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A46235 The idea of practical physick in twelve books ... / written in Latin by John Johnston ... ; and Englished by Nich. Culpeper, Gent. ... and W.R.; Idea universal medicinae practicae libris XII absoluta. English Jonstonus, Joannes, 1603-1675.; Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654.; W. R. 1657 (1657) Wing J1018; ESTC R8913 546,688 377

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knowen in that it afflicts with a gentle heat with which appear the notes of putrefaction in in the Urine and Pulse It is not burthensome to the Patient by any grevious symtome The Patient can hardly stir on his Legs for weakness The bodie pines away by little and little 'T is protracted beyond the fortieth day 'T is exasperated by the use of Purgers It keeps no order It arises from putrefaction of matter shed forth of the Vessels into the substance of some bowel or at least fast fixed in the Capillary Veins which are dispersed through the substance of the bowels and by its putrefaction corrupting the said substance From whence Vapors cannot be carried towards the heart in such great plenty as in other Feavers T is Cured by aperitives attenuat●rs and detergents appropriate to each part We must also use gentle Purging c. IV. Another sort there is Which arises from the Putrefaction and Corruption of some Bowel From whence putrid Vapors are communicated by the Veins inserted into the heart and heat the same It is somtimes more gentle otherwhiles more Vehement It happens for the most part in Putrefaction of the Lungs in Fistula's that peirce deep into the Cal Nesentery Womb c. The Cure is to be directed to the Ulcers and Fistula's of the internal parts V. Another springs either from Corrupt Milk as often betides Infants or from Blood somwhere Putrifying without the Vessels or from worms or from Crudity familiar to infants because of their greedy feeding with swelling and inflamation of the Hypochondria putrid Vapors being communicated to the heart In the Cure respect is to be had to the Causes and parts affected Chap. 3. Of an intermitting Feaver or Ague in general AN intermittent Feaver commonly called an Ague is a Feaver arising from Vapors which proceed from Humors bred in the Mesaraich Veins Putrifying and ever and a non entring the Vena Cava invading the sick person at certain set times and ending with excretions or Evacuations It 's SIGNS are to come at certain set times with shaking shivering or cold the sensitive parts being vexed and nipped as it were with a sharp Vapor To end by sweating Urine or passage of the Vapors through the pucrepores of the skin by scabbyness if the thicker part of the Humor be thrust forth into the skin Now necessary it is that it should come at certain seasons and then remit and come again For there remains a defilement in that part which is the seat of the putrefaction with a weakness also in the said part Wherupon the affluent Humor though it be good is defiled by the impurity of the part as it were with Leven and through the weakness of the parts it is corrupted Now this return of the Feaver or Ague is caused 1. Partly by the diversity of Humors seeing it alwaies agrees to them nor ever varies into whatsoever body it happen partly because of a peculiar Quality they have which ought either to be ascribed to celestial Causes or it arises from a peculiar corruption 2 It comes either just at one and the same time or by reason of some external causes which move the Humors it anticipates or the Humors being diminished it comes later Also the fits are either short if the matter be little or thin the bodies constitution not close compact the Patients strength Vigorous or long if the premises be contrarily disposed The next Cause is a putrid Vapor arising from an Humor and assailing the Heart Touching the humor three things are to be observed 1. That it is a Putrid Humor which appears by the Urine which has in it signs of putrefaction Nevertheless it does not All putrifie at once in the first Paroxysme but only a Part which is disposed to putrifaction the rest in the following fits til al be consumed 2. That the Hearth and Tinder as it were and place of the said Humor as wel out of the fit as in it is the Mesarick Veins Which appeares both by the stomach sickness Vomiting stretching and pain of the Hypochondria c. With which the Patient is troubled and also by the frequent Vomitings of Choler in very great quantity at the beginning of these feavers which could not be evacuated in such a manner from the remote Veins likewise because the approach of the fit is collected by the compression of the pulses at the beginning of the fit which the Greeks terme Episemasia and the matter is purged out by Urine 3. That the said Humor is ever and anon transferred into the Vena Cava and the Artery The truth is Crudity and Coction are observed in Agues or intermitting feavers as wel as in the continual At first the Humors are moved from the Circumference unto the Center And seeing the branches of Vena Porta are inserted into the substance of the Liver and their mouths communion with the Vena Cava and the Arteries proceeding from the heart are in the Stomach Guts Spleen and elsewhere