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A08911 The workes of that famous chirurgion Ambrose Parey translated out of Latine and compared with the French. by Th: Johnson; Works. English Paré, Ambroise, 1510?-1590.; Johnson, Thomas, d. 1644.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver.; Baker, George, 1540-1600. 1634 (1634) STC 19189; ESTC S115392 1,504,402 1,066

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of the vessels An admonitiō The 4. way dy Escharoticks The 5. way by cutting off the vessels Paines weakens the body and causes defluxious Divers Anodines or medicines to asswage paine What a Convulsion is Three kinds of an universal Convulsion Three causes of a convulsion Causes of Repletion Causes of Inanition Aph. 26. sec 2. Causes of convulsion by consent of paine Signes of a convulsion The cause of a Convulsion by Repletion The cure of a Convulsion caused by inanition An Emolient Liniment for any Convulsion An Emolient and humecting Bath The cure of a Convulsion by a puncture or bite A worthy Alex●pharmac●… or Antidote You must hinder the locking of the teeth What a Palsie is The differences thereof How it differs from a Convulsion The causes It is good for a feaver to happen upon a Palsie The decoctiō of Guaiacumis good for a Palsie Things actually hotegood for to be applied to paraliticke mēbera Leon. Faventi his ointment An approved ointment for the Palsie A distilled water good to wash them outwardly to drinke inwardly Exercises and frictions Chymicall oyles What Sowning is Three causes of sowning The cure of sowning caused by dissipation of spirits The cure of sowning caused by a venenate aire The cure of Sowning caused by oppression and obstruction What a Symptomaticall Delirium is The causes thereof Why the brain suffers with the midriffe The Cure The differences of a brokē head The kinds of a broken Scul out of Hippocrates Differences from their quantity Differences from their figure From their complication The externall causes Rationall causes Aphor. 50. sec 6. Lib. 8 cap. 4. Hippocrates and Guidoes conjecturall fignes of a broken scull Sensible signes of a broken scull before the dividing of the skinne Lib. de vuluere cap. What a probe must be used in searching for a fracture Lib. 5. Epid. in Autonomus of Omsium Hipcrates was deceized by the futures Vpon what occasion the hairy sealpe must be cut Celsus Hippocrater The manner how to pull the hairiesealp from the broken scull The manner to binde a vessell in case of too much bleeding A History A way to finde a fracture in the scull when it presents not it selfe to the view at the first A signe that both the Tables are broken You may use the Trepan after the tenth day It it sufficient in a simple fissure to dilate it with your Scalpri onely and not to Trepan it What an Ecchymosis is How 〈◊〉 contusion of the scull must be cured What a contusion is What an Effracture is The causes of Effractures The cure Hip. lib. do ●ul● cap. Gal. sib 6. meth cap. 〈◊〉 A History What a seate is The cure Lib. 8. cap. 4. A History What a Resonitus is Lib. 6. cap. 90. In whom this fracture may take place in diverse bones of the scull A History The Resonitus may be in the same bone of the scull A History Why Hippocrates set dovvne no way to cure a Resonitus The manner to know when the scull is fractured by a Resonitus Gal. lib. 2. de comp medic cap. 6. Com. ad Aph. 58 sect 7. Lib. 5. Epidem The vessels of the braine broken by the commotion thereof signes Celsus The cause of vomiting when the head is wounded Aphor. 14 sect 7 A History What was the necessary cause of the death of King Henry the second of France A History A History Why some die of small wounds and others recover of great Hippoc. de vul cap. Whether the wounds of children or old people are better to heale Aph. 15. sect 1. Aphor. 65 sect 5 Aph. 47 sect 2. Wounds which are dry rough livide and black are evill The signes of a feaver caused by an Erysipelas Why an Erysipelas chiefely assailes the face The cure of an Erysipelas on the face Why oyly things must not be used in an Erysipelas of the face Aph. 25. sect 6 Deadly signes in wounds of the head A convulsion is caused by drynesse A twofold cause of convulsisieke drynesse Lib. 4. de usu partium Opinion of Champhius The signes of a deadly wound from the depraved faculties of the minde From habite of the body From the time that such signes appears Celsus lib. 8. c● 4. When the patients are out of danger The patient must beware of cold How the ayre ought to be Aphor. 18. sect 〈◊〉 Lib. 2 de us● part ca. 2. The Aire though in summer is colder than the braine The discommodities of too much light What his drink must be Almonds encrease the paine of the head What fish he may eate Aphor 13. 14 sect 1. Aphor. 15 sect 2 Why sleepe upon the day-time is good for the braine being enflamed Lib. 2. Epidem The discommodities ensuing immoderate Watching Gal. Meth. 13. Medicin●s procuring sleepe The commodities of sleepe Lib. 4. Meth. Lib. de cur per sangu●… Miss The use of Fractures A History The two chiefe Indications in blood letting The discommoditis of venery in vvounds of the head Hovv hurtfull noyse is to the fractures of the scull A History Of a simple wound of the flesh and the skinne A degestive medicine A sarcoticke Medicine An Epuloticke A History What things we must observe in sovveing When we must not let blood in wounds A History The bitings of man and beasts are venenate Theriacall 〈…〉 picke Medicines A Cordiall Epithema The cure of the Hairy scalpe when it is contused A repelling medicine A discussing Fomentation Ceratum de Minio Detersive or clensing medicines Why the Pericranium hath such exquisite sense Gal. 6. Meth. The bones are offended with the application of humide things Lib. dei ulcer 〈◊〉 6. Math. Vigoes Cerate good for a broken scull A liniment