and exercised have Amputation made and before you begin this be sure to purge the body with Cassia Manna and the like and order cooling Juleps Emulsions and Hordeate Decoctions and keep the Body open by Purging and Clysters Hildanus in his 44 Observat relateth of a young Gentleman who being troubled with the Itch upon which sending for a Barber to breathe a Vein for him he pricked the Artery instead of the Basilick Vein whence did arise an Aneurism For the ablating of which above a moneth was used variety of Medicines to little or no purpose the Tumour equalled the bigness of a Goose Egge it was pale and hard in which was so perfect a Pulsation that it elevated the Dressings and Rollers as they might with ease be perceived He could not extend his Arm his pain was not great but onely when he would extend it Seeing how desperate it was he was very unwilling to undertake its Cure but being perswaded by the Prayers Desires and Requests of the Patients Friends to take it in hand he used this Method a good Order of Diet being prescribed to the
Lancet and prepare himself for this Operation First let him make a pretty strict bandage a little above the elbow of that arm which he intends to bleed not too strict because he will very seldome hereupon but meet with obstruction in bleeding the Artery being too close girt that it cannot discharge it self into the vein And as to his Lancet let him make his apertion a little sloping or upon placing it a little obliquely let him get his Lancet into the vein and so lift it up not penetrating too deep lest he commit those errours which daily are acted by ignorant Pretenders and Quackes who oft go so deep as that they prick an Artery and so cause Aneurisms and pains Let the Orifice that you make be neither too great or too small the first endangering the Division of the vein whilst the second runs it into a Tumour Here also is he to judg of the goodness or badness of the Blood and so according to his judgment may take away more or less and also considering the necessity of the disease the strength of the Patient and the quantity and quality of the Blood The veins which are generally opened are these the Frontal vein one under the Tongue the Cephalick Mediana and Basilick but of every of those in their order and as necessity requireth The Frontel vein is most properly opened in infirmities of the Face and in pains of the Head Two veins of the Temples opened in continual Head-ach in distillations of the Head and Eies The veins under the Tongue in Anginaes Apoplexies pains of the Teeth the Jugulars good in preventing suffocation Squinsies Asthmaes Dyspnaea and the like The three in the Arm the first being the outward or Cephalick this may safely be opened in distempers of the head as Mania and other hot passions The second Mediana so called in respect of its Scituation being made both of the Cephalick and Basilick vein in opening of this vein is made a general evacuation of Humours this oft times opened in pains of the breast and Pleurisies The third is Basilica or Hepatica by some called Axillaris this dischargeth those parts which are beneath the Neck as the Brests Sides Liver Spleen and Pleurisies And this note of the three in all sicknesses and times except in time of Pestilence That vein is to be taken which is most full and large In the Feet also are three veins Ischiatiea Saphaena and vena Poplitis these or some of them are generally opened in Obstruction of the Monstrues in bringing them down pains stoppings swellings and the like I shall conclude this with these directions In an Apoplexy open the Cephalick vein if this appears not open the Mediana In a Lethargy open the Frontal or Cephalick vein In a Squinsey those under the Tongue In a Pleurify the Basilica and here bleed while the Blood doth change its colour In diseases of the Lungs vena Axillaris or Mediana In inflammations of the Liver Basilica or Hepatica In obstruction of the Spleen the Basilick or Hemorrhoidal veins In diseases of the Womb the Sciatick vein In restraint of Menstrues Saphaena In pains of the Hips first open the Basilica then the outward malcolus below CHAP. VII Of Evacuation of matter erring in Quality IF a Tumour or Fluxion happeneth in respect of matter not onely erring in Quantity but also in respect of Quality that this may be discharged we are to consider two things First whether this matter may be altered as if hot cooled c. Secondly to remove the subject matter hereof and in the first if Plethory Phlebotomy is proper if less Pharmacy is most convenient And herein are we to observe these two Rules that the matter may first be educed or sent forth being contrary to the true genus of the part and then if it doth still remain to alter it The most proper way to deal with this is by our later writers found out which is by discharging the body hereof by purging Medicines which do work both quickly and safely ordering the strength of the Medicine according to the vigour and strength of the Patient and herein also are we to mind the motion of the Blood for if it doth move to the eies this is to be revelled first by Cupping-glasses without Scarrification Secondly that the parts ought to be rubbed for the better thinning the Humour thirdly frictions which are proper for revelling from the Center to the Circumference And Galen nameth the last when parts are obstructed we ought to obstruct with Medicines but these are tedious painful and troublesome Our later Writers have found out better means and methods as by washing with warm water which doth revell by opening the pores another sort is by vesicatories and these are in great use in Apoplexies Rheumatisms or Distillations the third and last is an actual Cautery and Fontinels and Setons very much in use in our times And in all these we are to observe that Revulsion doth take its indication from that part from whence the Humour sloweth not from the Humour flowing and this being known we are to understand the parts which we are to revell CHAP. VIII Of a Tumour the part affected drawing to it self Preternatural Bodies THE greatest occasion or cause of attraction in a Tumour of a preternatural body is cheifly to be attributed to Laxity and Intemperiety of the part and pain This Intemperiety is therefore first to be removed by running it into a better temper And this may be executed with oyl of Roses Violets and the like having fine linnen rags dipt therein and so applied and these are oft to be repeated to prevent inflammation For this use also Vnguent Rosatum Refrigerans Galeni Populcon Album Camphoratum If pain occasioneth this we are here to give ease by Anodynes according to Galen 13. Meth. 1. and if any preternatural bodies offend discharge them either by Medicine or Instrument if pain cometh from venome cure this as you do venomed bodies and herein also are you to consider the times of the poyson for the longer it hath got room and entrance the deeper doth it imprint its venomous Qualities and Effects In this case Venice Treacle Methridate and the like are very good Spirit of Wine here also is very proper And thus are we to vary our methods according to the variety of our Objects In venenate distempers in cold poysons we use hot Medicines and in hot poysons on the contrary cold Medicines as Rue Frogs Scordium and the like commended by Dioscorides Galen doth furnish us with many pleasant stories of poyson and amongst the rest he doth offer that if any be bitten with a Scorpion if the same Scorpion be taken opened and applied to the part affected it draweth out its own poyson This generally being here observed that before you apply any Medicine to the poysoned part you first well foment the part with a hot and sharp Lixivium and when the place beginneth to
grow red to apply your other Medicines as for example ℞ Fob Absynth Scord. Rut. Angelic Hyperic Salv. Agrimon Veronic au M. j. Rosar Rubr. m. ss Scabios Menth. Meliss an p. ij coquantur omnia in Lixivio q. s colaturae adde Spirit vini lbj with this foment the part and then may you use such proper and mundifying Medicines as are most requisite as ℞ Vrguent Basilicon Bu●●r recent au ℥ ss Ol. Amygdal Dulc. ℥ j. Theriac Andromach ℥ j. cum Vitel. Ovor. nov ij misce fiat Vnguent Or this ℞ Pulv. Mirrh Alo. Aristoloch Rot. Irid. Florentin Angelic an 3j Theriac solut in aqu vitae 3j cum mel q. s fiat unguent Or this ℞ Pulp Caricar ℥ iiij Ferment act ℥ j. Sinap 3iij Sal. gem torrefact ℥ ss Sal. commun torrefact 3j Sapon moll Theriac an 3j Vitellor ovor no. iij. Ol. Lilior alb q. s fiat Cataplasma Or this Emplaster of Falloppius ℞ Pic. naval ℥ j. Sal. nitr ℥ ss Sem. Sinap 3ij Caepar Allior sub prunis coct an ℥ iij. Assafaetid Sagapen an 3iij Stercor Columbin ℥ iss Aristoloch rotund Dictam Cretens an 3j Ol. Lilior q. s fiat Empl. If all these fail apply live Pigeons opened to the part affected and if these do not answer expectation make a speedy address to the actual Cautery Another cause hereof is loosness of the passages the which unless they be stopped do make a Tumour as if an Humour do flow out of several parts of the body into one particular part unless this be altered it is very easily raised up into a Tumour if this happeneth with an Intemperiety we are to mix restringents with coolers as thus in Fluxes of the Head take this for a defensative ℞ Pulv. Rosar rubr Myrtillor Balaust Gallar Mastich Sang. Dracon Bol. Armen Oliband Santal omnium an 3j Ol. Rosar q. s Cer. alb parum Acet rosat ℥ ss misce coquantur omnia ad aceti consumptionem his addere possis albumin Ovor. no. j. vel ij Or this ℞ Pulv. Santal omn. Sangu Dracon Bol. Armen Pic. Colophon an 3j his adde Empl. Diapalm ℥ j. Acet 3j misce fiat Empl. And these are proper Medicines here and by Galen called strengthening as well as restringent Medicines because they strengthen by compression as Gal. 2. ad Glauc 14. And having thus passed over the general Indications arising from the matter of a Tumour and its curative scopes as Phlebotomy and Pharmacy we come now to treat of the four times of Tumours CHAP. IX Of the four times of a Tumour and first of its beginning THE knowledg of these times are very proper for our Diagnosis Prognosis and Cure They are four in number Beginning Augment State and Declination That time most properly called the Beginning when a part begins to tumefy thus if a Tumour be made in a recipient part Expulsion and Repercussion is the Intention and this Repercussion is nothing else but Illision and Impulsion of the Humour which floweth either from the whole body or some part thereof into the affected part This Repulsion is a double motion from the part hurt and from another part sending to this hurt part And here we are to advise that when members are loose and soft then are we to strengthen with Medicines of a contrary affect that is with such Medicines as are compact and dry Gal. 14. Meth. cap. 17. saith that pure cold things do repel as cold water and he there adds that others which are not cold yet are restringent as Mint Roses Wormwood and the like and these he saies do repel these for the most part are to be used in the beginnings of Tumours but not alwaies in every kind of Tumour For experience teacheth us that in Pestilential or Venereal Buboes if in the beginning we should apply repelling Medicines we should send the peccant matter to the heart In these six cases apply no Repellers in the beginning as if it be bred by a venenate matter and repelling here you soon do shut up the doors of life If the matter be critical yet this doth not alwaies deny Repulsion for in a violent Fever in which it happeneth that the matter doth send it self to the membranes of the brain in this critical case the Fluent matter is to be repelled lest otherwise the brain becometh inflamed And then when this Tumour happeneth either in a Cacochymick or Plethorick body When the matter sloweth to the emunctories we are not to repel as Galen adviseth 6. de Comp. per loc cap. 2. Then when the part into which this Tumour hath got footing groweth weak as Galen also hath it Meth. 13. cap. 7. And lastly when pain and exasperation of the part is present for then Anodynes are more proper as Galen citeth 6. de Comp. Medic. these I have formerly shown you in the differencies of Tumours but this being their more proper place to bring them into I have also here given you their brief repetition and in all other causes we may and ought to come to use Repellers in the beginning of Tumours Avicen speaking of repelling Medicines ordereth us not alwaies to use one sort or kind thereof but in cold cases to use hot Repellers and in hot cases to use cooling Repellers Now if pain ariseth in the beginning and draweth somewhat of Humour to it here are you to use mild Repellers these being of a sufficient capacity to lenify the parts being stirred up by pain Such are Lettuce Purslain Trifole Nightshade Endive Violets and Plantane these being endued with a waterish moisture do much better in this case than such which are two astringent And out of these may you frame many sorts of Medicines by adding thereto Oyl Water Vinegar and the like And of these may you make stronger or weaker Medicines as occasion may require as ℞ Malvar Parietar Plantag an M. j. coquantur in aqu fontin contusis adde farinae Fabarum Hor dei an ℥ iss Pul. Rosar rubr ℥ ss Ol. Chamomeli ℥ iiij cum decocti praedicti q. s addendo fl Chamomel Melilot in pulv a ʒj fiat Cataplasma tepide admovendum CHAP. X. Of a Tumour in its augment THE Augment of an Inflammation or Tumour as Gal. hath it cap. 4. lib. de Morb. Tempor is when the Influx hath ceased and the part affected Tumefies more than it did formerly And the reason hereof by Aquapendens is because the blood prolapsed out of the vessels doth necessarily grow hot and putrify whence the blood is poured out and converted into a Spirit A●●cen saith that the Augment is then most properly to be so called when the Tumour encreaseth so that it is extended We may know when Tumours have arrived at their Augment by their causes and Symptoms by comparing its times and therefore here our intention is two-fold for that some part hath already made its Flux and other part is still to