joyned to the mesaraick Vessels the waies by which these Humors may be carryed thither are evident enough The CURE of intermitting feavers or Agues is Performed 1. By Removing the Debility consisting in the part by altering Medicines 2. By Withdrawing the Putrid Defilement with Purges Blood-letting if blood abound in Vena Cava and be corrupted by Vitious Humors By Sudorificks which are of greatest force in this Cure Precipitating Medicaments are commended at first as Crollius his pouder of snails shels pouder of mother of pearle calcined four scruples and the Magistery of Crabs eyes Externally are applied Cobwebs and Populeon Ointment the fish we cal a Tench bound to the soles of the feet c. Article I. Of a tertian Intermitting feaver or tertian Ague An Intermittent feaver specially considered is either a Tertian or a Quotidian or a Quartan Howbeit there are Quintans Septans Octans Nonans But those modes of Ague●● are seldom seen and are but certain sortes of the simpler Modes aforesaid only a fit Two or three happen to be omitted So a Qintan is a sort of tertian in which the third day is without accession An Intermiting tertian Feaver or tertian Ague is a feaver springing from excrementitious cholor putrifting in the mesaraick veins afflicting every third day with a cold shaking fit which is followed with a hot fit and other symptoms Its SIGNES are Paroxysme or fit which seazes the patient every other day with a shaking cold The shaking cold being over much Heat arises the pulse is at the first begining of the fit smal slow afterward frequent The Vrin reddish c. The CAUSE is a Cholerick filth in the mesaraick veins either alone or mixed with other humors and putrifting Springing from meats apt to be corrupted or others fit to generate the same and sending putrid vapours to the Heart The CURE is performed 1. By Evacuation of the first waies with lenitive medicaments or clysters 2. By Vomit if the matter tend to the stomach and
extendeth it self and reacheth even unto the spina or Backbone where the membrains that touch upon the Pleura are fastened and upheld and this pain is more remiss and moderate unless the membrain be together inflamed but if it be then the pain withal becometh extreamly pricking There is likewise a difficulty of Breathing and indeed greater than that in a Pleurisie so as that the sick person is with extream hazard and peril of suffocation enforced in a strait upright posture to draw his breath the brest or Thorax in that kind of situation being the more easily dilated forasmuch as in those that ly along in their beds it falleth down because that the parts of the Thorax or breast decline and rest themselves upon the spina or backbone which being erected the Thorax is likewise together born out and so is no longer heavy and burthensom unto it self The aforesaid Respiration is sublime so that in it the very top of the Thorax is moved even unto the very covering of the shoulder-blades it is also frequent and often in the begining and likewise it is greater than ordinary which in a short time by reason of the weakness and decay of the natural vigour and the instruments of breathing is chainged into that which is far less and is increased by the frequency thereof The Breathing is hot and because that by the expulsion of the sooty and misty vapours the Heart is lightened they are therefore the more eased and lightened the more they breath forth the aforesaid offensive and oppressing sumes The sharpness of it in a feaver is greater than in the pleurisie in regard of the neer neighborhood of the heart and hereupon there exhale hot vapours unto the Head which hurrying the blood along together with them make an impression upon the cheeks where the skin is but thin and so cause the face ●o become red the eyes and the Temple veins swel the cough is very troublesom by reason of the affect of the Lungs It is conjoined and accompanyed with spitle that is ten● forth at first with a kind of thinner putrefied and rotten matter and by and by dyed with blood and likewise otherwhile otherwise colorea and somtimes it is spit forth ful of froth The CAUSE is blood which is poured forth of the right angle or comor of the Heart into that vein that we cal Arteriosa and so filleth not only the veins and Arteries of the lungs but likewise also the whol body It is raysed and stirred up from external causes as a cold Air and especially the cold northern Air immediatly following upon the southerly the drinking of generous and strong wines a violent and more vehement motion after long rest and quietness and this upon a ful stomach the body being likewise ful and wanting Evacuation Anger and other the passions of the mind c. There is some hopes of a CURE if the Spitle being of a mingled red and yellowish color give out and intimate any sign of concoction in the Lungs affected and if the impostumations be thrust forth either unto the Ears or unto the inferior seats of the Thorax and so they either pass and turn into a fistula and so may be evacuated or else they are derived unto the Thighs It is somthing doubtful if there be want of spittle by reason of the contumacy or unpliablness of the matter and the imbicility of the natural powers if there issue forth and