good against convulsions Gal. 4. Meth. How farre humide things are good for a fractured scull Why Cephalicke or Catagmaticke pouders are good When to used How to be mixed when trey are to bee applyed to the Meninges Why a repelling Ligature cannot be used in fractures of the Scull How the patient must be placed when you Trepan him What to be done before the application of the Trepan The harme the bone receives by being heated with the Trepan What things hasten these ailing of the bone The bone must not be forcibly scailed A caution in Trepaning A safe and convenient Trepan The use of a Leaden Mallet Why a Trepan must not be applyed to the sutures Why two Trepans are to be used to a fractured suture A bone almost severed from the scull must not be Trepaned A notable cavitie in the forehead bone Lib. de ●ul c● A rule out of Hippocrates What discommodities arise from cutting the temporall muscle A history A history The generation of a Fungus Why when the scull is broken the bones sometimes become foule or rotten The signes of foulenesse of the bone Corrupt bones are sometimes hard The benefit of a vulnerary potion A History A great falling away of a corrupt bone Aph. 45. Sect. 6 The
to fall to your worke CHAP. XV. Of the generall cure of a Gangreene THe Indications of curing Gangreenes are to be drawne from their differences for the cure must bee diversely instituted according to the essence and magnitude For some Gangreenes possesse the whole member others onely some portion thereof some are deepe othersome superficiall onely Also you must have regard to the temper of the body For soft and delicate bodyes as of children women Eunuches and idle persons require much milder medicines than those who by nature and custome or vocation of life are more strong and hardy such as husbandmen labourers marriners huntsmen potters and men of the like nature who live sparingly and hardly Neither must you have respect to the body in generall but also to the parts affected for the fleshy and musculous parts are different from the solide as the Nerves and joynts or more solide as the Vertebrae Now the hot and moyst parts as the Privities mouth wombe and fundament are easilyer and sooner taken hold of by putrifaction wherefore we must use more speedy meanes to helpe them Wherefore if the Gangreene be cheefely occasioned from an internall cause he must have a dyet prescribed for the decent and fitting use of the sixe things not naturall If the body be plethoricke or full of ill humors you must purge or let blood by the advice of a Physition Against the ascending up of vapours to the noble parts the heart must cheefely be strengthened with Treacle dissolved in Sorrell or Carduus water with a bole of Mithridate the conserves of Roses Buglosse and with Opiates made for the present purpose according to Art this following Apozeme shall be outwardly applyed to the region of the heart ℞ aquae rosar nenuphar an ℥ iiij aceti scillitici ℥ j. corallorum santalorum alborum rubrorum rosar rub inpulver radactarum spodij an ℥ j. mithrid theriacae an ʒijss trochiscorum de Caphura ʒij crociʒj ex omnibus in pollinem redactis fiat epithema Which may be applyed upon the region of the heart with a scarlet clot or spunge These are usually such as happen in the cure of every Gangreene CHAP. XVI Of the particular cure of a Gangreene THe cure of a Gangreene caused by the too plentifull and violent defluxion of humors suffocating the native heate by reason of great Plegmons is performed by evacuating and drying up the humors which putrifie by delay and collection in the part For this purpose scarifications and incisions great indifferent small deepe and superficiary according to the condition of the Gangreene are much commended that so the burdened part may enjoy the benefit of perspiration and the contained humors of difflation or evacuation of their footy excrements Let incisions be made when the affect is great deepe in and neere to mortification But scarifications may be used when the part first begins to putrefie for the greatnesse of the remedy must answere in proportion to that of the disease Wherefore if it penetrate to the bones it will bee fit to cut the skin and flesh with many and deepe incisions with an incision knife made for that purpose yet take heede of cutting the larger nerves and vessels unlesse they be wholy putrified for if they be not yet putrified you shall make your incisions in the spaces betweene them if the Gangreene be lesse we must rest satisfied with onely scarifying it When the scarifications and incisions are made we must suffer much blood to flow forth that so the conjunct matter may bee evacuated Then must we apply and put upon it such medicines as may by heating drying resolving clensing and opening amend and correct the putrefaction and by peircing to the bottome may have power to overcome the virulencie already impact in the part For this purpose Lotions made of the lye of the Ashes of fig-tree or Oake wherein Lupines have bin throughly boyled are good Or you may with lesse trouble make a medicine with salt water wherein you may dissolve Aloes and Aegyptiacum adding in the conclusion a little Aqua vitae for aqua vitae and calcined vitrioll are singular medicines for a Gangreene Or ℞ acet opimi lb. j. mel ros ℥ iiij syrup acetosi ℥ iij. salis com ℥ v. bulliant simul adde aq vitae lb. s Let the part be frequently washed with this medicine for it hath much force to represse Gangreenes After your Lotion lay Aegyptiacum for a Liniment and put it into the incisions for there is no medicine more powerfull against putrefaction for by causing an Eschar it separates the putride flesh from the sound But we must not in this kinde of affect expect that the putride flesh may of it selfe fall from the sound but rather cut off with your incision knife or sissers whatsoever