make and this requires two scopes to remove the compacted matter and that we take away the cause hereof We have already discoursed of Repulsion we more properly in this place and time speak of Digestion or Discussion This Digestion is an Evacuation of a thin matter gathered in a part by insensible Evaporation procured by the natural heat encreased by proportionate Medicines And this is said to be performed four waies for first the Humour is to be made thin then resolved into a Vapour afterwards drawn from the Center to the Circumference and lastly expelled or thrown forth by the pores of the Skin and these therefore do show that the proper Medicine to be here used is to be a Digestive a Medicine hot and dry in the third degree and of thin parts Of these Digestives some are mild some strong some simple others compound Of the simples are Dill Rue Chamomile Ammoniacum Galbanum white Lillies Lupines Fenugreek and the like Such as are stronger are Time Origanum Mint Pennyroial Hyssop and the like Of the strongest sort are Sulphur vivum and Chalk c. Of the compounds ℞ Malv Dialth Absynth Lilior Albor. an M. i. coquantur in aqu fontin q. s colaturae adde Pulv. Rosar Rubr. ʒij Pulv. Absynth Puleg Fl. Chamomel Melilot an ʒij farin fabar Lupinar Hord. an ℥ iss cum ol Chamomel ℥ iij. misce fiat Cataplasma Ever observing this that according to the strength Age Temper and Constitution of your Patient you endeavour to regulate and order your Medicines If the former will not serve you may make use of this Empl. ℞ Farin Fabar. ℥ i. Farin sem lin ʒij Empl. de mucilaginib ℥ i. Melilot ℥ ss Pulv. Sem. Cumin Absynth a. ʒi cum Ol. Chamomel q. s fiat Empl. Or this ℞ Fol. Mal. Alth. Violar an M. i. Rad. Alth. Irid. Lilior Alb. an ℥ ss fl melilot Chamomel Aneth an p. i. Cumin ℥ i. Bacc. Laur. ʒij Croc. ℈ i. cum Adipe Anatis Anserini Butyri recentis ol Lilior an ℥ i. M. fiat Catapl Or this of Aquapendens ℞ Myrtillor Lactuc Solan a. M. i. Puleg Calamenth Hissop an M. ss coctis in aqua contusis adde Farin Faenugraec ℥ iij. Pul. Betonic Chamomel an ℥ i. ol Anethi Chamomeli a. ℥ iij. cum decocto praedicto fiat Cataplasma CHAP. XI Of a Tumour in its State THEN is it properly said to be in its State when it can reach to no higher degree the beginning of this State doth carry with it some rellish of the Augment and here therefore are Anodynes and Digestives proper being equally mixed In its middle you are to mix more of the Digestives and at last to use Digestives altogether It is in this state that the matter is very near digested and converted into Pus And these have sharp Symptoms attend them for while this pus is making there are Fever and pain as two inseparable companions that go along with it these in its declination taking their leave with the Tumour And this we are to observe that when nature digesteth we ought to help her forward in her designs But a Tumour is very oft times seen to terminate into many other diseases and herein we are to consider the Pulsation if it hath been long if pain be not diminished when the heat endures then is its transition to be expected and where any one of these are it is an evident sign there is matter at hand against which we must be prepared and so mind the symptoms as Pain Tension Hardness Heat for these are toublesome companions and then are we to assist nature in the discharge hereof taking away their causes which is to be performed by Medicines as this or the like ℞ Ol. Chamomel Rosar a. ℥ iij. farin fabar pul fl Chamomel an ℥ ij Hyssop ℥ iss Sapae dulcissim ℥ 10. misce fiat unguent Or this Catapl ℞ Lapath Parictar Chamomel Melilot an M●ss Rosar Rubr. pug i. fl Melilot Chamomel an p. i. farin H●rd pug iij. cum s q. aquae fontinae fiat Catapl Or this ℞ Fl. Chamomel Melilot an pug ij Herb. Chamomel M. i. Coquantur omnia cum Radic Lilior Albor. ℥ iiij simul contusis adde farin faenugraec ℥ ij ol Aneth Chamomel an ℥ ij Vini albi q. s fiat Catapl CHAP. XII Of a Tumour in its Declination WHEN all the former Symptoms do abate and cease then we generally hold we have arrived at the Termination and here according to Gal. cap. 1. lib. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are to use purely Digestives or Discussives and these are to be so much the stronger the declination of the inflammation being in its progress And in this part these two Cataplasms are very proper ℞ Hyssop Origan an M. i. coquantur in vino albo simul contusis adde Ol. Lilior Albor. ℥ iiij Pulv. Puleg Absinth an ℥ ss Farin Faenugraec ℥ iss misce fiat Cataplasma Or this ℞ Alth. Malv an M. i. fl Chamomel Melilot Rosar Rubr. an pug i. Rad. Lilior Alth. an ℥ i. Sem. Lin. faenugraec an ℥ ss Ficuum pingu no. 10. furfur farin hord tritic an pug ij contusa coquantur in aqua ad mellis crassitudinem fine addendo ol Chamomel Axung Porcin an ℥ iss misce fiat Catapl CHAP. XIII Of a Tumour tending to Suppuration THE true waies and methods of curing Tumours we have already shown but it oft times doth happen that a Tumour doth tend to suppuration that is the influxed Blood is converted into pus or matter whence doth arise another method of curing And here Galen doth propose two waies which are performed either by Digestion or Concoction but the first is the best for these two things follow concoction two much generation of this matter and an Abscess made hereof into another place In respect of its generation its long in curing in respect of the Abscess the Inflammation oft times doth run it self into another disease as oft times into a Gangrene as Jubertus observed in the wife of Rondeletius As touching the efficient cause of Purity or Matter Gal. offereth lib. de inaequ intemper cap. 3. that in an inflamed part there is found both a native and an extraneous heat the first preserving the part and doth administer such things to it as belong to its health and welfare the other Extraneous ariseth from the influxed Blood prolapsed out of the vessels and there putrifying this being contrary to the former and so doth destroy and pull down or extinguish the natural heat The first matter is thick laudable white equal well tasted but if the other prevail it appears livid red or black thin inequal grumous The Tumour offers it as a sign of its tending to suppuration by its intenseness and when the inflammation is great and the pain vehement and doth daily encrease and when pulsation joins with
this Tension and this be large when these signs are at hand use neither repelling Medicines nor Digestives but use your greatest care to assist nature in her progress of suppuration by maturating Medicines that is to prepare the matter and make it fit for expulsion and then to discharge it when we have thus prepared it And that therefore we may procure the Tumour for this suppuration and produce a good and laudable matter we are to encrease this Quantity of native heat by such Medicines as are of a digesting faculty the which ought to be of the native heat with the part These are to be applied from the beginning of the Augment to the end of the vigour Some of these are simple as Marshmallows ●iggs Chamomile Galbanum Bdellium Ammoniacum Hogs lard Goose grease and the like Of the compound may be reckoned Empl. Diachylon cum gummi de Mucilag Flos Vnguentorum or some of these Emplasters or Cataplasms Of which for this use these may be applied very properly ℞ Empl. Diachyl cum gum ℥ i. De Mucilag Parac●ls an ℥ ss Basilicon ʒi Croc. ℈ i. cum Vit●l Ovor. no. i. misce fiat Empl. Or. ℞ Bdell Ammoniac an ℥ ss Solventur in Lixivio claro adde Calc viv cum Axung contrit ʒi Sulphur viv ʒss Alumin ℥ ss mel Opt. ℥ iss ferment veter ʒij misce ℞ Rad. Lilior ℥ i. Alth. cum Rad. Malv an M. ss fl Chamomel Melilot an pug i. Ficuum pag. iij. sem lin faenugraec an ʒiij fiat decoctum in vino albo q. s colaturae adde Vit●ll Ovor. no. ij Croc. ℈ ss Ol. Cham. Melilot an ℥ ij misce fiat Cataplasma Or. ℞ Rad. fol. Alth. Malv an M. i. Coquantur pist●●tur ut artis est quibus adde ●arin Tritic. ℥ ij farin sem Lin. ●e●●graec an ℥ i. Butyr recent ●l Lili●r● alb Vnguent Dialth an ℥ iss Croc. ʒss vitell ovor no. ij misce fiat Catapl The matter by these orany of these or the like being brought to Suppuration this is to be discharged and this generally is to be performed by Incision or Caustick And before we attempt either of these we are well to understand whether it be ripe enough and this you may thus find out The Tumour at this time seeming by contracting it self to appear less than it was in its state then it draweth it self to a point its hardness is much abated and therefore discussed and by touching it with the finger we find it Fluctuatous the heat and pain ceaseth the part is changed in its colour the Cuticula is shriveled all these being good signs of its Suppuration This not being all drawn out you are to arm your Tents or Pledgets with this or the like ℞ Terebinth Venet. ℥ i. Mell. ʒij succ Ap. ℥ ss Farin Fabar. ʒv misce fiat Linimentum After the Application of which apply Diachylon cum gummi or Empl. de Mucilaginibus All these being discharged and the Orifice being well mundified and deterged your next business is by the helps of Sarcoticks to fill up with flesh as Vnguent Basilicon Aureum and the like and then with Epouloticks to induce a Cicatrice as with Vnguent Diapompholigos Desiccativum Rubrum Sanativum or Diapalma And thus have I run through the four times of a Tumour and because a Phlegmon doth bear the greatest share in these four times and orderings I shall be much briefer in its discourse and so proceed CHAP. XIV Of a Phlegmon or Inflammation in General IT is by all Authors granted that a Phlegmon hath its four times and that out of Blood besides this doth arise several other Tumours as a Carbuncle Gangrene Sphacelus Pernio Phyma Phygethlon and several others And here let us first inquire what a Phlegmon is and whence derived It taketh its name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to inflame This is an Intemperiety not only of the simple but also of the Organick parts as Galen observeth in 13. Meth. Our latter Writers do make two distinctions about the material cause hereof the Blood being either natural or not natural the natural furnished with these conditions being of the same Blood with that which cometh from the Sanguinary mass having in it the four Humours and these Qualities as being hot in action and moist in consistence in colour red in taste sweet the unnatural being denied of these good Qualities and also devested and deprived hereof Thus out of pure and benign Blood ariseth an exquisite Phelgmon if this Tumour hath any other humours annexed or joined to it it occasioneth a various species of Inflammation as having Choller admixed it maketh Phlegmon Erysipelatodes if Flegm Phlegmon Oedematodes if melancholy Phlegmon Scirrhodes Besides these also other accidents belong to Inflammation for if an inflammation doth get into the membranes of the brain it maketh Phrenitis when it creepeth into the Tunica conjunctiva there it frameth Opthalmia when into the Fauces Angina into the Pleura Pleuritis and so into the Emunctuories Bubo Its causes may arise either inwards or outwards Inward causes are Plethory or plenty of Blood and this not having its free passage must necessarily inflame and putrify inflamed heat in the Sanguinary masse and this oft times doth exalt it self into Fevers the part hot and painful doth draw the Blood and this maketh up the Inflammation Outward causes may be said to be Aires which do inculcate and shut in this putrid matter Attrition Attraction solution of Continuity or Luxation these or any of these causing pain and so Inflammation As to the signs when you perceive a Tumour is soon made and doth soon encrease you may properly judge this an Inflammation when the patient doth perceive a great heat and burning arising from this heat the colour of the part Florid and Red occasioned by heat and thinness of parts pain great and a pulsation joined to this pain by reason of its hot intemperiety when any part extendeth it self upon compression aggravation and vellication of the nervous parts and the veins evidently appear which before lay hid when Tension is made by reason of the constipated matter all these are sufficient signs which may pretend to paint out Inflammation I shall follow Guido's method in the cure of Inflammations as first by removing the cause then come to the Inflammation it self and so to the discharging of the peccant matter And for this he propounds four methods according to the four times and whereas a Phlegmon hath a Beginning while the Blood is nowing an Augment when in its Flux it is made hotter a State when it is converted into Pus or Matter and a Declination when the Inflammation is digested resolved and the Tumour diminished So also the four Intentions shall be these first in having a respect to the order of diet secondly to hinder the Flux of Humours thirdly to discharge the Matter and then lastly to correct
a solution of Continuity occasioned by much Matter distending the Nervous parts Heat and Inequality it is hot like the Humour that breedeth it The greatest matter here to be minded is the Hardness and Thickness of the matter if you see a black and livid Colour in the place and a Hardness accompany it this is a Pathagnomonical Sign if you meet with a melancholy Humour and a melancholy Habit of Body and the Brest suspected and the Body capable of entertaining such a Tumour furnished with evil Juices this giveth a fair prospective to the thoughts of a Cancer The Cancer which is Ulcerate may well be known by these Signs For its Ulcer carrieth with it a fetid Smell having thick swelling and blewlooking Lips horrid in aspect and accompanied with great Pain In its beginning it is hard having a blewish Colour and pricking Pain about it The event showeth the success for you may never expect a cure of this if any hopes may prompt on to proceed it will be with a great difficulty if you extirpate it there oft times remaineth a Cancerous Ulcer or it maketh its reversion some other way and to some other part so that as wise Hippocrates saith if the Patient be thus cured this Cure will onely be as a means to shorten his daies We ought not to meddle with ulcerate Cancers these by Galen held to be altogether incurable Cap. 5. lib. de atra bile they coming from black Choler neither ought we to attempt the Cure of any other without Amputation the which way and method of cure doth carry with it great danger and hazard as Celsus offereth Cap. 28. lib. 5. As to the Cure these three things are to be minded that we have a great respect to the Patien'ts Diet prescribing convenient Medicines and well ordering the part affected and these are performed by Diet Pharmacy and Chirurgery And because the best kind of these are bad enough to be treated with that it may have its great force and fury stormed and its spreading venemous Quality the better contracted and lessened we are here to begin our work with universal order and method of the whole Body The better to strengthen the other adjacent parts and to allay the fury and anger of this so potent an enemy we are first to look to the good order of Diet which in Quantity should be thin although moist in Quality and endeavour to quell the antecedent Cause by prohibiting the generation of this Humour and purge gently your Patient by degrees and in purging observe this rule that you often prepare the Humour the antecedent Cause being conquered lay Seige to the conjunct Cause with all such Engines as may storm the force of the matter contained in the part affected and if any furious motion hereof may either disturb the Quiet unsettle the Rest or discompose the order of this princely Fabrick use all means to prevent the incursion of this private Enemy And for the first intention it being the most proper and ready method for hindring the augment of a Cancer and keeping it within its bounds Purgation is as an excellent weapon And here may you furnish your self with many excellent Methods being either made into Apozems Pills Pouders Potions and the like As for an Apozeme take this ℞ rad Faenicul Asparag Lapath acut Scrophular Polypod querc Sanicul cort interior Frangul an ℥ i. Agrimon Veronic Cuscuth Cetrach Fumar-Capil vener an M. ss fl Genest Sambucin an M. ss sem Anis Faenicul dulc an ℥ i. Liquirit rasur Vvar passar exacinatar an ℥ iss coquantur omnia in s q. aquae fontinae ad tertiae partis consumptionem ad libram colaturae adde syrup de Scolopendr Epithym an ℥ iss Aqu. Cinamom ℥ i. misce fiat Apozema pro tribus dosibus Or this Potion ℞ Conf. Hamech ʒiij Extr. Hellebor nigr gr vj. Aqu. Cinamom ℥ ss cum q. s Decocti prioris fiat potio mane sumenda Or this ℞ rad Bugloss Acetos Cichor an ℥ ss Agrimon Cetrach Epithym a. M. ss Senn. mundat ℥ iss fiat Decoctum ad lbi fine addendo fl ʒ Cordial an pug i. in colaturâ infunde per noctem Rhabarb elect ʒiij pulv Cinamom ℈ iiij exprime Liquorem in hac solve syr Violar de Pomis