appear with much and thick urine those sweats that at first did arise about the neck and the head because those aforesaid sweats are thought to preceed from a forcible constraint suffocation and violence As for al other things in the cure if foloweth the method of other inflamations If it succeed any otherdisease and the blood be already evacuated then Cupping-Glasses with scarification ought to be applyed unto the Arms and the Thorax or Chest let the Expectorations be of the stronger sort and so likewise the Topical Remedyes The difference is taken from the subject and the causes I. One is of the whole lungs which if together with the heart it be inflamed to that it proceed exceed it self unto the side it then produceth in the sick person a resolution or palsie For the blood flowing abundantly into the great Artery so that the intercostal Arteries are thereby filled and so that also those little branches that penetrate throw the holes of the vertebra of the Thorax into the spinal marrow do swel the Nerves there passing sorth from the spinal are compressed and being thus pressed together they cause a resolution and Palsy Another there is of the one side or other of the Lu●gs and not in the whole and then there is a pain and heaviness self sensibly and perceived in the one or the other part thereof if the upper wing be disaffected and suffer then the Affect extendeth it self even to the Channel bones of the throat but if the lower then it reacheth unto the diaphragm The vein on that side wherein the inflamation is ought to be opened II. One is from pure blood from whence there ariseth a Phlegmone It is known by this that there is produced a bloody spittle unless haply the disease be extremely Crude a streightness of the pracoerdia and of the whol Breast oppresseth the party an extraordinary great intence heaviness contracteth the stern to wit that part of the Breast where the ribbs meet and the Back the Patient is not much afflicted with any acute Fever But now that blood sometimes in the Angina or quinsy breaketh forth violently out of the Jaws and then they die within seven daies if they escape these then they become purulent And because that in those that are in the midst betwixt old age and the vigorous flourishing estate of those of ful and perfect growth the expulsive faculty is more Languid and weak than in yonger persons they are therefore not to be cured but with much difficultty Sometimes it is derived thither from the Pleurisy and yet not by the vessells because that there is no convayence for them but by the membrane that investeth al the parts of the Thorax and then in this case likewise in regard there is a translation of the matter from the outward parts unto the inward that is to say from the less noble unto the more noble parts and such as are nigher unto the Heart the Malady is therefore the more dangerous Another from Chollerick blood from whence it is that the Quinsey is frequently turned into the Peripneumonia and the Luugs being of a spungy substance doth easily admit of a Cholerick and the thinner sort of matter and drink eth it in more deep than other It is known by this that the cough rayseth a yellow spittle and that that is not mingled with much blood the streightness of the Chest and the sence of weight and the veins is less than in the former differences and lastly it is known by this that the
taken they escape without halting If towards the Hip commonly they halt after it Both because the bowing tending outwards it is easily crooked Towards the inside and towards the outside it bunches out like a bow as also because being but one single bone it cannot easily be kept in its place It growes together in the space of fifty daies Chap. 2. Of less Frequent Fractures TO the less ordinary Fractures there appertain the Fractures of I. The Nose which is either equally flatted so as to make a saddle-Nose or it is broke only on the one side or it is writhen aside by the Gristle or the bones thereof are broke into smal fritters There is Joyned somtimes a wound and somtimes and Ulcer is raised within the Nostrils Unless the Nose be immediately rectified it must for ever remain deformed II. Of the lower Jaw-bone whose bone is either broken so athwart that the Bones nevertheless do in some measure hold together or so that one bone sticks out above another and one tooth sticks out beyond another They are consolidated within twenty dayes unless Inflamation happen Also the teeth remain sound III. Of the Clavicula or channel bone which is broken either athwart and is easily reduced into its natural seat by extending and compressing the same with a mans fingers or long-waies which has alwaies some Eminency which can hardly be brought into order It s fracture is knowne by the touch and by the pian It is soddered together within the space of twenty daies IIII. Of the Scapula and that either in respect of the shoulder tip and then Inequality is perceived if the hurt part be compared with the sound or in respest of the broad part Then a certain cavity is perceived by the touch the Arme just against it is benummed If the fracture be in the neck of the Scapula or in the Jointing of the shoulder Inflamation is soon caused because of the veins Arteries