thereof you can then put to it Egyptiacum as oft as neede shall require The knowledge hereof may be acquired from the colour smell and sensiblenesse of the flesh its selfe The description of the Egyptiacum whose wondrous effects I have often tryed in these causes is this ℞ floris aris aluminis roch mellis com an ℥ iij. aceti acerrimi ℥ v. salis com ℥ j. vitrioli rom ℥ ss sublimatipul ʒij bulliant omnia simul ad ignem fiat unguent If the force of the putrefaction in the part be not so great a weaker Aegyptiacum may serve When you have put in the Aegyptiacum then presently lay the following Cataplasme thereupon For it hinders putrefaction resolves cleanses dryes up the virulent sanies and by the dry subtlety of the parts penetrates into the member strengthens it and asswages the paine ℞ farin fabar hor dei orobi lent lupin an lb. s sal com mellis rosat an ℥ iiij succi absinth marrub an ℥ iiss aloes mastiches myrrhae aqua vit an ℥ ij oxymelitis simpl quantum sufficit fiat Cataplasma molle secundum artem Somewhat higher than the part affected apply this following astringent or defensitive to hinder the flowing down of the humors into the part and the rising up of the vapours from the putride part into the whole body ℞ oleirosati myrtill an ℥ 4. succi plantag solani sempervivi an ℥ ij album ovorum 5. boli armeni te●rae sigillata subtiliter pulver●satorum an ℥ j. oxycrati quantum sufficit misce ad usum dictum But these medicines must be often renewed If the greefe be so stubborne that it will not yeeld to the described remedies wee must come to stronger to wit Cauteries after whose application Galen bids to put upon it the juice of a Leeke with salt beaten and dissolved therewith for that this medicine hath a peircing and drying faculty and consequently to hinder putrifaction But if you prevaile nothing with Cauteries then must you come to the last remedy and refuge that is the amputation of the part For according to Hippocrates to extreame diseases
white and become smooth or plaine For so their eating and spreading force will at length be bridled and laudible flesh grow up in place of that which is eaten After such burning it will be good to wash the mouth with the following gargarisme which also of its selfe alone will serve to cure Aphtha's which are not maligne ℞ hordei integri p. j. plantag ceterach pilosellae agrimonia an M. j. fiat decoctio ad lb. j. in qua dissolve mellis rosati ℥ j. diamoron ℥ ss fiat gargarisma You may also make other gargles of Pomegranate pills Balausties Sumach Berberies red roses being boyled and dissolving in the strayned liquor Diamoro● and Dianucum with a little Alume For Galen writes that simple Vlcers of the mouth are healed with things which dry with moderation now Diamoron and Dianucum are such But others stand in neede of strong medicines with such like If the palate be seazed upon we must use the more diligence and care for there is danger least being the part is hot and moyst the bone which lyes under which is rare and humide may bee corrupted by the contagion and fall away and the voyce or speech be spoyled If the Vlcer be pockie omitting the common remedyes of Vlcers you must speedily be●ake your selfe to the proper antidote of that disease to wit quick-silver Fistulous Vlcers often take hold on the Gummes whence the roote of the next tooth becomes rotten and so farre that the acrimonie of the Sanies oft times makes its selfe a passage forth on the outside under the chinne which thing puts many into a false conceite of the scrophulae or Kings evill and consequently of an uncurable disease In such a case Aetius and Celsus counsell is to take out the rotten tooth for so the Fistula will be taken away the Gum pressing and thrusting its selfe into the place of the tooth which was taken forth and so the cause nourishing the putrefaction being taken away that is the tooth the rest of the cure will be more easy The Vlcers of the tongue may be cured by the same remedies by which the rest of the mouth yet those which breede on the side thereof endure very long and you must looke whether or no there be not some sharpe tooth over against it which will not suffer the Vlcer in that place to heale which if there be then must you take it away with a file CHAP. XVI Of the Vlcers of the Eares VLcers are bred in the auditory passage both by an externall cause as a stroake or fall as also by an internall as an abscesse there generated They oft times flow with much matter not there generated for such Vlcers are usually but small and besides in a spermaticke part but for that the braine doth that way disburden its selfe For the cure the cheefe regard must be had of the antecedent cause which feedes the Vlcer and it must be diverted by purging medicines Masticatories and Errhines This is the forme of a Masticatory rum Mastic ʒj staphisagr pyreth an ℈ j. cinam caryoph an ʒss fiant Masticatoria utatur manè vesperi But this is the forme of an Errhine rum succi betonic mercurial melissa an ℥ ss vini albi ℥ j misce frequenter naribus attrahatur For topicke medicines we must shunne all fatty and oyly things as Galen sets downe in Method medendi where he findes fault with a certaine follower of Thessalus who by using Tetrapharmacum made the Vlcer in the eare grow each day more filthy than other which Galen healed with the Trochisces of Andronius dissolved in Vinegar whose composure is as followeth rum balaust ʒij alumin. ʒj atrament sutor ʒij myrrhae ʒj thur aristoloch gallarum an ʒij salis Ammon ʒj excipiantur omnia melicrato ●…t trochisci Galen in the same place witnesseth that he hath healed inveterate Vlcers and of two yeares old of this kind with the scailes of Iron made into powder and then boyled in sharpe Vinegar untill it acquired the consistence of Honey Moreover an Oxes gall dissolved in strong Vinegar and dropped in