an ℥ iss misce fiat Apozema Some of the aforesaid Pills mentioned in the cure of a Scirrhus may well be used and taken here Sudorifique Decoctions are also very prevalent here as ℞ Lign Sarsafr ℥ ij Lign Guajac Sarsaperill an ℥ iss Cinamom ℥ ss coquantur omnia in s q. aquae fontinae addendo sem Anis Faenicul dulc an ʒij rasur Liquirit ℥ ss Of these make a Decoction of which the Patient may drink three or four times in a day And as touching the part affected Repulsion and Digestion Scarrification and Section according to Galen lib. 14. Meth. are very proper for evacuating and discharging of the repletion of Humours As for the first two Repulsion and Digestion Galen doth order these to be used both before and in the time of Purgation and then to use Digestives when the Body is sufficiently purged these being made and composed of such things as may not contain any corroding Quality in them and of the Simples may be reckoned these Plantane Nightshade Knotgrass Lettuce Sowthistle Pomgranates Balaustians and the like Avicen doth much commend Tutthy being washed and mixed with oyl of Roses Paulus doth commend Nettles bruised Some do admire the powder of Frogs and others as much do praise an Unguent made of them Others have a great value for Empl. Diacalcitheos dissolved in the juice of Nightshade and oyl of Roses in Cancers not ulcerate But for compound Medicines take these ℞ succ Solan ol Rosar an ℥ iij. pulv Ranar. ustar testar Cancr an ʒiij pulv Rosar rubr ʒi Tuth praeparat Lithargyr aur pulv Plumb ust lot an ʒi Agitentur omnia in Mortario plumbeo fiat Vnguent ℞ Theriac veter ℥ i. succ Cancror ℥ ss succ Lactuc ol Rosar an ℥ iss Vitell. ovor no. ij sub cineribus coct Camphor ʒss agitentur omnia in mortario plumbeo fiat Vnguent Or this ℞ pulv Plumb Ceruss Min. an ℥ ij Litharg aur ℥ i. ol Lin. lbss Cer. q. s fiat Empl. Or this pretious Unguent so much admired by Franciscus Arcaeus in Cancerous Tumours ℞ ol Rosar Omphac lbss sev Hyrcin Vitulin Vnguent Rosatum Populeon an ℥ iiiss succ Solan Plantagin Acetos an ℥ iss Vini granator ℥ iiss coquantur omnia lentissimo igne ad succorum Vini consumptionem postea colentur colaturae adde Ceruss ℥ iiss Litharg aur ℥ 5. Plumb ust Antimon an ʒ10 Tuth praeparat ℥ iss Cer. Alb. q. s fiat Vnguent in Mortario plumbeo All these or any of these may be used in the beginning of a Cancer when it is but small but if it hath arrived at a greater bulk and largness
open and by purging it from its Flegm and waterish Humours as this ℞ Extr. Rud. ℈ i. Pil. Coch. ʒss Resin Jallap gr vi misce or this ℞ Pil. sine quib aur Indic an ʒss Resin Scammon ℈ ss misce for two doses The part affected is to be treated with Coolers and Discussives as are Mallowes with Barley Meal and Cicers being made into a Decoction or some of my discussing Cataplasm already prescribed or this ℞ Farin Fabar. ℥ i. Hord. ℥ ij coquantur poscâ ad formam Cataplasmatis in fine ebullitionis adde pulv Rosar rubr ℥ ss post unam ebullitionem ab igne remove tunc misce album vitel Ovor. no. Ol. Rosar parum misce fiat Cataplasma If the Psydracium be ulcerated and a moist Humour cometh from thence apply this ℞ Litharg aur ʒi Ceruss ℥ ss Alumin ʒij fol. Rut. cum Aceto Oleo simul mixt fiat Vnguentum with which anoint the Skin and having well embrocated it with this you may conclude your Cure with this Liniment ℞ Lithargyr aur Ceruss pulv an ʒij Sulphur ʒi Ol. Rosar q. s fiat Linimentum And lastly aqua Scahiosa is by many held to be most excellent here Alome being added to it CHAP. XXXIV Of Hydrocephalos THIS is a proper Tumour of the Head arising for the most part from Water and hence doth it take its name This is a Distemper which doth very oft come into the World with young Infants being either bred with them in the Womb or else so as they are bringing into it It may also be occasioned by a careless or ignorant or unhappy Midwife It may well be called a Cephalick Dropsie for it doth contain in it a proper Waterish substance known by its indolency softness its easie yielding to touch but chiefly from its inundation of Water running out of one place into another in its compression These Tumours do often times vary for in some they are small whilst in others they do appear very large It is a peculiar Disease in the Head of young Children the which ariseth from too much Humidity of the Head for which very Cause they which are much troubled herewith do seldom live long as both Galen Aetius and Paulus do observe This Tumour by Galen in Libr. definitionis is thus designed as being a collection of waterish Humours or feculent Blood in some parts of the Body which doth force it self up to the Head And here is a double meaning to be explained the one whereas he calleth it not only a collection of a Serous Humour but also of a feculent Blood as when the Head Cranium suffers an outward Contusion or Collision and the Veins by this Collision do sprinkle their Blood between the Cutis and Pericrane This Blood here thus putrifying doth make a most soft Tumour and if a serous aquosity were collected the which by dayly experience may well be offered to happen from a Contusion thus happening it may frame a Hydrocephalos Aetius lib. 6. cap. 1. will have that a Hydrocephalos may be generated from a Feculent or bloody Matter the which being changed into a thin substance A second of Galens is that a Hydrocephalos is a collection of an aquous Humour in some part of those Bodies which have a forcing quality towards the Head out of which it may be conjectured that Galen doth offer that Hydrocephalos to be a Disease of some part of the Head not a Dropsie of the whole Head and this is confirmed by Aetius and Paulus who treating of Hydrocephalos do allow four species hereof First when this Humour getteth between the Brain and Membranes Secondly when it lyes between the Membranes and the Skull A third between the Bone and the Pericrane And Lastly when between the Pericrane and the hairy Scalp I have already shown you part of its Signs that it is a Tumour soft in touch whitish in colour indolent turgid much like a Pillow to other parts easily yielding to touch and as speedily filling up its former made vacancy the Finger being removed If it ariseth from a Contusion it doth appear first red and doth carry pain with it as Aetius doth write but being afterwards changed into a thin substance it doth spread it self without pain In those where it happeneth between the Pericrane and Bone they answer plainly the rest for here it is hard in Tumour and very painful by reason of the distention of the Pericrane If it happeneth as sometimes it doth between the Membrane of the Brain and the Skull it will be a Tumour but not yield to compression nor soft to touch Here it maketh the Infant soon to give way to it and to yield up its Ghost Its Causes may be said to be sometimes outward sometimes inward One of the outward may be said to be that which is mentioned by Paulus in Children newly born who had their Heads but ill bound up by their Midwives Another is contusion or collision or ruption of one or many Vessels Another cause is a cold Air or too much Water or thinness of its passages or Vessels out of which this Serum or matter do recide as Aetius hath it or also too cold or waterish Milk which it may suck from the Nurse these may be said to be the inward Causes hereof as when the Brain is too much cooled or the matter being here first collected and hence sent to the Brain Every Hydrocephalos is very slow in its motion as Aetius doth prove Lib. 6. Cap. 1. For it hath a cold Brain inwardly from its beginning arising from its inward Cause and also an outward by and from its outward Cause by reason of its delay and contaction To draw all these to one head there is to be allowed two Species of a Hydrocephalos One in which this waterish Humour is contained and made by an inward Cause that is out of an abundant collection of this serous matter in the Body The second doth not contain the sincere Serum but as it were a mixt feculent Blood the which doth eat it self out of the lacerated Veins arising from Contusion or some other outward Causes As to its Presage Paulus Aetius and Galen do offer that if this Humour be collected between the Brain and its Membranes it is mortal in other parts it may admit Cure by curing its Causes and removing its Effects But here as well as in other parts of the Body the Rules of Celsus and Galen are to be observed every Disease is so much the more dangerous by how much it gets into a greater bulk and bigness As touching its Cure we shall begin with that which is extant between the Hairy Scalp and Pericrane And herewe are to observe that every Hydrocephalos is to be cured by discharging of this waterish substance which is to be performed by purging the whole and cleansing the affected part And with this we are to begin with general Cephalick Purgings in
it does continually flow An Imbecillity of the Testicles does give another great suspicion hereof Another Cause amongst some is attributed to Coition with a Menstruous Woman Oft times it happens by overstraining the inward parts a thing very frequent in snch who being in their Drunken fits do act beyond their power of Reason If the Seed therefore which is thus thrown forth be pure and is not in any respect tinged with any strange quality and is void of all fetid smell this either does shew and express a plenty thereof or a weakness of the Retentive Faculty or Convulsion of the Spermatick Vessels But if it be accompanied with any other vitious Humours and furnished with thin ill Juices and appears with another colour strange to its own proper nature and yieldeth a smell which sheweth no good Concoction this first of all does calefie and by its acrimony does corrode pricketh and invadingly ulcerateth And this Ulcer does much differ from that which exerciseth it self in the Bladder and thus may with ease be distinguished where the Neck of the Bladder is ulcerated the pus or Matter does as it were compactly precede the Urine it self and the pain between making water is most mightily sharp about the ulcerated part On the contrary the Bladder it self being ulcerated there is no pain felt nor Matter pissed forth secreted by the Urine but cometh along with it The Urine does yield a strange strong smell where the Bladder is affected with an Ulcer When the Urinary passage is ulcerated the Yard is very painful and heavy and bendeth downwards An U●●er contracted in the Neck of the Bladder or in the cavity of the penis unless it be both speedily and knowingly cured does convert it self into preternatural Caruncles by which the Urinary passage is obstructed For as out of most pure Blood the best Flesh is generated so also vicious Juices enwrapping or keeping company with the Ulcers there is oft times seen a spongious Flesh to grow and breed And therefore when we have arrived at the sure knowledge that this unnatural Guest hath made his entrance into these quarters which we may speedily find out by the search of a Candle and to gain advantage of this Disturber of the Humane peace we ought if Plenitude be a main wing of its vigour to discharge this by Evacuation And here let the Patient use a thin Diet if the Juices be sharp and thin thicken them so as that they may give strength to the Spermatick Vessels if we do here find or meet with any weakness strengthen them And for clearing this Method observe with me these Curative scopes First loosen the Body with emollient Clysters made of Mallows Violets Pellitory Lettuce French Barley and the like adding thereunto Cassia in the end After this breathe the Basilick Vein 〈◊〉 the right Arm. These two being premised let the Thighs be washed with a Decoction of Red Roses French Barley Violets red Poppies and the like Let the Kidneys Spine and Testicles be cooled with this ℞ Vnguent Rosat Refriger Galen an ℥ j. ol Violar ℥ ss pulv Rosar rubr Santal Citrin Spod an ʒj Camphor gr●iij Acet Rosat gutt aliquot As to the part affected deterge it first with a Decoction of French Barley in which have been put some Mel Rosarum this being made lukewarm is by a Syringe to be injected into the Yard Then produce a Cicatrice with this following ℞ Aqu. Rosar Plantag an ℥ iiij Sacchar candit ℥ j. Ceruss Lithargyr aur Alumin Roch. an ʒiss Camphor ℈ ss misce fiat injectio Trochisci albi Rhasis do here also very well but if you have a mind to dry more powerfully adde to the former a little Aegyptiacum Shun all strong Diureticks which may force or drive the Humours to the ulcerated parts and such things are especially to be used which have a quality in them to lessen the pain For this purpose Lac Amygdalatum is very good A Hyposarcosis in the Neck of the Bladder or in any part of the Urinary passage may be collected out of the great difficulty of Urine the which comes not onely out by drops but by forcing and endeavour to perfect this So that sometimes upon a great straining while the Patient makes water he hath a Laxity joyned with it Neither can that Urine come right which hath its passage obstructed by a Carunculous Flesh Neither doth it easily come forth unless it be compressed with the Hand Oft times there is seen such Obstruction that unless the Catheter be called in use there 's no coming forth of Urine to be expected There is a twofold Method in curing of a Caruncle of the Yard the one is performed by Instrument the other by Medicine A Fomentation for this purpose may be this ℞ fol. Malv M. j. rad Alth. Ap. Faenicul an ℥ iij. sem Lin. Cydonior Foenugraec an ℥ j. fl Chamomel Staechad Melilot Puleg Origan an pug ij Caricar pingu ℥ iss coquant●r omnia usque ad radicum dissolutionem cum hoc foveatur radix penis Or else dip Sponges herein and apply them to the part affected After it is thus fomented it is to be absterged with such an Unguent as this ℞ Vnguent Dialth Agrip. Oesyp Butyr an ℥ j. ol Amygdal dulc Lilior albor Chamomel an ℥ ij Ammoniac ℥ iss Succ. Ap. ℥ iij. Mucilag semin Foenugraec rad Alth. Lin. an ℥ ij boil them all untill the consumption of the Juices then adde the Fat 's and strain it off and to the strained Matter adde a little white Wax Here also are you to make use of searching Candles made of white Wax And for this Affect a Leaden Probe is excellent good for that whereas besides that it is an Anodyne so also hath it a very drying faculty When these fail we come to the use of a Catheter but this without a very respective care and steddy hand does very often occasion strange Hemorrhagies and so thereby doth frequently bring fear both to the Physician and the Patient But should such a Flux as this appear this may with ease be stopped by injecting into the Passage with a Syringe some Plantane water and Rose water to which the White of an Egge should be added Here also are you to mind how upon applying your Candle what part thereof is either bent or bruised or compressed for upon this part is to be applied your Medicines you intend to use and for this purpose Philips Emplaster is reputed to be a most excellent and sovereign Medicine in this Affect because it healeth the adjacent parts and keepeth them whole and safe but that which grows with the Ulcer it taketh away without pain This is its description ℞ Aerugin Auripigment Chalcat Alumin Roch. an ℥ ij his adde Acet acerrim perfus inter duos marmoreos fiat pulvis subtibissimus exponantur Soli. Then put it into fresh Vinegar again after dry it as formerly let this be done for 8