and nerves which spring from the Vertebraes of the Neck V. Of the Brest-bone whose fracture is known by the bones giving way when pressed with the finger by shortness of breath c. and it is dangerous because of the Neighbourhood of the noble parts VI. Of the Ribs which are either so broken that the extremities of the broken bones do neither go in nor stick out And then few are either Feverish or spit blood Or so as that the Ends of the Bones are out of their places Then the flesh above the broken Rib is blown and heaved up and if the place be pressed with the hand a noise is heard of the departing Air. Inflamation Feavers Impostumes do for the most part follow Or the whole Ribs are not broken Then there is neither great pain nor a Feaver VII Of the Back-bone which frequently by reason of the hurt ensuing to the spinal marrow the Membranes and the Nerves especially if the fracture happen by the Vertebra's of the Neck proves deadly especially if a palsie either of the Arms and Hands or of the Legs and Feet do follow thereupon VIII Of the Patella or Whirl-bone of the Knee which is known by inability to go and an hollowness which is perceived in the place of the fracture It happens either long waies and then the bones are easily joyned together again Or athwart or slanting Then no art can so help it as to hinder the Patient from halting IX Of the Bones of the Feet which is wont to be caused by an heavy and strong thing 'T is easily known by sight and touch because the parts are fleshless It is not so dangerous See Galen upon Hippocrates of the Joynts and Fractures And so much shal suffice to have spoken touching External Diseases THE SEVENTH BOOK OF THE IDEA OF PRACTICAL PHYSICK Touching Feavers HItherto we have treated of the external Diseases of the Body The internal are either universal which affect the whol Body or Particular which vex some parts only The Vniversal are Feavers A Feaver is considered generally or specially Generally considered 't is divided into Non-putrid and Putrid Hectick Malignant and Pestilential Title I. Of Feavers in General A Feaver in general is an hot Distemper of the whole Body arising from an Heat Preternaturally kindled in the heart and by means of the spirits and blood through the Veins and Arteries diffused into the whol Body and hurting the natural actions thereof by a Crowd of Symptomes The Part affected is the Heart wherein the heat is first kindled and soon after the whol Body at least in respect of the noble parts somtimes For the Heat being diffused possesses the parts either Habitudinally or Habitually Also their temper consisting in the innate and influent Heat is changed Now this Distemper is joyned somtimes with dryness other whiles with Moisture Hence though the feaverish heat do alwaies tend to dryness yet oft times the disposition of the Body upon which that heat acts and the moisture do hinder the Body from falling into a Morbifick Dryness The Cause is whatsoever kindles Heat in the Body Now heat is kindled 1. By Motion whiles the rest of the parts by frequent smiting one against another causing a conflux of more Humors than can be discussed do grow hot 2. By Putrefaction while by the external Heat the internal is called forth 3. By Contact and Nearness of some hot thing 4. By stopping of the pores and interception of sharp vapors and Sooty steams which makes the body unhealthy and this is the Principal Cause without which other Causes can hardly effect any thing 5. By the mixinre of some hot thing The CURE of a feaver in general is performed by Alteration wherein such a progress must be used as that the Cause be not fomented and by mitigation of Symptomes The principal Symptomes are 1. Thirst the inner coat of the stomach being either parched with the burning heat or soaked with an hot sharp and nitrous Humor 2. Hiccuping sharp and biting Humors twitching and nipping the Stomach 3. Vomiting either by reason of an hot and Chollerick Humor or a very cold Humor or of a thick and Clammy matter or some Vapour 4. Loosness of the Belly when the stomach is so far irritated that it can in no wise embrace or digest the meate and when liquors extreamly cold are drunk down 5. Dryness Blackness and Roughness of the Tongue by reason of sooty Vapours which so burn the same that the Spittleish moisture is consumed which arise somtimes from a clammy humor sticking about the Teeth jaws beclam fur the Mouth 6. Lipothymia and Syncope Swowning and Fainting which somtimes proceeds from the permicious nature of the Humor and somtimes from rusty green or black Choler fermenting and coming out of the Veins into the Heart 7. Shortness of Breath occasioned by the oppression of the Midrif through the fervency of green Choler boyling about the heart or by plenty of Humors somtimes t is caused by the heat of the Heart or Lungs when