warme amends and dryes up the putrefaction wherewith these Vlcers flow Also the scailes of Iron made into powder boyled in sharpe Vinegar dryed and strewed upon them But if the straitnesse of the passages should not give leave to the matter contained in the windings of the eares to passe forth then must it bee drawne out with an Instrument thereupon called a Pyoulcos or matter-drawer whereof this is the figure The figure of a Pyoulcos or matter-drawer CHAP. XVII Of the Vlcers of the Windpipe Weason stomacke and Gutts THese parts are ulcerated either by an externall cause as an acride medicine or poyson swallowed downe or by an internall cause as a maligne fretting humor which may equall the force of poyson generated in the body and restrained in these parts If the paine be encreased by swallowing or breathing it is the signe of an Vlcer in the weazon or windepipe joyning thereto But the paine is most sensibly felt when as that which is swallowed is either soure or acride or the ayre breathed in is more hot or cold than ordinary But if the cause of paine lye fastened in the stomacke more greevous symptomes urge for sometimes they swound have a nauseous disposition and vomiting convulsions gnawings and paine almost intollerable and the coldnesse of the extreame parts all which when present at once few scape unlesse such as are young and have very strong bodyes The same affect may befall the whole stomacke but because both for the bitternesse of paine and greatnesse of danger that Vlcer is farre more greevous which takes hold of the mouth of the Ventricle honoured by the Ancients with the name of the heart therefore Physitions doe not make so great a reckoning of that which happens in the lower part of the stomacke Now we know that the Guts are ulcerated if Pus or much purulent matter come forth by stoole if blood come that way with much griping for by the Pus staying and as it were gathered together in that place there is as it were a certaine continuall Tenesmus or desire to goe to stoole Now all such Vlcers are cured by meates and drinkes rather than by medicines according to Galen Therefore you must make choyse of all such meates and drinkes as are gentle and have a lenitive faculty shunning acride things for Tutia Lytharge Ceruse Verdigreece and the like have no place heere as they have in other Vlcers But when as the Vlcer shall be in the Gullet or Weazon you must have a care that such things may have some viscidity or toughnesse and be swallowed by little and little and at diverse times otherwise they will not m●●h availe because they cannot make any stay in these commune wayes of breath and meat therefore they presently slip downe and flow away
spoken that since the Chirurgions scope is to give issue to the matter therein contained there is no other question than to make apertion to evacuate the matter in the most inferior part I have shewed the young Chirurgion the meanes to doe it safely without tormenting the patients for nothing The fourth IN Paps that are too great Paul Aeginet and Albucrasis commands to make a crosse incision to take out all the fat and then joyne together the wound by stitch In briefe it is to flea a man alive which I have never practised nor counsell it to bee done by the young Chirurgion The fifth ALbucrasis and Paul Aeginet will cauterize the Liver and the Spleene with hot irons which the modernes have never practised for indeede reason is manifestly repugnant thereunto The Sixth IN the Paracentesis which is made in the third kind of Dropsie called Ascites Celius Aurelianus commandeth divers apertions to be made in the belly Albucrasis applies nine actuall cauteries that is to say foure about the Navell one upon the Stomacke one upon the Spleene one upon the Liver two behind the backe upon the spondills one of them neare the breast the last neare the Stomacke Aetius is likewise of the same opinion to open the belly with divers cauteries Paul Aeginet commands to apply five actual cauteries to make the said Paracentesis But abhorring such a kind of burning of which you speake much in your third booke I shew another kind of practise the which is done in making a simple incision in the sayd belly as may be seene in my workes with happy successe I doe not teach yong men in my workes the manner of burning which the Ancients have called infibulare that is not in practise though Celsus writeth of it The Seaventh IN the Sciaticke proceeding from an internall cause and because the viscous humors displace the bones Paul commands to burne or cauterize the said joy 〈…〉 the bone Di●scorides commands the same Which I doe not finde expedient ●…king indication from the subjacent parts for there where one would burne t is in the place of the foure twin muscles under which passeth the great Nerve descunding from the holy bone which being burnt I leave it to your censure what might happen as Galen remarketh speaking of the Vstion which must be made in the shoulder called humerus The Eighth IN the outward Laxation of the Spondills Hippocrates commands to bind the man right upon a Ladder the Armes and Legges tyed and bound then afterwards having raised the Ladder to the top of a tower or the ridge of an house with a great rope in a pully then to let the patient fall plumbe downe upon the hard pavement which Hippocrates sayes was done in his time But I doe not shew any such way of giving the strapado to men but I shew the Chirurgion in my workes the way to reduce them surely and without great paine Moreover I should be sorry to follow the saying of the sayd Hippocrates in the third booke De morbis who commands in the disease called Volvu●us to cause the belly to bee blowne with a paire of Bellowes putting the nosell of them into the intestinum rectum and then blow there till the belly be much stretcht afterwards to give an emollient