us it is an Art which informeth with reason how we may cure prevent and mitigate diseases by the help of the hand but it s most proper and essential definition is taken from eradicating diseases by Art and manual Operation for as 〈◊〉 hath it such medicines as are applied to Tumours Wounds Ulcers or Fistusaes cannot so properly be said to be cured by Chirurgery because this health is purchased and procured by help of medicine which was applied But where an Abscesse or Impostume is opened by Incision bones dissocated or fractured reduced by the hand Fistulaes dilated Cataracts couched Cancers taken of by Instrument and the like these may well come under the name of Chirurgery it being from the use of the hand that it taketh its name for it is derived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à mann opera and thus Chirurgery quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As for its subject matter I have already shown man being alone the proper Instrument hereof As to its end it was ordered and framed to repair natures wants to help her necessities to make her curvations right And to its order and method it is divided into Theory and Practice The first teacheth and is called science acquired by demonstration and knowledg of the principles of Art this carrieth with it the precepts of Art The second practice found out by Knowledg and Reason arriving at a greater degree of perfection by manual Operation and this daily experience adds to its lustre and truth It may also be divided into general and special parts These held general as the Articulations or soft parts Those special which teachthe right way of Operation about Tumours wounds ulcers fractures dis●ocations and the like The scope of Chirurgery directs the Chirurgion to the well knowing and understanding these four parts as to remove solution of continuity to restore union where wanting to separate parts unnaturally united and to supply defects The first is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the joining part the second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the separating part the third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the removing part the fourth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the supplying part The first performed by Consolidatives Agglutinatives adducing Luxated bones and curing fractures The second acted by Incision Phlebotomy or Scarrification or Amputation as in wry necks hare lips imperforated Anus and Penis The third is finished by extirpating tumours as Ganglions Cancers Nodes Strumaes Scrophulaes Stones Cataracts drawing out of water from the Abdomen or Thorax by a Paracenthesis Amputation and the like The fourth he supplies in restoring Ruptures into their proper places as in restoring a new nose and bringing the blind eie to its sight And these are to be done Citò Tutò Jucunde suddenly without pain safely without cheat or imposture and pleasantly without fear or fallacy And that the Chirurgion may perform these with honour and repute let him take a turn with me in the several borders of this Chirurgick garden where he may first see what is natural what unnatural what preternatural thereby the better to furnish himself with Indications or Intentions against these or any thereof And the first that offer themselves here are the things of nature for whose end this first intention is appointed and that is health its cause effect its strength and temper all which are to be kept in their order and beatuy These are generally allowed unnatural or preternatural as a disease or distemperiety for this is said to be a praeternatural effect of it self and hurting action by its cause and this may hurt by action hindring it or by accident and then by symptoms which follow a disease as a shadow doth the body There are three general Intentions here requisite The first arising from a preternatural thing taking from its contrary as union from Solution of continuity coldness from heat heat from coldness driness from moisture and moisture from driness ablation from matter exceeding and encreasing from matter diminishing apertion from obstruction and dilatation from angustness astriction from amplification reposition into its proper place from whence it made its recession And as we are to observe this order of contrariety so also are we well to understand it which affect ought first to be cured the curing of which is the principal cause of curing the other and without which no perfecture The second Intention sheweth how we are to keep those parts intire which are placed according to nature and to discharge and expel those that are preternatural and we may understand an incurable disease these three-waies First when the disease of its own nature is incurable as the Elephantiasis or confirmed Secondly when the patient useth not such means as should be proper for his recovery Thirdly when the curing of one distemper threatens another greater and more terrible The third Intention is performed by opportune helps and conveniency use of right and proper medicines and these are either Medicinal or Instrumental Instrumental for living well and keeping a good order as Pharmacy Phlebotomy Emplaisters Uuguents Powders and the like The unguents a Chirurgion should alwaies have in readiness satisfying his common Intentions are these unguent Basilicon to maturate and convert into Pus Apostolorum to deterge and mundify Aureum to incarn and fill up A●●um to agglutinate and consolidate Dialthaea to mitigate and ease pain Instruments for all occasions large and small some for searching others for cutting for some drawing out extraneous bodies and others for putting or reducing parts into their respective places And these bring me to the Chirurgion himself which is to be the man onely engaged both in their applications and administrations and let us see what person he ought to be how qualified armed furnished and exercised To consider in what chair of honour and esteem a Chirurgion is seated may well require his care and study learning and excellency and since there is such a conjunction of the mind with the body such a connexion and society that they generally take shares of one anothers good and bad fortune as some deliriated with fevers whilst others are blown up with madness by the fury of choller To see the wonderful effects of blood while melancholy acts her innumerable changes in our bodies may well call into admiration the best of mens knowledg our thoughts varying according to the diversity of tempers in our bodies Thus are we troubled with diseases inflamed by anger sweetned by love exhilarated by joy dejected by sorrow tempered by sweetness shaken by fear and to search out the depth of these their originations and causes their diversity of shapes and postures may well require a quick sight to penetrate a powerful wit to search out a well guided reason to consider of He therefore that will enter this stage of Chirurgery must well understand its various scenes and acts for it s he alone guided by the provident hand and
have already writ of Tumours from whence we shall derive this method in our beginning of Tumours first acquainting you with the name of a Tumour then its essence and causes then its difference and symptomes its signs and presages and after these its universal cures both as touching general and particular Tumours Of each of these in their Order CHAP. II. Of the name of a Tumour IT hath its name from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies inflammation or extutuberance and hence by Celsus and Avicen a Tumour is said to signifie a preternatural extuberance and by Galen is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tumor praeter naturam by the Asiaticks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were a condensed or conglobated matter by the Arabians Apostema which by the Greeks signifieth an Abscess which is a substance converted into Pus or as Aqua pendens calls it an eminency of the body this I call a preternatural disease in which some parts of the body are indecently extended being hereby unfit for performance of their proper action Hippocrates doth christen all Tumours with the name of Oedema Galen appearing somewhat doubtful and incertain doth sometimes reckon this amongst diseases of the similar sometimes amongst the Organick parts Haliabbas is of his Opinion Guido defines an Aposteme a disaffection composed of three sorts of diseases aggregated into a bulk And Avicen thus expounds them ill complexion ill composition and a common solution of Continuity which is found in every Tumour Tagaultius after Guido defineth an Aposteme to be an Inflammation made in a member beyond its proper nature and form Falloppius holdeth a preternatural Tumour to be a Disease in magnitude and therefore simple and onely consistent in a great extention Fabritius de Aqua pendente offereth a preternatural Tumour for the most part to be a compound disease and taketh its denomination from that which hindereth action Read calls it sometimes a Disease sometimes holds it to be a light Affection for the most part incident to the Organick parts encreasing their quantity by superfluous humours Or if you please after all these you may take a preternatural Tumour to be a material Intemperiety dissolving the Union of the parts and sometimes hurting them in magnitude figure and sight CHAP. III. Of the Causes of Tumours A Tumour is said generally to have four causes attend it as a Material Efficient Formal and Final cause By Guido the first is called the conjunct cause The second when Nature frameth any part so weak as that it is not able and strong enough to keep the excrements of other parts out of its territory A third cause when any part of its substance is too rare or loose the fourth is a natural Humidity with exemplification of the part Another cause may be said to be the Site of the part for the upper parts are said to be less capable of receiving humours than the lower part Falloppins offereth six heads as so many Observations of Tumours The first when it begins to putrifie it spreds and extends it self speedily and suddenly groweth into a lump or masse Secondly there are Humours which ●ake Tumours and these are either 〈◊〉 or preternatural Thirdly when some parts change and remove themselves 〈◊〉 of their proper places into other 〈◊〉 strange places as you 〈◊〉 in Rupt●●●● and Dissocations A fourth is such ●●mours as are bred of waterish 〈◊〉 as Hernia Aquosa Ascitis and the like A fifth when vapours wind and the like either naturally or preternaturally do frame a Tumour And the sixth is that which maketh the body unnatural to it self as Sanies Excrements and the like But to bring this discourse of Falloppius to one head you may find six Humours generally in our bodies of which are generated these six Tumours as out of Blood Choller Flegm Melancholy Wind and Water Phlegmon Erysipelas Oedema Scirrhus Pneumatocele Hydrocele Besides these we have Insects and other Animals that very oft times are the occasions of Tumours as Falloppius once observed in a Maid who having a large Tumour about the Inguen the Chirurgion in his presence opening the same saw it filled with Worms Amongst the primary causes may well be reckoned Air for out of its Contagion ariseth many Tumours Secondly Contaction as a cold Stone may occasion a Tumour and for this Falloppius brings in another story of a Woman who sitting upon a cold stone was afflicted with a cold Tumour And a third may be solution of continuity and this proveth either occult or manifest thus after fractures we oft times find large Apos●emes to appear and what was the occasion of Luxation is very oft also the occasion of Tumours as too much contracting or binding of a part may occasion a Tumour as Gangrene biting of Beasts taking of offensive things inwardly these being sufficient matter for Humours to breed from If a Humour do suddenly excite a Tumour this is its evident cause and the cause hereof is either Congestion or Fluxion The one when bred carried in the part onely whilst the other maketh its further progress by Fluxion as Aqua pendens observeth And therefere as he adviseth we ought well to consider the part mit tant and the part recipient for the matter doth not move it self but is moved by some other as by the part mittant per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by the part recipient per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The mittant part ought first to be strong and able to expel the supersluities as the attractive is made by the part recipient And this bringeth me to the inward causes and here sometimes the matter is hedged into one place so that it cannot make its exit Another may be its passage out of one place into another and this is properly called Fluxion a Fluendo from thus ●lowing and as intemperiety is the cause of pain or solution of Continuity so also is this intemperiety made either by outward or inward causes CHAP. IV. Of the Differencies of Tumours THE true Differencies of Tumours by Aqua pendens are generally taken from these two Fountains as from Humours and the depending parts and from these two do arise the cheif intentions in Tumours Falloppius doth offer seven things which belong to the Differencies of Tumours First a disease when it receiveth more or less Secondly the material cause hereof diversified and then are its Species and Differencies diverse Thirdly when the efficient cause when manifold doth draw many species to it The fourth is the Fountain of accidents which followeth the disease The fifth the time which is the cause of all the differencies of Tumours The sixth the subject of the Tumour And seventhly the motion of the disease for it is as its owner and moveth as he moveth Besides these are we to consider of the times of diseases for some are short some long some quick others slow and therefore are we well to