from a humor which is known by this that its invasion is not altogether so sudden and unexpected and that it continueth longer And this is I. Either waterish having its residence in the Pericardium which is not known but with much difficulty albeit the malady be continual and that the sick persons complain of the suffocation of the Heart It is taken away by discussives as wel such as are internal as Treacle Confection of alchermes the Species of diambra as those that are External namely hot Bread besprinkled with a cordial water and applied to the region of the heart Neither vesicatories nor venesection are here to be made use of Or else it is sent from some other parts and by its weight either burtheneth too much the veins Arteries and the ventricles of the heart so that it is thereby deprived of the freedum of its motion as it hapeneth in wounds great fear and terror c. or else by its quallity it infesteth the same which is especially wont to be done by Choler a dust and terrefied by excessive heat and then there wil be need of evacuations and revulsions For the Cauteryes if we make use of any there are no cantharides to be therewithal mingled or put thereinto Treacle outwardly applied if the matter be cold is here commended 2. Or else it is not malignant and of this what hath already been spoken ought to be understood or else it is Malignant and poysonous and then there is great variety in the Pulse which chanceth especially in regard of the greatness and smalness thereof c. III. One is from a Tumor which if it be hot the inflamation in the Body wil be so much the greater and the breathing wil be difficult if the swelling be hard and in the Pericardium the motion is then continnual and the sick person wasteth and weareth away by degrees and without any manifest Cause The Cure is to be proceeded in according to that of a Tumor IV. From Worms which are discovered by the Convulsion for the whole and entire cure hereof see in Hartman The Bezoar stone is here of excellent use V. From the defect of Spirits which is known by the foregoing of dissipating Causes It is Cured by those things that Cheer and Comfort as odoriferous wine c. VI. From a hot Distemper touching which the second Book is to be Consulted Chap. 2. Of Fainting or Swouning FAinting or Swooning is a sudden and Precipitate fayling of al the Spirits and especially of the vital powers and strength with a pulse much weakened and almost totally abolished as likewise with a cold sweat arising from an extraordinary great weakness of the Heart through the fault and defect of the vital spirits of which those that remain retire also from the External parts of the Body unto the Centre to wit the Heart According to the diversity of the degrees of this sad affect so are the names thereof various and different Ecclusis is a smal and light fainting Lepothimia and Leipopsychia is that which is somwhat more greivious and Syncope is the most sad and greivious of them al which last if it proceed so far that the pulse or beating is abolished in the whole Body it is then termed Asphyxia the reason whereof shal be declared in its definition The Signs and that first of the affect not yet present but very neer approaching are especially in persons unaccustomed thereto an Anxiety that neither was nor indeed could be foreseen a vertigo or swimming in the head a representation as it were of strange and various Colors an often reiterated change and alteration of the Pulse The Signs of the Affect present are a suden fal and failing of al the Powers of the Body a Pulse most weak and obscure and so it is distinguished from the Apoplexy the strangling of the womb the Chilness and Coldness of the whole Body but more especially of the extream parts a cold sweat and therefore termed syncoptick breaking forth and chiefly in the temples neck and Thorax which if it be with an abolition of the Pulse it is then to be accounted a sign Pathognomick The CAUSE is a sudden fayling of the vital spirits whithout which neither the heart nor indeed any other part of the body can perform its actions but as touching this we shal speak more fully in the differences There is some hope of a Cure if it be only from the single or simple distemper of the heart if it proceed from evident and apparent Causes and if it be by Consent There is no hope if the patient fal often into these fainting fits and that without any manifest cause if it befal a weak body if the sick person be not raised out of these fits after the sprinkeling of Rose water upon his face and the drinking of wine nor yet even after sneezing wort hath been administred if the heart primaryly lie and labor under this affect and lastly if it affect those that are Feverish and by reafon of the great store of humors with an inflamation of the stomach and the Liver The Cure hath respect 1. Unto the paroxysme in the which the Spirits are to be refreshed and cheered with the vinegar of the flowers of tunica a kind of Gilly-flowers the vinegar of Rue and of the Elder Tree the balsam of white Ambor and likewise by putting to the nostrils wine Rosewater Cinnamon water and carbuncle water c. When the disease is hot then cooling Medicaments but if the Affect be Cold then those Remedies that heat and warm are to be administred and unto women those things that afford the most strong and stinking savour Unto the Region of the Heart Epithems and inunctions of treacle Mithridate and the oyl of Citron are to be applied Wine that is old and odoriferous is here most efficacious II. It respecteth the intermission touching which more shal be sayd now we are come in the next place to speak of the differences