glister and to stop the fundament with a sponge Such practise as this is not made now a dayes therefore wonder not if I have not spoken of it And you not being contented to patch together the operations of the above said Authors you have also taken divers in my workes as every man may know which sheweth manifestly that there is nothing of your owne in your Chirurgions Guide I leave out divers other unprofitable operations which you quote in your booke without knowing what beasts they are in never having seene them practised but because you have found them written in the bookes of the Ancients you have put them into your booke Moreover you say that you will teach me my lesson in the operations of Chirurgery which I thinke you cannot doe because I have not onely learned them in my Study and by the hearing for many yeares the lessons of Doctors of Physicke but as I have sayd before in my Epistle to the Reader I was resident the space of three yeares in the Hospitall of Paris where I had the meanes to see and learne divers workes of Chirurgery upon divers diseases together with the Anatomy upon a great number of dead bodies as oftentimes I have sufficiently made triall publickly in the Physitions schoole at Paris and my good lucke hath made mee seene much more For being called to the service of the Kings of France foure of which I have served I have beene in company at Battells Skirmishes assaults and beseiging of Citties and Fortresses as also I have beene shut up in Citties with those that have beene beseiged having charge to dresse those that were hurt Also I have dwelt many yeares in this great and famous Citty of Paris where thankes bee to God I have lived in very good reputation amongst all men and have not beene esteemed the least in rancke of men of my profession seeing there was not any cure were it never so difficult and great where my hand and my counsell have not beene required as I make it appeare in this my worke Now dare you these things being understood say you will teach mee to performe the workes of Chirurgery since you never went further than your study The operations of the same are foure in generall as we have declared heretofore where you make but three that is to say joyne that which is separated separate that which was conjoyned and to take away that which is superfluous and the fourth which I make is as much necessary as industrious invention to adde to Nature that which is wanting as I have shewed heere above Also it is your will that the Chirurgion make but the three operations above sayd without medling to ordaine a simple Cataplasme saying it is that which comes to your part belonging to the Physition And that the Ancients in the discourse which you have made to the Reader have divided the practise of Physick into three kinds that is to say Diet Medicine and Chirurgery But I would willingly demand of you who hath made the partition and where any thing should be done who are those which are content with their part without any enterprize upon the other For Hippocrates Galen Aetius Avicen in briefe all the Phisitions as well Greekes and Latins as Arabians have never so treated of the one that they have not treated of the other for the great affinitie and tye that there is betweene them two and it should bee very difficult to doe otherwise Now when you will vilifie Chirurgery so much you speake against your selfe for in your Epistle which you have dedicated to Monsieur of Martignes you say that Chirurgery is the most noble part of Physicke as well by
a day these must be dressed Medicines for an Eschar A description of Nutritum A remedy for burnes commonlyumed in the Hospitall of Parts Why deepe combustions are lesse painefull than superficiarie Markes or spots made in the face by cornes of Gunpowder cannot be taken away Gal. 2. ad Glauconem The generall cause of a Gangreene The perticular causes Cold causeth a Gangreene How defluxions cause a Gangreene An untureable Gangreene Lib. de tumor prater natur Aph. 5 sect 6. A Gangreene by effluxe of a cold matter A notable History Simple cold may cause a Gangreene A History What parts are usually taken by a Gangreene occasioned by cold Sect. 2. lib. de fract What a pulsificke paine is Sgnes of a Gangreene proceeding of cold Signes of Gangreenes proceeding from strait bandages or ligatures c. Signes of a Gangreene occasioned by a bite puncture c. Why a Gangreene is called Esshiomenos The quicke impatient of the dead Various Indications of curing of a Gangreene What parts soonest taken hold of by a Gangreene A cordiall Epithemae The cure of a Gangreene made by inflammation The description of an Egyptiacum A strigents that may be used in cure of a Gangreene Gal. 2. ad Glauconem Aphor. 6. sect 11. A note concerning the unsensiblenes of the part A wondrous symptome Sect. 7. Lib. 6. Epidem The controversy decided Lib. 7. Cap. 33. An observable History The Ligature of the part A caution to be observed How to draw forth the vessells and binde them How the lips of the dismembred part are to be joyned together The Heamorrhagie of small vessels is not to be regarded An emplastick medicine A repercus●ive How to place the member and how often to dresse it An emplastick pouder Detersives Why after dismembring the patients complaine of paine as if the part were yet remaining on An ointment for the spine of the backe against all affects of the nerves How to procure the falling away of the ends of the bones Cathaereticks Hot Irons not to be used Lib. 5. Meth. A History Dismembring at a joynt Sect. 4. lib. de Art Burying in hot horse dung helpes Convulsions A fomentation for a Convulsion Monsters or miracles in diseases The diverse acceptions of an Vlcer Sent. 34. sect 3. lib. defract Sect. 1. pr●g What an Vlcer properly is Lib. de conflict Artis●ap 6. The internall causes The externall causes The signes of a putr●d Vlcer * Vlc●● cac●ethes Gal. cap. 5. lib. 4. Meth. Com. ad a●hor 22. sect 5. Aph. 45. sect 6. Hip. progn lib. 1. cap. 8. Aph. 65. sect 5. Aph. 67. sect 5. Aph. 4. sect 5. Hip. lib. de 〈◊〉 Gal. cap. 2. 