origination hereof by the Arabians called undimia by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies no otherwise then an eminency There are of natural or excrementitious Flegm these three sorts the first being acid so called from its taste the second salt Flegm the third glassy Flegm from its coldness thickness and toughness And if Flegm doth erecede from its nature by admixing it self with Blood it is called Oedema Phlegmonodes if with Choller Oedema Erysipelatodes if with melancholy Oedema Scirrhodes A great matter hereof is a great quantity of Flegm residing in the body cheifly about the extreme parts as the hands knees or feet these being the most remote from the Fountain of heat This Flegm is thrown forth from the greater vessels to the smaller the which being there deteined by the thickness of the Cutis is collected in the musculous parts and there doth form this Oedematous Tumour It is a Tumour soft indolent loose yeilding to the touch generated from a pituitous matter It is soft and loose and these two come from the Humour of thin Flegm indolent for it neither doth make or cause any pain or dissolve unity It gives way to the touch and is a white Aposteme and without heat white being most like its object Flegm without heat being like the matter out of which it is generated which is cold and moist A pituitous Humour redundant in the body is the cheif cause to the which a cold and moist air a flegmatick diet too much sleep and idleness and a cold dyscrasy both of Head Stomack or Liver may help forward to the encrease of its cause And as Galen saith Comm. 46. that out of Fluxion of Humours some are cruel as Chollerick fluxes and burnt Melancholy and others are more kind as this Oedema so this is a tedious and long disease because it is cold the native heat being herein very weak It is oft times soft and without pain and so carrieth the less danger but if it be hard and with pain it is dangerous As touching its cure here ought we first to use proper means by Retraction and Revulsion of the Matter and lessening of it Secondly because it is cold remove its cause by implanting heat and warmth herein Let the Air be warm and dry the Diet attenuating and drying here Wine is good because it doth digest and warm Let his diet be of good and light digestion as Chickens Rabbets Partridges and the like to which may be added all sorts of spices Let his sleep be moderate and let him avoid all passions of mind and venery and observe that he keep a good habit of his body After this let him use such evacuations as may both attenuate open and discharge this Flegm Bleeding here is in no wise to be used unless a Phlegmon do accompany it Fever or the like And for his use these Phlegmagogicks are very proper and convenient as ℞ Alo. lot cum aqu Majoran Agaric trochisc an ʒi Mastich Cubebar an gr vi Troch Alhandul ℈ ss Cum syr de Betonic q. s fiant pillulae dosis ʒi Or ℞ Pil. Coch. ʒij Aurear. ℈ i. Troch Alhandul gr iiij cum Oxymelit scillitic q. s fiant pil no. 18 quarum sumat 2 omni mane Or if you will ℞ Pil. Coch. ℈ ss extr Rud. ℈ i. Mercur dulc gr 15 ol C●ryophyllor gut i. misce sumat mane A potion preparing Flegm ℞ Hyssop M. i. Menth. M. ss Absynth M. ss sem Anis Faenicul Calamenth an ℥ ss Rosar rubr ℥ ss fiat decoctum ad lb. colaturae adde Sacchar lb. aromatizetur cum pulv Cinamom ʒi or this potion ℞ aqu Meliss Bugloss an ℥ ij in his in funde per noctem Rhabarb ʒi Agaric trochisc ℈ ij pulv Cinamom ℈ ss ZZ ʒss colaturae adde Mann ℥ ss Cambog gr iiij aqu Cinamom hordeat ℥ ss misce fiat potio Or if you please this ℞ Electuar Diacatholic ℥ ss Diaphaenic ʒij pul Agaric troch ℈ ss solvantur omnia in aqu Hyssop Rosar damascinar Faenicul an ℥ i. misce fiat potio cui adde syr de Betonic ℥ iss And because Oedema is a disease offending partly in quality partly in quantity in respect of its cold and moist quality we are to use such Medicines to the part affected as are warm and dry and in relation to its quantity we are to endeavour its discharge and evacuation And since here is required a double intention here ought we carefully to inquire and examine whether Repellers mixed with Digestives are in the beginning first to be used Galen doth satisfie us cap. 3. lib. 2. ad Glanc that they are to be used as you may find him there using a peice of sponge or linnen rags dipt in Oxycrate to which a little salt is added and so applying it over the part and then ordering it to be rolled up for Repulsion is this roller being dipt in vinegar and the sponge and the water do digest the pituitous Humour But it may be asked how Digestives being hot and dry may or can agree with water which is cold and moist in digestion Galen doth answer this Chapt. 8. lib. 1. that water doth digest and this we may see in the hands and feet of Fishermen who having been much imploied in the water you will find them both corrugated and wrinkled which corrugation is nothing else but the evacuation of that matter which formerly filled up the spaces But should an Oedema happen upon the Tendinous or Nervous parts we are to use little vinegar and for discussion of the matter this may be very proper ℞ fl Chamomel Rosar Mirtin Absynth Staechad a. M. ss Alumin Roch. Sal. commun an ℥ ss Balaust nuc Cupress an M. i. Salv. Rorismar Squinanth an pug i. coquantur poscâ factâ ex Lixivio coquantur omnia usque ad ʒae partis consumptionem in quo madefaciatis Spongiam and this you are to use to the state Or this Cataplasm ℞ pulv Rosar rubr Mirtin Absynth Rorismar Staechad an ʒij pul fl Chamomel Melilot an ʒi misce coquantur cum q. s Hydromelitis fine addendo pulv nuc Cupress Squinanth Balaust an ʒiij Or this Cataplasm ℞ farin Fabar. mic pan an ℥ iiij pulv Terrae cimol ℥ ij sem Lin. Faenugraec an ℥ j. Bol. armen ʒi coquantur in s q. Lact. vaccin ad Cataplasmatis formam fine addendo Camphor Croc. an ℈ i. vitell ovor no. ij misce fiat Cataplasma Or this ℞ farin Hord. Fabar. an ℥ iiij pulv Rosar ru Bacc. Laur. Mirtillor an ℥ i. pul fl Chamomel Sambucin Melilot Ivae arthritic an ℥ ss fim caprin ℥ ij cum vino rubro fiat Catapl fine addendo Sapon nigr ℥ iij. applicetur bis in die And because Quicksilver hath a very strange penetrating quality allowed it that it can command Flegm from
thereof twice in a day within three daies perfectly recovered CHAP. XXV Of a Cancer AND because this is a Tumour doth happen very frequently in our Art and proves an enemy both very powerful and painful that we may understand the right way of dealing herewith it generally happening in the Brest let us first consider the Brest it self and its parts The Brest according to our Countryman Wharton is said to be framed of a glandulous spongeous Parenchyma not divided into distinct conglobated Glandules but is rather to be accounted a conglomerated Glandule but in a Scirrhus and in a Cancerous Tumour they appear knotty It hath Veins Nerves Arteries and Lymphaducts and a porous Cavity its Veins and Arteries come from the Subclavians it hath its Nerves from the fifth pair and from other Originations Lymphaducts are here very frequently scattered and as touching its Porosities or porous Cavities these do serve for its Excretion or its excretory uses they being more large in the Brest then in the common Ductus which is opened with many small Foramulaes their general use is to prepare the Milk fit for the Infant and for the making this there is held a great controversy some holding the Blood to be the Prima Materia hereof whilst others do contend as stoutly for the Chyle to be its Origination The first is not to be defended for if Chyle be to be made most properly into Blood it may very properly be accounted retrograde for Blood to turn into Chyle And such as do stand up for the Chyle to be the onely substance of the Milk they do offer this as their assertion that the Chyle doth immediatly pass through the Milky vessels into the Brest or that it is there received into the Veins and thence effused through the Thoracick Arteries into the Brests and that they have a power or faculty to separate the Blood from the Chyle and to dispose it through the Mammillary vessels into the Body and this they call Milk but the way or passage which should conduct this to the Lactiferous vessels is not yet arrived at Our worthy Wharton's opinion is that Milk is peculiarly a nervous Juice not properly constituted for the substance of the Milk but also for carrying a double Matter with it as being both Chylisick and Spermatick and these two do breed the greatest part of the Milk not immediatly sent from the Ventricle to the Brests by the Milky vessels but carried by or through the Ductus chyliferus into the Subclavian thence circuled with the Blood through the Ventricles of the Heart and so passeth through the Thoracick Arteries and in time of the Mother giving milk it is refunded into the ample capacity of the Brests and there do separate the Sanguineous part from the Chyle and do reduce it through the Mammary Veins into the Meditullium of the body And this he offereth as the cheif matter or substance of Milk and the most proper nutriment for the Infant And since we daily see the young sucking Babe is nourished by alluring this Milk from its mothers Brest by her Nipple it is very necessary that it should contain in it such a substance as may give it satisfaction And as the more noble part thereof doth come from the Succus nervosus so also ought it most properly to be derived from hence for the Infant 's nutriment but thus much as touching Milk We arrive now to that which nearer concerns our enquiry which is the tract of a Cancer and this by the Greeks is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by us a Cancer from the resemblance it hath with a Sea-Crab For as the one hath expanded claws and feet in several places being of a livid or cinerish colour so also is this Tumour of a round Figure of a livid Colour and sticketh or adhereth so close to the part affected as a Key to a Door or a claw of a Crab in its griping having in it by some reported to carry in it exalted Veins but this is more fabulous then true for not in four of a hundred as Falloppius observes can you see them thus apparent It carrieth with it a train of horrid pain and heat shewing it self to view both cruel and horrible it ariseth from black Choler As Tagaultius supposed it ariseth from the Fecies of Blood but this is onely his opinion for this doth more properly frame and make a Scirrhous Humour and that which to the whole body doth make an Elephantiasis to a private or particular part doth also frame a Cancer and where this black Choler is sharp and hot it maketh an Ulcerate Cancer and by reason of its thick Juice it can neither be repelled or discussed for as it slighteth and contemneth the company or acquaintance of mild Medicines so also doth it like Lard or Oyl turn into a flame rage and fury by the applying of any strong or vehement Medicine The Causes of this Atra bilis are many for first in the Liver is bred this natural melancholick Humour which is called the Fecies of the Blood and hence ariseth a Scirrhus so this Atra bilis is made up of the adustion of the other Humours and without flattery is the worst of all the rest and as it groweth more putrid sharp and malign it doth more speedily violently and painfully create an ulcerated Cancer Sometimes it ariseth from a hot intemperiety of the Liver which burneth it and by this burning is bred Atra bilis Sometimes as Galen saith cap. 10. lib. 2. ad Gla●c from weakness and intemperiety of the Spleen it being made incapable to attract this melancholick Humour in so much that it is kept up and burnt up in the body Sometimes it happeneth from a suppression of the Menstrues Outward causes may also affect this as a thick and viscous Diet as Onyons Leeks Beans and the like It may arise in any one part of the Body sometimes it doth throw it self forth into several places but the Brest being a soft loose part is most subject to its Tyranny and receiving the impress of its malitious stamp Sometimes it happeneth in the parts of the Face Nose Lips Mandible and Tongue Sometimes in the Inguens and Thigh a lively example of which I had in a Gentlewoman my Patient in Norwich when I writ this Another reason that a Cancer doth soonest grow acquainted with the Brest before any other part is in respect of the great consent that there is made between the Breast and the Womb by the Veins through which this thick and feculent Blood is sent and dispatched and for the same reason is it that there have been seen so oft times Cancers of the Womb. At its first touch it doth appear hard in respect of its thick Humour it is of a livid Colour and the more malign the Humour is the more livid the Colour of the Tumour is and then painful for here is made
so suddenly run into Uucers if not suddenly and well cured In its Cure are we to prohibit its Ulceration for it soon exulcerates if not well cured And here we are to begin with purging and cleansing the Body from these Humours by Pil. Coch. Aggregativ Sine Quibus and the like and by Diaphoreticks to dry up this moisture the part affected is to be discharged of this Serum and prohibiting suppuration And therefore to Children troubled with such a Disease you may use such a Medicine as this ℞ Aqu. Marin vel aqu fontan in quâ imponatur Sal M. j. in his coquantur herbae Saliv Rosar rubr Absynth an M. ss cola In this you may dip Sponges and apply them warm to the affected part and afterwards lay this Plaister-wise Take Figs being boiled in Water to the form of a Pultice and apply them If you require stronger Medicines ℞ Alumin Roch. Calcanth ust an part aequal sqam Aer dupl Glut. in Aceto diluatur cum reliquis imponatur If it be exulcerated apply Ceratum Citrinum Sem. Lin. trit cum aqua Let it be deterged with the pulp of Figs to which may be added a little burnt Alume and skin it with Desiccativum Rubrum or Diapompholigos There was a Minister of forty years of Age who was much perplexed with a Scirrhous Tumour at the great corner of his Eye the largeness of a Chesnut being of a livid colour intertexed with many capillary Veins The Body being well purged and a good Dyet ordered and being let Blood on his left Arm the same side where this Tumour possessed the Tumour was extirpated with a pair of cutting Forcipes After which was applied the white of an Egg mixed with Rose water then following were applied Anodine Abstersive and very drying Collyriums oft time● repeating the Purgations and Administring cupping Glasses to the Neck and Scapulaes and to the Forehead was applied this first being Anodine and afterwards this second being very drying The first was this ℞ Mucilag sem Cydonior Plantag cum aqu Rosar extract Lact. muliebr an ℥ ij Camphor Croc. an ℈ ss misce apply i● warm The second this ℞ A●u Plantag Rosar an ℥ iij. Tuth praeparat 〈◊〉 ust praeparat Ceruss lot an 〈…〉 fiat Collyrium By the benefit of these and observing his prescribed Direction he was perfectly cured CHAP. XXXVIII Of a Cataract I NOW proceed to Tumours of the Eyes and under this Head I shall comprehend Suffusio Hordeolum unguis Oculorum and Encanthis Suffusio or Cataract by the Greeks is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this is an affect of the Eye whose cause is as it were a concreted glassy Humour gotten between the Cornea and the Chrystalline Humour clouding it and obscuring its Species of Objects sometimes covering the whole Pupil whilst at other times it is seen only to cloud but half thereof And according to it s more or less spreading it doth either in process of time wholly abolish or partly diminish the sight And as Platerus doth observe it groweth in length of time to the thickness and hardness of an excocted Egg. It is oft times made by a concretion of a Flegmatick Humour bred either between the Coats of the Eye or its Pannicles or Spots It ariseth also from an influx of Humours or is occasioned by some outward Action as a Blow or Fall or thick and fumid Vapours arising from the Stomach and so getting into the substance of the Brain are from thence sent and diffused into the Eye and at length do there contract its concretion It may arise also out of weakness and cold Celsus lib. 7. cap. 7. saith that there is a space or distance between the Cornea and the Vvea and in this empty space as he does imagine lodgeth this Cataract or Suffusion and there takes its Origination Paulus lib. 6. cap. 21. saith that a Suffusion is a Concretion of an idle or sedentary Humour in the Cornea near the Pupilla but this carrieth not so full a measure of truth as the former Galen 10. de usu partium cap. 1. 4. offereth that this Humour doth grow between the Cornea and the Crystalline Yet Fabritius ab aqua pendente doth affirm that in the three persons which he hath couched and that in all People which he hath seen use the same Operation the Needle hath been applied backward under the Vvea before the Suffusion would appear and therefore it is probable as he mentioneth that behind the Foramen of the Vvea this Humour should consist because if it did grow in its Circumference it could not be dilated Where this Cataract is confirmed and comes to maturity we may with ease perceive the thin Membranes visited with a strange Species of a thin clouded Pupil variously coloured according to the diversity of Humours as sometimes with white or black or blewish yellow red or green and by these or any of these the Eye is oft times clouded and deprived of its sight If it do possess half the Pupil it takes away but half but when it creeps and overcasts the whole it doth cause perfect blindness It s Cure is to be begun with a good order of Dyet and convenient Medicines and Instruments artificially prescribed and applied Abstaining from Wine and such hot things as may disturb the Brain Shunning flegmatick Dyet and such as is of a flatulent and pituitous Juice If the Patients Bread have some Fennel-seed put into it it will be so much the better for this is generally reputed not only to help the sight but also is very advantagious for dissipating of cloudy Vapours Bleeding Purging Frictions are here very useful Masticatories chewed in the Mouth are proper Cupping Glasses and Vesicatories applied to the Neck and Shoulders are here also very requisite for Derivation Pills and Potions for purging the Head of these flegmatick Tumours are wonderfully helpful For Purging Means or Methods take some of ℞ Pil. Sine Quib. ℈ i. Pil. de Cynogloss ℈ iss Ol. Faenicul gutt iij. cum syr Betonic q. s fiant pillulae Or these ℞ Alo. optim ℥ ss Turbith gummos Hermodact Agaric recent trochiscat an ʒij Diagrid ʒi ZZ Caryophyllor an ℈ ss Croc. Sal. gemm an gr vij pulverisentur cum Syrup de Staechade q. s fiat Massa pillalar hujus sumat à ʒss ad ℈ ij c. A potion for the same ℞ Sen. ℥ ss sem Anis Caryophyllor an ʒss fol. Menth. Betonic an M. ss Summitat Thym. Paralys Anth. an pug ss coquantur ad ℥ iiij colaturâ infunde Agaric recenter troch ℈ ij Cinamom ʒss misce fiat potio For outward Medicines there are innumerable by most Authors already mentioned amongst the best of them all may be reckoned this very oft times used by my self with good success ℞ Succ. Haeder terrestr Chelidon Bellid an ℥ ss Aqu. Rosar albar. ℥ i. pulv Sacchar condit albissim ʒss Mix these and being made lukewarm let the