The Differences are taken from those Causes that produce a defect of the Spirits I. One is that Spirits are not generated either by reason of a defect of Matter to wit the blood overmuch evacuated and the Air corrupted or else by reason of some defalt in the faculty as wel in regard of the more noted and considerable diseases of the Heart whether they be from its distemper or whether they be instrumental as in regard of the Arfects of the Brain and the Liver yea likewise of the stomach and the womb and of al these there ought to be a special and due regard had in the cure II. Another is from the Dissipation of those spirits that are generated and bred which is caused 1. by those insensible evacuations that are either habitual or else happen from the over great rarity and thinness of the skin and in this case we must have recourse unto perfumes and sweet smelling medicaments and to those kind of meats that afford a good and wholsom
Juyce the skin is to be condused and made thicker with the oyl of the mirtle tree and with the oyl of Mastick or else it is from the thinness of those things that are to be retained and therefore here those meats that are not over fluid and easily dissipated have their place as being most fit and proper 2. By Evacuations that are sensible as wel of the blood as of other humors where Note that these Evacuations are to be stopped that the body ought not to be besprinkled with those things that are cold that in a large and abundant sweat only such things as close and bind the skin are to have any place or use 3. By diseases as overmuch want of rest and sleep of which enough before a vehement pain the gnawing or pain of the stomach the Colick pain the Nephritick or pain of the stone in the kidneyes or blader the pain of the Teeth c. a sudden breaking of an impostume in which there may a restauration be made by restorative meats sweet smels and rest 4. By such things as are evedent and apparent as namely extream hunger the immoderate use of venus too much and over violent exercise c. III. Another from the alteration and corruption of the spirits which is caused by a malignant matter whether external or internal as for instance the rottenness of humors poyson drunk and taken down the bitting of venemous Creatures and then the Cure is to be sought for in its peculiar and proper place IV. Another from the suffocation of the spirits which is caused 1. By overmuch blood and then there are present and appear signs of a plethory and in this case the opening of the Basilick vein helpeth much 2. A humor that is Crude and thick very much abounding about the heart and the veins and arteries thereof the capsula or purse of the heart and the neer neighboring members and this is either there cellected or else transmitted either from the head and other parts and then the habit of the body is Hydropical neither can the patient undergoe and bear either the opening of a vein or purgation Frictions or rubbings downwards anoyntings with oyls that open and loosen the use of Oximel with the decoction of other things that cut and divide and fasting unless the pulse be suddenly changed and discover an extraordinary weakness al these help and conduce much to a Recovery 3. By fuligenous vapours gathered together in great abundance about the Heart and the Members adjacent by which the respiration or breathing is hurt these are soonest and best taken away by discussives 4. By a Sudden Terror and Fear for which Evacuation is most convenient lest that from the afflux of Blood some obstruction in the Vessels or else an Inflamation should be excited For what remaineth see further to the Treatises of the Practical Physitians Title VIII Of the Affects of the Paps or breasts in Women Chap. 1. Of the Diseases of the Papps Article I. Of the Tumors or Swellings of the Paps THe Affects of the Paps or Dugs are either Diseases or Symptoms unto the former of these there belong Tumors the Cancer and the Magnitude The Tumors of the Paps are four I. An Inflamation which is a hard swelling It is known by the redness the pain the pulse or beating and the heat thereof by which it differeth from that we cal the Clotting or Curdling of the Milk and the overgreat abundance thereof It ariseth from the great store of Blood that is attracted transmitted or suppressed It is Cured 1. By a Diet that is thin and spare cooling and moistening 2. By Diversion which is performed by letting blood in the Ankle if the Causes be suppressed 3. By Evacuation by opening the internal Vein of the same side and so letting out the Blood as also by a gentle Purgation 4. By the Application of Topical Remedys in the Inflamation of such as thereunto accustomed And here we are to take Notice that the Repellers ought to be temperate lest that the Heart be overmuch cooled that in the Augmentation thereof there is commended beer and butter wel warmed and so applied that the extream Hardness may most properly and succesfully be prevented and removed by the Medicament that is formed and made of the Marrow of a Calves Thigh two ounces thereof of Oesipus or the moisture of greasie sheeps Wool one ounce of Saffron four scruples of Cummin wel bruised two scruples that when it is Suppurated in regard that the