5. lib. Meth. 4. For what causes Vlcers are ●aid to heale What pu● or matter is 〈…〉 equall and white Ad s●●tent 32 sect 2. de fract Aph. 21. sect 7. Two sorts of excrements flow from a maligne Vlcer The curing of a simple Vlcer consists in exsiccation Gal. 7. Meth. cap. 12. Gal Lib. 4. de companed secund gen The things conducing to the generating of flesh What a scarre is Things causing cicatrization Signes of a distempered Vlcer Remedies for a dry distempered Vlcer Signes of to● moist an Vlcer Gal. lib 1●… simp cap 7. Signes of a hot distempered Vlcer Signes of a cold distempered Vlcer The matter of Narcoticke cataplasmes Catheraeticks have power to asswage paine Things wasting superfluous flesh Lib. 〈◊〉 Meth. cap. 6. For the callous lips of Vlcers Lib. 4. Meth. cap. 2. The cause of wormes breeding in Vlcers A fomentation to kill the wormes Gal. 4. comp med A detergent lotion Detergent medicines without acrimony A caution very observable in use of detergent things A distinction to be observed concerning the impurity of ulcers Diligent regard must be had of the patients bodies and the affected parts How virulent and eating ulcers differ Gal. Lib. 4 de comp mod sec genera How a chironian ulcer differs from an eating see before Cap 2. Gal lib 4. sec gen Cap 5. Gal lib a de comp med sec gen Cap 6. Gal lib 4 de comp med sec gen Cap. 5. Galens reason further explained Medicines are onely such in faculty The beginning of your binding must be at the Vlcer Hip. lib. de ulc Revulsion into contrary parts 4. Methodi Lib. 6. cap. 6. lib. 3. Botryon Caloma Argomon Ep●cauma The cure A Collyrium to clense the Vlcers of the eyes A sarcoricke Collyri●m An ●pulotick Collyrium Lib. 6. cap. 6. A Collyrium for hallow scarres The scarres of the Horny coa● are white and these of the Adnata red Lib. 6. cap. 8. Ga. Lib. 3. de comp med secund locos cap. 3. The cure Lib. 20. epist 5. An injection when the Ozaena shall come to the Oss● Ethmoideae Aph. 24 sect 3 Celsus lib 6 cap 11. Gal com ad 〈◊〉 lib. ep●●●m The cure A gargatisme for the Aphthae Lib. 6. meth Cap. 10. Vlcers of the palate must be quickely aed carefully dressed Aetius lib. 6. cap. 3. Celsus lib. 6. cap. 13. Their causes The cure A masticatory An Errhine The composition of Andronius his trochisces Scailes of Iron Of the Pyoulcos Galen makes mention 2 ad Gia●… con●… The Causes Signes Gal. lib. 5. de loc affect cap. 5. Lib. 4. 5. Method The cure How to take medicines for Vlcers of the throate Why acride things must be shunned in these Vlcers How powerfull Honey is to cure such kind of Vlcers Egyptiacum good for the Vlcers of the greater guts Lib. 5. meth Causes Signes Hip. Aphor. 81 sect 4. Aphor. 76. sect 4. Ap●●or 77. sect 4. The cure Why we must shunne strong purges Things to clense these Vlcers Trochisces for the Vlcers of the Kidnyes and bladder 4. Method Signes to know what part of the ●ladder is ulcerated Why ulcers in the bottome of the bladder are uncureable Egyptiacum for the ulcers of the bladder The causes Lib. 3. sect 12. tract 2 cap. 5. Signes The cure Why strongly drying things are good for Vlcers of the wombe An in●ection for an Vlcer in the bottome of the wombe An injection hindring putrefaction What a Varix is and what be the differences thereof The matter The causes Signes The cure The cutting of Varices For what intention a Varix must be cut Paulus cap. 82. lib. 6. The manner how to cut it What a Fistulai● What a Gallousus The differences of Fistula's The signes The signe that the bone is ba●e from the condition of the matter which is cast fur●h Aetius tetra 4. sect 2 cap. 55. Old Fistula's if closed prove mortall How to finde out the windings and cavities of Fistula's Causticke injections Colsu● lib. 5. Remedies for a Fistula proceeding from a corrupt bone The cure of what Fistula's may be attempted and which may not A palliative cure of a Fistula The causes Signes Symptomes The art of binding and cu●ing a Fistula of the Fundament What they are Their differences Symptomes Sent. 37. sect 6 epid A remedy for the immoderate flowing of
drest Hipp. sent 43. sect 1. de fract Meats fit for generating a Callus Lib. 6. meth cap. 〈◊〉 Why the marrow may seeme to have sense of feeling In what space the legge is usually knit Discussing and unctuous medicines hinder the generation of a Callus What helps forward the generation thereof What Callus must not be broken though distorte or otherwise ill conformed The causes of too slender a Callus Remedies therefore When we must desist from fomenting and frictions Warme water The effects thereof Notes of short just and too long fomenting Fomentations hurt plethorick bodies Why the fractured bones of the foot must be kept in a strait postur● What a Luxation properly so called is What a Luxation not properly so called is The third kind of Dislocation The fourth What Luxations are simple What compound What a complete Luxation is What a subluxation or straine Internall causes of dislocations Externall causes Hereditary causes Sect 3. sent 88. 94 sect 82. 4. sent 3. 