called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Latines Ranula it lodging under the Tongue It is occasioned by a moist pituitous gross and thick Substance falling from the Brain into the Tongue much resembling in it the Substance of the White of an Egg being somewhat of a more yellowish Colour And here observe if the party be plethorick breath a Vein under the Tongue and use proper and peculiar Gargarisms for this purpose and anoint it with some restringent Unguents or rather open it with some red-hot Iron Instrument being sharp the manner of which is thus Get a bended hollow Iron-plate which hath a hole in the midst making the Patient to hold open his mouth you must so fit it that the hole is to be just upon the part which you intend to open with the Instrument open the part so as you may hurt none of the circumjacent parts when you are ready to burn it thrust your Thumb under the Patients Chin that you thereby may somewhat elevate the Tumour and hereby you may open with more certainty Being thus opened throw forth the contained Matter after which wash the Patients Mouth with Barley-water and Sugar of Roses and thus may the Ulc●r be safely cured Gulielmus Placentinus doth order only Aqua Aluminosa to be held under the Tongue in which hath been boiled a little Myrrh Gesner in Histor animal lib. 2. pag. 51. writes That a Physitian related to him that he saw a Tumour under the Tongue the breadth of two Fingers which hindered the speech and that this Tumour was cured by drawing a Needle through it and afterwards opening it with a sharp Instrument the which being done came out matter from thence much like that of an Artheroma resembling coagulated Milk to the quantity of as much as would fill two hands the which being discharged he ordered the Patient to gargarize his Mouth with Aqua mulsa and sent into the Ulcer of the same by a Syringe and the Body being well purged and by the use of Restringents the Patient perfectly recovered CHAP. XLV Of Strumae and Scrophulae THIS Tumour doth arise with much ●ase from too much fibrosity thickness and viscidity of the nutritive Succus and for this cause only is it that this Juice is so difficultly despersed into all the parts of the Body and therefore must confidently redound in some place and with ease lay its first grounds and Foundations of a Tumour There is held a great difference between Strumae and Scrophulae and by Dr. Wharton in his Book De glandulis the one of these is called by him Wenns the other the Kings evil Scrophula signifying the first and Struma the latter Scrophulae are soft Wenns hard the first pale carrying in them the colour of the Skin the second having a redness turning to lividness Scrophulae soft and not much penetrating Strumae immovable and deeply fixed the Kings-evil swellings generally encrease into a great bulk and magnitude and besides their glandulous Fleshes they do carry in them several sorts of Juices in their little Bags the which do help much forward their growth and bulk It is credible that these concreted Juices are as some rejected Excrements thrown from the glandulous Flesh in its nutrition for these Glandules have no excretory Vessels and therefore necessarily they should carry their Excrements in their Bags And this is one reason of their growth Secondly the Blood effused from hence through the Arteries is more plentiful than that which is reduced through the Veins and hence therefore may there arise another reason of its growth Thirdly The Nerve which keepeth here is but small and that makes them so dull and hence is it that were the parts pricked with Needles the Patient would not much complain of pain Now as touching Strumaes these are not always seen to run into a bulk or magnitude but sometimes they encrease sometimes they lessen and at length do vanish These Tumours do receive their proportion from the reductory Vessel and are discriminated from its first genus here is nothing found besides Nerves V●ins and and Arteries And by how much the Veins are better capacitated and enabled to convey and carry off that which is sent them from the Arteries by so much also are these Strumatous Tumours less capable of running into bulk than such as are Scrophulated And how these Tumours are translated from one place into another I attribute chiefly to the Nerves in their Operations these being most proper Messengers to carry to and fro Now if there be any matter carried to the Emunctuory Vessels or Glandules and be there excerned the Struma doth soon lessen and sometimes doth wholly vanish and is very often seen by applying of Hydrargyrical Mêdicines or Salivation to consume and waste away these having in them a very powerful influence of making the Nerves spit forth their Humidities into the Emunctuory Glandules And hence by Paulus and Celsus these are said chiefly to arise in three places more especially as in the Inguens Axillaries or about the Neck or Throat but most chiefly about the Neck and Throat because here they be nearer the Head their Fountain from whence they draw their flegmatick Matter to their conglomorated Glandules Some of these Strumaes do succeed other Distempers whilst others do breed of themselves Sometimes an outward Cause may occasion them as by applying too hot resolving or too drying Medicines As to their Presage we ought here to consider their different places where they make their abode for these are also either small or great loose or fixt few or many painful or without pain arising from Flegm or Melancholly Some being in the inward part of the Neck whilst others do border on the outward Some terrifying young Children whilst others do lay their impresses on people more aged And by how much they are more movable by so much are they with less difficulty cured yet take them at the best the Chirurgeon will find work enough to get well off clear them with repute Such as adhere to the Bones are incurable there are three ways of eradicating them Either when the Radical Moisture which is carried and reserved in their several Cystuses or Bags is sucked up by the Nerves or the affluxed Blood reduced by the Veins or a free transpiration brought to the part affected The first and main cause of this translation is the Nerve which doth bring and breed the first rudiment of a Struma out of its matter and to help forwards this work both Veins and Arteries are as its Assistants The curing also of these Diseases are very difficult in that most generally such as are troubled with these swellings outwardly they also have them inwardly As to the Cure the thick Lympha is to be incised tempered and evacuated the Glandules softned the Humour if possibly either to be discussed or suppurated and at length if no otherwise to be overcome is to be treated with Escharioticks And
signifies Aspera Arteria and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tumour and therefore by Celsus is said to be a Tumour arising between the Cutis and Wind-pipe and by him is numbred amongst Abscesses whose Matter is lodged in a Bag or a Coat which is dull Flesh somewhat like Honey or Water Celsus doth here also propose two sorts of Medicines as Caustick and Instrument by burning Medicines so as that the Cutis and Bladder may be burnt and thus the Matter discharged but this is a great deal of trouble to a little purpose and therefore he more readily comes to Incision And here he orders a direct Incision to be made into the Coat so as the vicious matter may be separated by the Finger after which let it be well mundified with Vinegar to which adde some Salt or Nitre and in every Abscess we are to take notice that there is a small Vein or Artery that doth feed it and its Membrane whereto it doth adhere to the sound part in the other part it is free If any Patient should come to your hand with such an Abscess be always careful of these four Intentions as in the ordering your Patients Diet in preparing and purging the antecedent Matter in removing the Matter contained in the Tumour and in applying convenient Topicks Let his Diet be thin his Air hot or temperate for purging these may serve ℞ Pil. de Agaric Pulv. Hier. Colocynth an ʒij cum syrup de Stechad q. s ●i●nt pil dos a ʒi ad ʒiss In this case Sweating is also good And as to Chirurgery you may use this Ungu●nt and Emplaster ℞ Sulphur Sandarach an ℥ ss Euphorb ℥ i. cum Cerae olei q. s fiat Vnguentum After anointing herewith apply this Emplaster ℞ Rad. Ireos Sal. Gem. an ℥ i. Terebinth q. s Diachyl cum Gummi Apostolor an ʒi misce fiat Emplastrum If these will not do Rogerius does advise us to make a double Seton so as that the Humour may slow out by degrees In old people very commonly the Larynx is so attenuated and the Muscles as it were so dried up and as it were discharged of their Fleshy Substances that it happens frequently in chewing that some part of the Aspera Arteria is seen to fall and this was verified by Osualdus Gabelchoverus de observationibus suis who writes of an old Gentleman that could not take down any liquor as Beer Wine or any liquid substance but a great part of his Aspera Arteria would slip yet he could take and eat his meat very well without any hindrance The same I knew of one Mr. Goodman a Minister here in Norfolk a man of about 40 years of age who could eat his meat very heartily without any lett or disturbance but when he hath had occasion to drink was forced to bend himself forward and by degrees let his liquor pass down very moderately lest a part of his Wind-pipe should slip out and so prove very troublesom to him I have been oft in his company when I have both seen him use this Method and also taken all care to prevent the falling down or relapse of his Aspera Arteria CHAP. XLVII Of Angina IT is called Angina from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is all one to S●rangulo the which doth signifie every Affect both of the Jaws and Throat whereby Breathing is hindred or if you please it is that Affect of of the Throat the Larynx being overstraitned by some inward occasion so causing Suffocation It is a very acute Disease and is an Inflammation of the Fauces Of this there are two sorts one Legitimate the other Illegitimate To the one a Feaver is a continual companion but it hath nothing to do with the other There are three species of a true Squinancy one with Inflammation and not in the Fauces neither apparent in the Neck but in the Throat and this bringeth speedy danger of Suffocation A second accompanied with a manifest Phlegmon with no Tumour or Redness in the the Neck A third when the Neck seemeth to be inflamed with the Fauces having along with it Tumour R●●ness Heat and Pain The inward Cause is Blood abounding and oft times peccant the which doth not alone raise this unless more vitiated by a sharp and four Lympha The outward Causes are evident Cold Fish-bones being received the wrong way cold Drinks and too much Repletion A Bastard Squinancy is made by a pituitous Distillation falling upon the Fauces and Muscles of the Neck exciting a Tumour without Redness Heat and Feaver Of these are ●●de three Differencies by some Author● and these they christen with three 〈◊〉 names as Cynanche Parasynanche 〈◊〉 che but these are but of small moment towards our encrease of Knowledge The Diagnostick Signs are when the Patient cannot move his Neck and breatheth with difficulty neither can he well swallow and finds a pain and heat in his Jaws That is accounted most dangerous which with the most speed doth threaten Suffocation and yet is neither perceived in the Cheeks neither doth it any ways appear in the Neck yet there is felt a vehement pain and the Spirits scarce seem to be drawn for oft times this Suffocation doth happen the first day There is no Squinancy with safety and the lesser the Tumour the greater the danger and Hippocrates lib. 4. Aphor. 34 35. saith if the Humour of the Angina be carried to the Lungs it maketh its exition before the seventh day otherwise the Patient grows in danger of Suffocation And if it hath made its efflux without leaving any evil symptom in this time the Flux being converted into Matter this is to be suppurated and not kept here for where it is not cleansed from hence the Patient doth very readily run or fall into a Consumption This Lympha and Bilis is to be tempered in the Bloud and to be very speedily revelled and derived and therefore are we first to breathe a Vein in the right Arm and this is as oft to be repeated as necessity may offer And if this will not do breathe a Vein under the Tongue but this is to be performed at the beginning then cool the body with Clysters or Purges and let your Patient have convenient Gargarisms prepared for him as ℞ fol. Rosar rub Balaust an pug 1. cort Granator ℥ ss fol. Querc m. 1. Alumin ust ℈ i. coque ex aqua ferreata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adde syrup Diamor ℥ iiij misce In the end you may order this discussive Gargarism ℞ rad Liquirit cort Granator an ʒij fl Balaust fol. Rosar rub an pug 1. Jujub no. 12 Ficuum no. iij. Passular Corinth ʒiij coque in aqua Hord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his solve syrup cap. Vener Mel. Rosat an ℥ iss misce This following also in the beginning is very proper ℞ fol. Ros rub Sambucin an M. j. coquantur in Cervisia tenniore q. s fine addendo