Breasts or Paps are Spungy and ful of hollow Caveties it is most commonly to be opened in divers places thereof that the Pap affected is very rarely cured and healed unless the Milk of the other that is sound be dryed up in regard that the blood equally floweth unto both and lastly that the Pain is to be moderated and mitigated if it be in Summer most fitly with the Leaves of Henbane if it be in the Winter then with the Roots of the said Henbane roasted under the Embers and then wel beaten together with Hogs Grease II. Oedema which is somtimes diffused and spread abroad throughout the whol Paps or Breasts so that they wholly and equally swel It is known by this that it is soft and that by intervals and at certain times to wit in the time that the Courses flow the swelling and the pain is exasperated but yet notwithstanding that there is evermore some of the swelling remayning The Original and the Cure hereof are to be sought for out of that which is spoken in the general touching these Tumors And here it is only to be Observed 1. That in the retention of the Courses those meats that are Tosted and Roasted are not so fit and convenient 2. That the stronger sort of Maturatives are to be made choice of in regard that here the matter is tenacious and very loth to yield 3. That a due regard is likewise to be had of the Stomach that is the Receptacle of the Flegm III. The Scirrhus of the Paps is either Exquisite or not Exquisite 1. The Exquisite is various I. One is that which is but newly begun or but now beginning which upon the touching thereof is a little painful and in this regard it is distinguished from a Cancer that is likewise but now beginning and it is very hardly Cured Another Old and Inveterate which is hard without pain incurable by Medicaments especially if it resemble the color of Capers or if haires grow therein it is somtimes Cured by Manual operation II. Another is by the Congestion or heaping up of a Humor that is in it self thick in the Curing of which we are not to use Vinegar either in the beginning or long at any time lest that either the residue thereof should be hardened and become like unto a stone or else that the substance of the part being overdryed should wast and consume away neither ought we to attempt any thing by Manual operation if the whol
Mans body They commonly cal this part Dietetical in reference unto the diet that is observed The other openeth the Method of preserving the health by shewing us the way and means how we may so use these things not natural that they may not in the least hurt or offend our bodies Of Things not natural there are four ranks or Classes The first containeth those things that are taken and received into the Body The second those things in and about which the body is exercised The third such things as happen unto the body from without The fourth and last comprehends those things that are voided forth of the body to wit the Excrements Chap. I. Touching things not Natural that are assumed or taken into the Body Article I. Of the Aire THings not Naturall that are received into the body are Air Meat and drink Air is a thing not natural surrounding or encompassing the body of Man and insinuating it self into it by certain pores and passages Touching this Air there are four things observable First that it is necessary to the very being of Health Secondly That it affects mans body Thirdly That there are many differences thereof Fourthly That it is subject and Liable unto divers changes and alterations And first of al That it is necessary and requisite unto the very being and preservation of health yea indeed so far forth necessary that if any one intercept the said passages of the Air into the body it unavoidably perisheth in a moment or very short time appeareth even from hence to wit that unless the heart should be cooled and unless that the Internal fire or heat should be ventilated and excited and lastly unless the spirits should continually be refreshed and revived a man could not possibly put forth or exercise his Actions Now the Air is therefore attracted by the Lungs that it may qualify and temper the overgreat heat of the Heart The same Air likewise by its motion as it were with a Fan ventilates cooles the internal heat so that it not only becomes more moderate but is also thereby excited and stirred up And lastly the same aforesaid Air being from without attracted inwardly by the rough Arteries usually termed asperae and first of al prepared and wrought upon in the very flesh of the Lunges and next of al in the Heart and Arteries those of them more especially that are in the Netlike folding we commonly cal it plexus retiformis and last of al most perfectly and exquisitely in the ventricles of the Brain by its substance generateth and produceth spirits Secondly It Affects the Body of Man after a twofold manner First as it surrounds it either naked or clothed Secondly As it insinuates it self into the same whether it be by inspiration which is done either by the Mouth according to the taking in and putting forth of the breath or by the Arteries according to their dilatation and compression or otherwise by Transpiration which is performed al the skin throughout and in each part thereof by those