4. lib. de art Children may have impostumes in their mothers wombs The common signe of all dislocations Signes of an unperfect dislocation What luxations be uncureable Why those bones which are hardly dislocated are hard to be set Sect. 1. de arti● sent 29. Celsus lib. 8. cap. 11. Why the plucking of an append●x from a bone is uncureable Hipp. sent 88. sect 3. de art Sent. 10 sect 5. lib. 6. epid sect 3. de art sent 88. You must not endevour to set an inflamed joynt Five intentions in curing dislocations The benefit of holding the member in dislocations The use of intension The manner of setting it or putting it into its place Signes that the bone is set The benefit of sit placing the member The manner of binding up the set joynt The cure of inveterate ●uxations These ligatures are not for deligation but extension The causes Differences Signes that only one part is dislocated Signes that both sides are dislocated Prognosticks Why death quickely ensues upon the dislocation of both sides of the jaw An astringent medicine The first maner of setting a jaw-bone Another Dict. What the Surgeon What the Patient ought to do Signes that the Jaw is dislocated backwards The Cure Differences of the luxated Collar-bones The Cure Com. ad sent 62. sect 1. de art An anatomicall description of the Spine The variety of the processes of the Spine Gal. cap. 7. lib. 13. de usu partium Lib. 13. de usu partium The connexion of the head with the first Rack-bone of the neck Prognosti● The danger hereof Signe●… sympto●… their 〈…〉 tion The Cure Signes of their restitution Differences and signes Causes The danger of a vertebra dislocated inwards Hipp. sent 51. sect 3. de art Gal. in com The cure Another maner of cure How to keep the restored vertebrae in their places Cyphosis Lordosis Scoliosis Com. ad sent 2. sect 3. lib. 〈◊〉 art Seisis The separation of the spinall marrow from the encompassing vertebrae The error of Nurses in binding and lacing of Children Hipp. sent 6. sect 3. de art Why when the spine is luxated the parts belonging to the chest are nourished and grow the lesse Why the Luxation of one vertebra is more dangerous than of many Sent. 51. sect 3. lib. de art The signe●… The C●re Cause● Signes Cure Gal. Com. ad sent 3. sect 1. de art Why there is no internall ligament from the arme-bone to the shoulder blade Differences of a luxated shoulder Sent. 1. sect 1. lib. de art Signes of the shoulder dislocated downe-wards The waies to restore it Gal. com ad sent 23. sect 1. de art A perfect setting the luxated shoulder by extension only Hipp. sent 12. sect 1. de art Sect. 1. lib. 1. de 〈◊〉 sent 19. The description of the Glosso●omium termed Am●i Sect. 1. de art sent 21. Hip. sent 64. 4. de arti● How to make use of the Ambi. Com. ad sen 〈◊〉 23. sect 1 de articulis Signes Cure Sent. 23. sect 1. de art Signes The cure What to bee done to hold in the shoulder after it is restored Signes Cure The Author seems not to agree with Hipp. Sent. ult Sect. 3. fract and Celsus in the setting down the kinds of a dislocated Elbow The Author doth not agree with Hippocrates and Celsus in setting downe the notes of these dislocations for those notes which are here attributed to an outward and inward luxation these Celsus hath given to an elbow dislocated towards the fore and out part and those which are here attributed to the elbow dislocated upwards down-wards those Celsus hath attribured to a dislocation to the out and in-sides Inflamation hinders reposition Signe Cure A Caution The cure Sent. 63. sect 3. defract Why the elbow is most subject to Ancylosis Differences and causes Cure Sent. 1. sect 2. sent ult sect 3. de fract Here as before chap. 31 the Author dissents from Celsus and Hippocrates in expressing the names and signes of these dislocations Signe Cure Celsus lib. 〈◊〉 Cap. 18. Why the dislocated fingers may be easily restored Hip. sent 68. sect 3. de art Gal. com ad sent 47. sect 4. de art A subluxation may befall the Thigh from an internall cause Why the thigh-bone dislocated is difficultly restored or restored easily falls out againe The breaking and relaxation of the internall ligament Gal. com ad sent 42 sect 4. de art Hippocrates explained sect 1. 〈◊〉 lib. de art Ad sent 51. sect 3. de art Signes of the thigh-bone dislocated out-wards Paul Aeg. lib. 6. cap. 8. Hip. sent 91. sect 3. lib. de artic Stopping of urine by reason of an internall dislocation of the thigh-bone Signes The generall cure Sect. 2. lib. de fract Sect. 2. lib. de fract How to make extension and counter-extension in this kind of fracture Ligatures made for extension must be fastened neere the part to be extended A generall precept Sect. 2. lib. de fract When it is that onely extension serves for the restoring the dislocated thigh The differences The cure The differences Ad●… sect 3. de fract How to restore a knee dislocated backwards The cure The joyning of the leg and shin 〈◊〉 The cure Differences and signes Causes and differences The cure Why bloud-letting necessary in the fracture of a heele Hip. sect 3. de fracturis Why the heele is subject to inflammation Gal. ad sent 2● sec 2. 〈…〉 fract Sig●es Cure Cure Sent. 14. sect 2. lib. de fract The differences Cure Remedies for a confusion What may happen by paine Remedies for the leanenesse or Atrophia of any member What measure to be used in fomenting A dropax Binding of the sound part opposite to the emaciated How to bind up the emaciated part Signes that an Atrophia is cureable Gal. c. 2. lib. 1. de comp med securlocos The cause What Alopecia uncurable What curable and how Lib. 1. de comp med sect locos Cap. 8. lib. citati The cure For a scaly scall An