onely vomited up Flegm then he perceived the pain again in the same Side so as it turned not to the sound then was conjectured that there was a new Collection of Matter in the Side and he being prepared for the discharge of the same the Empyema was opened by a Caustick being laid on the Side and Matter for a long while came from the Side and at length the Patient perfectly recovered CHAP. L. Of a Tumour of the Diaphragma THE Diaphragma hath two sorts of Tumours belonging to it and either of them do bring the Patient in danger of death the one long the other short for by the Excrements forcing here they may make a Tumour both with or without a Fever If without a Fever from the beginning pain and difficulty of breathing a small and a hard Pulse and these Excrements we are to allow to be thin and crude and thence do follow a Tension of the Bowels because the Muscles are extended to the Diaphragma And if a Fever be joyned to these Tumours Experience does satisfie it is not sharp and it ariseth from the too long contention of Excrements in the part affected An Inflammation of the Diaphragma beginning there necessarily does follow a Fever and in respect of the Affect because the Tumour is made of hot matters and in relation to the part affected by reason of its near bordering upon the Heart there do generally follow from this Inflammation Pain and Difficulty of Breathing and therefore as Galen saith Breathing here in this case is small and frequent lib. 5. de loc affect sometimes Convulsions do succeed these Inflammations When such a Tumour of the Diaphragma is offered to you for cure let your first Intention be to discharge the Matter or Substance that is lodged And because the Origination of this does generally arise from Fluxion this also is to be prohibited and this is done by discharging the fluent Matter If you take them in the beginning they may give some hopes of Cure but if they be of any long continuance they admit of no Cure because they generally hurry the Patient into a Consumption and will not be taken hold of by the best of Medicines As to the Cure the first Intention is to discharge this Matter by well purging and clearing the Body of its Excrements and here such things are most proper as can discharge both Flegm and Water such as is Elaterium Radix Sambucinus or the like Phlebotomy is no ways proper here for the peccant Matter is cold and therefore Discussives are here most convenient And these may be said to be of two sorts some to be administred inwardly whilest others are outwardly to be applied and these ought to be both emollient and relaxing as Butter Fat 's Marrows and the like and these are to be ordered according to the Humour and the Strength of the patient first beginning with milde Medicines and then proceeding with such as are stronger as Oyl of Chamomile Dill and the like Here also you may use Emplasters and Unguents as of Mallows Marshmallows Lilies with Linseed Fenugreek seed c. preserving and desending the inward parts with such things as can discuss as Treacle Methridate Sarsaperilla c. I once saw in a Gentleman a Tumour bred in the Diaphragma out of crude and thin blood in which pain and difficulty of Breathing a hard and small pulse were present the Matter and Humour was cold and tough and crude and this shewed it Mortal for it brought him into a Consumption and the Abscess breaking he did spit up Blood and much indigested Matter These Tumours although they are bred of a thin and cold Matter yet in the place affected they thicken and for the performance of this there is required pain difficulty of Breathing a hard and a small pulse little or nothing changing it self no apparent Tumour shewing it self and if to these Tumours a Fever do joyn it self as Experience does oft times shew it doth it is not sharp yet they bring Death with them and when they persevere and are not resolved they bring the patient into a Consumption and so lay him even with the dust as it did the aforesaid Gentleman CHAP. LI. Of Exuberancy of Milk MAny Women in their first days after being delivered of their Burthen have a great redundancy of Milk because much Blood is sent thither and not taken away or sucked out for the helping of which it is thought by some that Repellers are very proper to be applied before such Women be delivered and so to hinder the address of Blood thither for after this much Milk being received it cannot afterwards be so well repelled but ought to be discharged by the Breasts or drawn out by Sucking or otherwise It may be prohibited if the Blood do not flow violently by these Medicines following as ℞ Bol. armen ℥ j. Sangu Dracon Oliban an ʒij Ol. Rosar ℥ ij Cer. acet an parum misce fiat Linimentum Or my Emplaster oft times used in this case with good success ℞ Emplastr Diapalm ℥ ij Ol. Rosar ℥ ss pulv Sangu Dracon ʒj misce Or this ℞ Ol. Myrtin ℥ ij Amygdal dulc ℥ ss Terebynth Venet. ʒij pulv Mastich Bol. armen Corall Sangu Dracon an ʒj pulv Myrtil Balaust Rosar rubr an ℈ ij pulv Salv. Betonic an ℈ j. misce cum cerae citrinae q. s fiat ●mplastrum A Schirrus does oft times proceed from coagulated Milk in Women as it fell out in a young Woman whose left Brest while she was giving her Child suck was wholly correpted with an Inflammation the which being allayed a large Tumour and Hardness remained which gave me suspition of a Scirrhus Her Body being well purged with a lenitive purgation the Brest and its circumjacent parts anointed with Oyl of Roses to which was added a little Vinegar and this for some days was used afterwards the whole Brest was anointed with this Liniment ℞ Empl. de Mucilaginibus ʒij ol Lilior Amygdal dulc pingued Gallinae an ℥ j. Gum. Amoniac solut in Acet scillitic colat ℥ ss misce fiat Vnguentum Over which was applied this Cataplasm ℞ fol. rad Alth. q. s incidantur minutissime postea coqu in aqua mortario pistentur fiatque cum farin Fabar. Axung Porcin Gallinae proprio decocto Malvar Cataplasma By these Medicines and the Body being well purged and a good order of Diet observed the hard Tumour grew soft and resolved and to the Ulcer I applied powder of Precipitate and over this Empl. de Ranis cum Merc. And with this method beyond expectation she recovered her perfect health CHAP. LII Of a Caruncle in the Yard and its manner of Extirpation AMongst the most dangerous and frightful Affects which do seize on Humane Bodie this of a Gonorrhaea may be well reckoned and this is excited by many causes for Acrimony and Thinness of the Sperm may be one cause so that
received a perfect Cure CHAP. LVIII Of Exomphalos or Hernia Vmbilicalis EXomphalos is made by the Peritonaeum being either relaxed or rent and hence oft times happens that the Omentum and the Intestines do fall into its place If it happeneth by the Omentum it retains the colour of the Cutis and there will appear a soft and almost indolent Tumour and is reposed without any noise but happening by the Intestines it appears unequal and upon its Reduction it maketh a Murmuration If it happens from Flesh it appears hard if from Wind soft and this by the Learned called Exomphalos by us a Navel Rupture proceeds from the same Cause as the former and may be treated with the same Curative Method save onely in this place you are to mind that you cover the whole Rupture with hard and thick and large Bolsters that hereby it may sufficiently be kept in If it happens that it proves a flatuous Tumour of the Navel cure it as you do Physocele if a waterish Tumour this is to be thus treated by making a small Incision and keeping it open so long as untill you have discharged the whole Water Hildanus in his Centur. 3. Observ 64. relates of a pleasant story to this purpose so does Benivenius tell us of a strange one the last I will produce first because that of Hildanus I intend to give according to the Author himself with his Figures and Method how to make and apply the outward Dressings and Ligatures Benivenius chap. 6. Abditis relateth a strange story of John Binus who had a Son whose Navel grew out like a Mans penis four fingers in length and as it were had a Coat of the Testicles joyned to it out of which sometimes Spirits did fly the which many Physicians saw whereupon some of them judged some of the Intestines had thrust themselves out others the Omentum others attributed it to Wind and Humours but at length it was concluded that it was a Fleshy Excrescency and for the taking this off there was a strict Bandage made the which was every day contracted or bound closer untill the whole was eradicated the which being removed the Patient recovered his perfect Cure and Health This of Fabritius Hildanus is of a noble and pious Martron in Germany in whom not onely the Navel it self but a little above the Peritonaeum and some part of the Abomen it hung down dilated into a great Bag in this Bag also not onely the Omentum but somewhat of the Intestine was contained Sometimes a murmuring was there perceived and then pain was present sometimes proving very vehement otherwhile more remiss according to the quantity of Winds then present She affirmed to him she got this Affect in the time of her Childbearing Of the rest because Prolapses of this sort of the Navel or Abdomen can be seldom reduced into the Belly or if they might be they are not there retained without great difficulty they produce wonderful troubles to the Patients that are therewith vexed when they by reason of the weight do draw their upper parts downwards For this purpose he hath invented a new Bag by which this Extuberance may as well as possibly be drawn upwards and so elevated that the grieved Patient may bear the burthen with much less trouble and incommodiousness This is to be made of a strong doubled Cloth fitted to the Thorax so as that it descends no lower than the first Bastard Rib and so backwards to the Thorax from the Region of the Omoplates making a Ligature on either side placed two fingers breadth and perforated in several places to fit it the better to the Thorax To this Ligature is to be annexed this large one with the Bag so as it may be lifted up or taken down according to the will and pleasure of the Patient by the benefit of which holes this may be done This Figure you may see very fairly described in this following Leaf together with the Bandage with Figures directing how to make and use it CHAP. LIX Of Hydrocele or Hernia Aquosa HYdrocele or Hernia Aquosa do either possess the whole Scrotum or part thereof This Aqueous Humour is not collected in the Scrotum but in the Membrana Erythrois containing the Testicle for into this a thin fluid Humour does make its influx being much of the consistence of Urine distending this Erythroidal Membrane and the subsistance of the Testicle in process of time is also corrupted by its acrimony By Aetius Leonidas this Aqueous Tumour is said to be loose and without pain the which is not to be eased by any Cataplasms Fomentations Emplasters or Unguents There 's one onely Remedy which must discharge it and that is Section or Incision and this is very manifest and apparent because the Seminal Vein of this part ariseth not from the Cava as do the right but from the left Emulgent The Kidney being by this evilly affected not performing its proper function part of the Urine the which the Emulgent protracts to it self whenas it cannot descend to the Bladder from the ill-affected Kidney it falleth into the Membrance Elythrois and here breeds Hydrocele and this being sublated with the Testicle this Humour can no longer remain here as Dodonaeus observes cap. 39. Observ The Causes hereof may be many some being occult others manifest occult as this waterish Humour being gathered from the repleted Vessels Guido adds a Vice of the Liver herein or Spleen by reason of which there is a Liquor collected in the Hypocondries which with ease does make its descent manifest as Percussion Collision Fraction of Vessels which are in the Testicles for the Blood which flows into the Vessels is changed and turned by reason of the weakness of parts into an aqueous substance Percussion and Collision and the like are its Signs the Tumour vanisheth if Hunger hath preceded If the Habit of the Body be ill this Hernia proceeds from the ill accident of some Bowel if not hence it may from too much Liquor for Repletion is made by too much Potation Aetius taketh the Causes from the Humour it self the which if it be yellowish and pale the Hernia will appear from the Repletion of the Vessels if feculent from Percussion if white from a Vice of the Liver or Spleen the Veins of the Scrotum are tumefied if it be compressed the Humour floweth into the Vessels which formerly were empty It shineth and appears very bright and is soft light and clear by viewing it and applying a Candle on the opposite part It is a particular Dropsie and as a general Dropsie is bred by a collection of Matter as in a Critical Abscess by drinking more freely of Water than can be discharged by Vomit by Generation by interception or alleviation of a Sanguisick Faculty So a Hernia aquosa flatuosa do either come by a primogene affection or by succession of some other Distemper and for this reason Hollerius does prescribe here
got into the Scrotum or its Coats the which we shall thus endeavour to discharge by outward Medicines as Fomentations Oyls Unguents Emplasters Cataplasms and the like neither here using Caustick or Incision For Fomentations you may use these ℞ Origan Calamenth Puleg an M. ss sem 4 Calid major sem Vitic Bacc. Laur. Juniper sem Cumin an ʒij fl Melilot Chamomel an pug ij Sal. ʒij coquantur in s q. vini albi ad 3 partis consumptionem Or this ℞ Lixiv. Barbitonsor iij. Cumin Bacc. Laur. an ℥ ij fol. Laur. Rorismarin Rosar rubr Meliss Menth. Majoran an M. j. Sal commun ℥ iiij with this bathe the part affected with a Sponge Or this ℞ Acet fortissim ij in quibus coquantur rad Pyreth Staphis ac Bacc. Juniper Laur. Cumin an ℥ ss fol. Laur. Haeder terrestr Salv. Thym. Rorismarin an pug j. bathe also with this the affected part or with this ℞ sem Cumin Bacc. Laur. Rut. Chamomel Bacc. Juniper Absynth an ℥ i. misce fiat Fomentum cum aqua vino mixta Oyls for the same are these ℞ ol Rut. Laurin an ℥ iss ol Petrol ℥ i. ol Spic Terebinth an ℥ ss misce Or ℞ ol Chamomel Rut. an ℥ i. ol Aneth Nard an ʒiij spirit vin ʒij Cer. q. s fiat Vnguentum Or ℞ ol Castor Rut. Euphorb an ʒvj Vnguent Martial ℥ ss misce Or for Cataplasms take these ℞ sem Cumin Bacc. Laur. sem Sesel Rut. an ℥ i. stercor Bovin j. Sulphur viv Cumin an ℥ ij mel q. s fiat Cataplasma Or this ℞ Farin Fabar. ℥ iiij sem Danc. Cumin an ℥ ss Bacc. Laur. Juniper an ʒij fl Chamomel Melilot Rosar rubr Lavendul an pug j. Salpug iss cum vini albi q. s fiat Cataplasma Or ℞ Farin Fabar. ss sem ●●nugraec cumin an ʒij sem Apii Rui. an ʒj fl Chamomel pug ij pulv Rui. Absynth Scord. Rosar rubr ad ʒss c●quantur omnia in vino albo q. s fine addendo Oximelit Scillitic q. s fiat Cataplasma Empl. de Bacc. Laur. is here also very good or this mixt Emplaster ℞ Empl. de Melilot de Bacc. Laur. de Ran. cum Merc. an ʒiij nitr Cumin Sulphur Calc viv Sal. an ℈ j. ol Laur. Cerae q. s fiat Empl. Benivenius cap. 81. Abditor writes of a Person of Quality who having his viscera and Stomach so filled with Wind that it proved very troublesome to him and when the part was compressed there was perceived no exition and hence not onely the Bowels and the Brest but the Scapulaes also were extended with incredible pain and the Spirits very narrowly con●ined all convenient and proper Medicines being prescribed and used without any effect the third day the Gentleman dieth the dead Body being dissected the Intestines and the other viscera were seen to be much swelled and puffed up with wind and in the left Ventricle of the Heart was found a hard Callosity equalling the largeness of a Nut and these two were generally held to be the onely Causes of his Death