〈◊〉 The signes The prognostications 〈◊〉 history Remedies for the ascension of the wombe For the falling downe of the wombe properly so called A discussing hearing fomentation How vomiting is profitable to the falling down of the wombe The cutting away of the womb when it is patrefyed Lib. 6. Epist 3● lib. 2. Epist 〈…〉 ●ract de mirand morbor caus A history Antimonium taken in a potion doth cause the wombe to fall downe The signes of the substance of the wombe drawne out Whether there be a membrane called Hymen A history Lib. 11. cap. 16. Lib. 3. sent 21. fract 1. cap. 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of midwives about the membrane called Hymen What virgins at the first time of copulation doe not bleed at their privie parts Lib. 3. The filthy de●… of bauds harlots Lib. deprost demon cap. 38. What is the strangulation of the wombe Why the womb swelleth The accidents that come of the strangling of the wombe Why the strangulation that commeth of the corruption of the seed is more dangerous than that that comes of the corruption of the bloud The cause of the divers turning of the wombe into divers parts of the body The wombe is not so greatly moved by an accident but by it selfe Whereof come such divers accidents of strangulation of the wombe The cause of sleepiners in the strangulation of the wombe The cause of a drousie madnes A hisrie The ascention of the womb is to be distinguished from the stangulation The wombe it selfe doth not so well make the ascention as the vapour thereof Women living taken for dead How women that have the suffocation of the wombe live only by transpration without breathing How flies gnats and pismires do live all the winter without breathing A history The 〈…〉 when i●… of the suppossion 〈◊〉 the flowers Why the supprossion the 〈…〉 ●eri 〈◊〉 or deadly ●●men The pulling the haire of the lower parts both for this malady and for the cause of the same A Pessary The matter of sweet fumigations By what power sweet fumigations do restore the womb unto its owne nature and place Stinking smels to be applied to the nostrils Avicens secret for suffocation of the wombe Castoreum drunken Expressions into the wombe The matter of pessaries A glyster scattering grosse vapours A quick certain a pleasant remedy for the suffocation of the wombe Tickling of the neck of the wombe The reason of the names of the monthly flux of women What women do conceive this flux not appearing at all What women have this menstruall flux often abundantly for a longer space than others What women have t●● fluxe more seldome lesse and a far more shorrtime than others Why young women are purged in the new of the Moone Why old women are purged in the wane of the Moone The materiall cause of the monthly fluxe When the monthly flux begins to flow The final cause A woman exceeds a man in quantity of bloud A man execedeth a woman in the quality of his blood A man is more hot than a woman and therefore not menstruall The foolish endeavour of making the orifice of the wombe narrow is rewarded with the discommodity of stopping of the flowers What women are called viragines Lib. 6. epidem sect 7. The women that are called viragines are barren Why the strang●… or bloodinesse of the urine followeth the suppression of the flowers Histories of such as were purged of their menstruall flux by the nose and dugges To what women the suppression of the moneths is most grievous Why the veine called basilica in the arme must be opened before the vein saphena in the foot Horse-leeches to be applied to the neck of the wombe Plants that provoke the flowers Sweet things An apozeme to provoke the flowers What causes of the stopping of the flowers must be cured before the discase it selfe The fittest time to provoke the flowers Why hot houses do hurt those in whom the flowers are to be provoked What women ●…and what women due loath the act of generation when the moneths are stopped With what accidents those that are manageable and 〈◊〉 mar●●● a●… troubled Aph. 36. sect 5. Lib. 2. de subt The efficient cause of the milke is to be noted By what pores the flowers due flow in a woman and in a maide The causes of an unteasionable flute of blood The criticall fluxe of the flowers The signes of blood dowing from the womb or necke of the wombe The institution or order of 〈◊〉 Purging An unguent An astringent injection Astringent pes●… The reason of the name The differences What women are apt to this fluxe Womens fluxe commeth very seldome of blood By what signes an ulcer in the wombe may be known from the white flowers How a womane fluxe is wholsome How it causeth diseases How it letteth the conception Why it is hard to be cured A history If the flux● of a woman be red wh●●ein it dif●er●th ●ro● the ●…uall ●lux A womans flux is not suddenly to be stopped What baths are profitable An astringent ●nj●●tion The signes of a putrefyed ulcer in the wombe The virulent Gonorrhaea is like unto the duxe of women The differences of the hoemorrhoides of the necke of the wombe What an Acrochordon is What a thymus is St. Fiacrius figges What warts of the womb must be bound and so cut off Three s●op●● of the cure of wa●ts in the wombe An effectuall water to consume warts Unguents to consume war●● What 〈◊〉 ar● The 〈◊〉 What co●dyl●mat● ar● The cure What the itch of the womb i● Thdifferences and signes An abscesse not to be opened A history The time of breeding of the teeth The cause of the paine in breeding teeth The signes The cure What power scratching of the gums hath to asswage the pain of them A history what a monste is What a prodigie is Lib. 4. cen anim cap. 4. Monste seldome lo● lived Arist in problem 〈◊〉 3. 4. de gen anim cap. 4. Lib. 7. cap. 11. Cap. 3. The ninth book of the Polish history Lib. 4. de gen anim cap. 4. Lib. 4. de generanim cap. 5. Sect. 2. lib. 2. epidem The force of 〈◊〉 upon the body and humours Gen. chap. 30. That the straitnesse or littlenesse of the wombe may be the occassion 〈◊〉 monsters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cap. 64. There are sorcerers and how they come so to be What induceth them thereto Exod. cap. 22. Levit. cap. 19. Hebr. 1. 14. Galat. 3. 19. 〈◊〉 Thes 4. 16. John 13. Mar. 16. 34. The power of ev'll spirits over mankind The differences of devills The delusions of devills Their titles names What the devills in Mines doe Devills are spirits and from eternity The reason of the name Lib. 15. de civit Dei cap. 22. 23. A history Another An opinion confuted Averrois his history convict of falshood The illusions of the devills A history Our sins are the cause that the devils abuse us Lib. 2. de abdit caus cap. 16. Witches