CHAP. LXI Of Sarcocele or Hernia carnosa THis is a Tumour contra naturam which is generated about the Testicles out of a Scirrhous Flesh or it is a Tumour bred out of the defluxion of thick Humours which are collected between the Coats of the Testicles and they there not assimulating there oft times grows as it were a Hyposarcosis oft times Varices accompany the Tumour and these are very troublesom and these Humours being thick and viscid bred from Flegm and Melancholy as they breed Scirrhous Tumours in other parts so also do they generate a hardness in these It is known by its Hardness Asperity Inequality and Indolency It ariseth from Melancholy it having a sublucid colour If it ariseth from Flegm it does not differ from the colour of the Cutis If it ariseth from burnt Melancholy it hath a pricking pain and the Tumour is inequal in some places soft in others hard If the Tumour be not confirmed cure it as you do a Scirrhus by using Emollients then Discussives but the last seldom does any good here But if these fail you are to come to Section but if it be Cancerous attempt nothing Matthiolus affirmeth that he hath absumed a Sarcocele by the onely using of Pulvis Radicis Anonidis being taken for many moneths But if it yields not to Medicine Incision is the next remedy and this way or method is not void of danger the Testicle being either left in or taken out And by the way we are to consider that if any fleshy substance grows about the Coats or Testicles this is wholly and absolutely to be taken away in this case for more safety the Vessels are therefore to be drawn out and tied and afterwards incised and cauterized for to leave any part hereof does more represent the ignorance of a Quack than knowledge of an Artist for no Son of Art will give the advantage of a new growth whenas he may well prevent any appearance of the same by a careful managing of his Operation and taking care of preventing all accidents for a small quantity but left remaining will soon run up like a rank Weed to a great bulk and this in a short time grows worse and worse If the Tumour be not very hard the Chirurgion comprehending the whole Tumour that is the whole tumefied Substance in the Testicle every way encompassing it let him make his Incision even to the Tumour above the Scrotum then abduce the Testicle from the Scrotum drawing a strong Needle and Thread through the middle Process above the Region of the tumefied Testicle and then drawing it back again through the same part of the Process then tie both of them these being performed cut off the whole Process the Testicle being concluded with it It being ablated apply a Repercussive Medicine and strengthen the neighbouring parts with convenient rollings and bolsterings and heal up your Ulcer as you do others Fabritius Hildanus tells a very pleasant story of a young man who embracing his Mistress in Veneral Ceremony he being near ready to eject his Spermatick succus was prevented of his intended purpose by a Messenger which rushed in unawares by opening the Chamber door and disturbing him in his pursuit on which his Sperm receded and was retained Upon which a pain seized on his Groin his Testicles tumefied and the pain began to be remiss in his left Testicle and the Tumour vanished and returned to its former state but about the right the Tumour continued the which in process of time turned into a great fleshy Rupture and he being called to the Patient amongst other Physicians in consultation saw not onely Flesh about the Testicle concreted but found it also extended with serous Humours so that it equalled near the largeness of a Childs Head CHAP. LXII Of Circocele or Hernia Varicosa THis is nothing else than
his rest by perplexing him more in the Night than in the Day These Tumours are hard bred from a hard Flegmatick thick and viscid Flegm which are not to be discussed but by hot Medicines and such as have a Faculty of making the Nerves spit forth this Matter contained in them these carrying with them an Emollient and lenifying quality and hence may you confidently make use of such Medicines here as I have set you down in my Tract of a Scirrhus adding thereto Argentum vivum Empl. de Ranis cum Merc. is very proper here also In the whole time your Patient lyes under your hands take care that he be ordered a sober Lie shunning Venery as the greatest enemy imaginable It proves much better if it have not touched the Bone than if it had but suppose it should get thither and foul it this is to be Scaled either by actual or potential Cautery the which being removed apply such convenient Sarcotick drying Medicines as may produce a new Skin over this And for this affect Powder of Myrrh Aloes Ireos Euphorbium Gentian Aristolochia rotunda and the like are proper I have seen these very frequent in St. Thomas Hospital in Southwarke and sometimes here in Norwich where I have met with the Signs very exact painting out Pains and Aches and nocturnal vexations as continually as the Day leaves it self to be shut up by the Clouds of the Night CHAP. LXX Of Tumours and Apostems of the Knee AFter long and difficult Diseases Tumours are oft seen to breed in the Knees and by how much the longer they are in breeding by so much the longer expect will be the getting of them extirpated They bring sharp and bitter pains with them because these Humours are crept into very sensible parts as Membranes the which do both distend and rack them The Cure hereof is difficult because this Humour is seldom seen bred but in Cacochymick Bodies and such as are of an evil habit of body and then because the part affected is cold and weak being far from the Fountain of Heat Sometimes it is made by Flatuencies crude and serous Humours the which do flow and mix themselves betwixt the nervous parts and Membranes As to the Cure if it proceed from Blood order a thin and cold Diet and for Revulsion Venesection is good and here observe your 4 times in its Cure But if it cometh from a waterish Matter the Body is to be purged by Phlegmagogicks and for your Topicks apply such Medicines as have in them an incisive attenuating rarifying and a powerfully drying quality as these ℞ Farin Orob Hord. Lent Lol. an ℥ j. furfur ℥ ss fl Chamomel Melilot Sambucin summitat Absynth Scabios Veronic an pug Stercor Caprin lbss Sapae ℥ ij ol Rut. Chamomel Aneth an ℥ iss coquantur in Lixivio vel in aqua Absynth composit cui addere possis Oximelit Scillitic q. s fiat Cataplasma For this Affect this Emplaster is also held to be good ʒ Diachylon cum Gummi Paracels an ℥ ss Oxicroc ʒij Melilot ℥ ss Empl. de Ran. cum vel sine Merc. ʒiij misce fiat Emplastrum A Maid of 18 years of age falling on the Ground hurt her Knee out of which did arise a large In●lammation accompanied with many pains by applying Empl. ex Argilla Bol. Armen Bran the White of an Egge and a little Vinegar the pain somewhat abated and the Inflammation grew remiss About the Rotula a very large Tumour did arise which was also very hard in so much that without great pain to the Patient it was not to be contracted Hence was collected that there was Matter gathered about the Rotula and a very large Tumour did arise which was also very hard in so much that without great pain to the Patient it was not to be contracted And for the Cure hereof this Method was used that the Blood and Humours might be lessened and their Afflux to the part affected prohibited a drying and thin Diet was prescribed and the Patient afterwards thus purged ℞ Herb. flor Betonic Scabios Cuscuth Agrimon Veronic an M. ss sem Anis ʒj fiat Decoctum in s q. aquae fontanae in ℥ iiij solve Diacatholic ʒvj Electuar e succ Rosar ʒij misce fiat Potio After this a Vein was breathed in the Arm out of which was drawn 10 Ounces of Blood then was prescribed a purging Apozem made of opening Roots Agrimony Veronica Majoram Rosemary and the like being made into a Cataplasm was afterwards applied to her Knee then was applied this Cataplasm ℞ Farinae Hord. farinae Fabar. an ℥ iiij pulv Rosar rub Bacc. Laur. Myrtillor an ℥ j. pulv fl Chamomel Melilot Sambuc Inae Arthritic an ℥ ss fim Caprin ℥ ij cum vino rubro q. s fiat Cataplasma fine addendo Sapae ℥ iiij apply it warm twice in a day This was used for 3 weeks and the Apozem prescribed and taken and by these and a good order of Diet the pain ceased and the whole Tumefication vanished But in the lower part of the Rotula there was perceived a manifest Hardness for the emolliating of which all care was taken but in vain at length was applied a potential Cautery to this lower part the breadth of the Tendon then was the Eschar removed by this Liniment ℞ Vnguent Basilicon Butyr recent sine Sal. an ℥ j. ol Amygdal dulc de vitell Ovor an ℥ ss ol Rosar ℥ j. misce fiat Vnguentum fine addendo vitell Ovor. no. j. Croc. ℈ ss This being removed there was found a thick viscid Matter lodging in the lower part of the Rotula and by applying of Pulvis Aluminis usti cum pauxillo Praecipitati taking great care that the Tendon might come by no injury or detriment the Ulcer was mundified and afterwards was induced a perfect Cicatrice and by these means the Patient perfectly recovered CHAP. LXXI Of an Abscess of the Foot THe Foot as well as the Hand is troubled and perplexed with viscous and strumatous Tumours oft times planting themselves in the Joynts sometimes making the Bones bare and foul The onely way to cure this Evil is to discharge the Matter by Resolution and if possible not to open it At the end of the Toe there oft times falleth a sharp pain arising without any manifest cause not without some inward occult Malignity without Tumour or Redness depriving it of sense or motion and hence oft times the end of the Foot being destitute of its native heat and colour is affected with a Lividness and Blackness and in process of time does terminate into a Gangrene and Sphacelus this more frequently happening more in aged people than in youth because as the parts themselves are a great way from the Fountain of Heat so also are aged people less capable to help towards the producing of this Heat into those parts and therefore in such cases let it be your first Intention to apply warm and
Empl. Observat Observat In 6 cases no Repelling Medidicines to be applied in the beginning Cataplasma Here Digestives are most proper Four waies of digestion Catapl Observ Catapl Catapl Observat 〈…〉 Catapl Catapl Catapl Catapl The efficient cause of matter Signs of Suppuration 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Catap● Catap● A method to find whether a Tumour be ripe enough to open What a Phlegmon is Whence it ariseth Its causes Signs Of the cure of a Phlegmon Four methods according to four times by Guido His diet Observat Electuary Bolus Potio Troch Electuary Clysters Purging potion Revulsion Revulsion Vesicat●ries Defensatives Observ Repellers Catapl Unguent Observ Question Answer By several reasons Their use and benefit Catapl Unguent Another Catapl Unguent Catapl Cured by Digestives Catapl Catapl Authoris Catapl Catapl Catapl A History Catapl Catapl Natural Second not natural Quest Answ Third preternatural Its differencies The names of Erysipelas What it is Signs Its differencies from a Phlegmon Praesage Cure The Authors Julep herein Emulsion● Bleeding Potion Potio purgans Electuar Pill Clysters Another Another Unguent Unguent Unguent Unguent Catapl Catapl A History Catapl Unguent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chirurgery Electuar Potio A History A History What flegm is It s name It s generation Definition Signs Cause Praesage Pill Pil. Pil A potion Potion Potion Topicks Question Answer Observat Digestive Catapl Catapl Catapl Unguent ex Mer●●● Empl. A History 4 Species of Melancholy Burnt Melancholy made four waies How a Scirrhus is made It s definition Signs Causes Presage Cure Potio purgans Another potion Pills Pills Pills Digestives Empl● Empl. Empl. Emple A History A History Signs Presage Cure Pil. Pil. Pill Pill Catapl Unguent A History What i● Wind. What a windy Tumour is Cause● Differencies Signs Cure● Potion 〈◊〉 Pil. Clyster Clyster Troch A Hippocras Wine Pulvis Fomentation Foment Catapl Unguent Catapl Empl Silv●● History What the Brest is The Anatomy of the Brest How milk is made It s name Causes It s subject Signs Presage Cure Apozeme Potion Apozeme Sudorifick decoction Unguent Unguent Empl Unguent History History Caution How an ulcerate Cancer is to be treated A second may Of a Cancer growing at the Eye-tooth Apozeme Potion Potion Gargarism History Signs Signs Causes Presage Cure Unguent● Unguen● Unguent The Cure of a pestilential Carbuncle Catapl Histo●● Cause Unguent Another A History Signs Causes Presage Herpes exedens Signs Cure Cerate Unguent Unguent History Fomentation Catapl Empl What a Gangrene is What a Sphac●lus is The di●ference between a Gangrene and a Sphacelus 3 Causes of a Gangrene The universal Causes both of Gangrene and Sphacelus To the first To the second Signs of a Gangrene from a hot intemperiety Signs of its coming from cold 5 Signs of a Sphacelu● Cure 1 From the Antecedent Cause 6 Intentions in applying of proper Medicines A particular Cure of a Gangrene coming from Inflammation 1 Intention Unguent Catapl Second Intention 〈…〉 History Oyl Catapl Decoction Digestive Ca●apl History Cordial History What Artheroma is Observa Care Observ History History It s Cause Cure Empl. History Whence its Name Cure Pil. Pil Catapl its differencies It s Definition Signs Causes Two Species of a Hydrocephalos Presage Cure Decoction Oyl History Unguent Unguent Empl. History History Unguent History Its Causes Digestive Unguent History Three sorts hereof Cure Unguent History Cause Cure ●●story Cause Signe Cure Pil. Pil Potion A Medicine of the Authors Observ History History Celsus Method Paulus ' s Way History Defensative Collyrium What a Polypus is Cause Differencies Celsus ' s way Paulus 's way What a Glandule is What the Parotides are It s Cure Catapl Unguent Catapl History History History Descript●on of Strumaes Signs Presage Three ways to eradicate them Cure Pil. Pil. Pouder Pouder Aqva Unguent Catapl Catapl Catapl A History Catapl Catapl Catapl Pil. Unguent Empl. Histo●y Three species of a true Squinsey Ca●ses Signs Presag● Cure ●argarism Gargarism Catapl History What the Amygdals are 〈◊〉 how made Uses They being the chief Organs of Tasting Cure Gargarism Another Another Trochisc Cataplasm Pil. Electuary History Signs Decoction History Cure History Liniment Empl. Another History Unguent Cataplasm The Causes of a Gonorrhaea Injection A double Method in its Cure Fomentation Unguent Empl● History History How the Intestine is to be reposed Cataplasm Unguent Decoction Cerate Empl. Empl. Empl. Apozem Empl. Empl. Histo●y Cerate Empl. An●ther Oyl Syrup Electuary Pil. A second Method by Adustion A third Method is Incision The fourth Method History Clyster A Restringent Bag. Purge Signs History Another Another History History Causes Signs Cure Topicks Empl. Fomentation Another Catapl History Foment Another Another Another Oyls Unguent Catapl Another Another Empl. History Signs History Intentions Hernia Humoralis Causes Cure Hist History Causes Signs Presage Cure Unguent Another What Phygethlon is History Their Origination Unguent Another Another Another Another Another History Its Causes A restri●gent 〈◊〉 History Apozem● Empl. It s Figure what it is Its differences from Pterygion Its Signs Its Causes and manner of breeding Revulsives Interceptives Repellers Catapl History ●● Pterygian Unguent Catapl History Potio purgans Catapl Unguent Hist Potion Unguen Catapl