exceeding smal passages not unlike unto those of a very fine five which the Greeks cal Porous the Latines poros we in English pores Thirdly It derives its differences from the quantity quallity and substance thereof I. In respect of its Quantity it is copious scant ful which last Hippocrates in his tract of breathings or blasts cals athrooteron that is to say al at once and speedily breaking in upon us II. In regard of its Quality 1. Hot and this augments the cholor melts away the humors weakens and hinders Concoction and consequently by dissipating the Native heat it very much shortens the life 2. Cold which by shutting the pores or passages of the skin and so hindering perspiration excites putrid Feavers or else by compression causeth destillations forceth the Blood oftentimes out of the Veins from whence proceed inflamations and then it extreamly hardneth whatsoever is in the belly 3. More than ordinarily moist which heapeth up together flegm and store of Crudities 4. Over dry which its true wasts and consumes the superfluous humors but again it breeds acute feavers through the abundant increase of sharp humors and it likewise exceedingly dryeth the skin 5. Corrupt whether overmuch exceeds in the first qualities or else is rendered impure by reason of vapors arising from Lakes standing waters fenny and Moorish places or else such as cannot be cleansed and purified by the through blasts of the wind 6. That which is the best which is temperate in the first qualities pure subject to no infection or polution seren clear sweetly and gently stirred to and fro by frequent blasts and gentle gales of winds and which is often times moystened with wholsom and healthful showers of rain III. In relation to its substance it is 1. Thick which for the most part intercepts the very sight and hinders the prospect so that either we cannot at al discern the starrs or if we do they appear unto us much less than at other times or at least as much darkned and overcast 2. Troubled or tempestuous which hath divers of its thicker parts as it were made up of their moisture violently hurried amidst the serene and cleer by turbulent and tempestuous winds 3. Thin which is contrary to the former transparent serene free from vapors and throughly cleansed by the thorough blasts of Windes 4. Putrid and rotten whether it be that it putrefie of its own accord as wanting ventilation as for instance that which is on every side shut up and as it were imprisoned by high Mountains or else that it becomes corrupted from some other cause as suppose from the Heavens the Stars the Winds blowing from infected places or from some noysome pestilent vapor c. 5. Healthful and wholsome which hath its original and its whol constitution from and under benign and healthy Climats is stirred and driven to and fro by wholsom Winds and is not in the least vitiated or corrupted by the vapors that proceed from any putrid and impure whether things or places Fourthly The Air taketh its mutations or Changes which Galen cals Alteration according to the Constitution from these ten things more especially First From the Stars and Constellations for both the Planets and likwise the fixed Stars have in them much of power and influence upon these inferior Bodies Concerning the influences of the former we may at large read in Porphyrius in the fourth Chap. of his paraphrase upon the Books of Ptolomy as touching the effects of the stars And Hippocrates writes that most Women conceive at the ful of the Moon Touching the latter to wit the fixed stars it is easily to be seen and manifestly perceived even in the lesser Dog-star alone the Pleiades Arcturus For upon the rising of the Dog-Star the Seas grow tempestuous fluctuating Wines work afresh and fluctuate in the Cellers Dogs run mad and the like At the Settling of Pleiades great Tempests and North-east Winds arise and upon the
we not over do And we must know that 't is alwaies more safe in a doubtful proportion to fal rather too short than to exceed Touching this matter take these rules 1. Infirmities which have taken deep root need stronger remedies than such as are slight 2. In a mild infirmity we must do al at once and suddenly and so we must in an extream and dangerous sickness because it quickly finishes its course and quickly kils 3. In indifferent and cronick diseases we must endeavour to expel them by little and litle and slowly but we must withal take heed least while we go about to quench a mighty flame with a smal Quantity of water we m●ke the fire burn the faster II. The Time respects 1. Seasonableness of which note 1. That we must then act when the Patient can best bear it 2. That the motion of nature must be alwaies furthered unless it be dangerous 3. Turgent humors must be drawn out the self same day 4. About the beginnings and ends of Diseases stronger medicines may be given because then al the symptomes are weaker in the state it is better to rest because then al is at the height 5. The Constitutions of the Heavens that is to say both the Conjunctions Risings and Settings of the Stars as also the great changes of times especially in cronical sicknesses are to be considered c. II. Method or good order in the plurality of things to be done Here observe 1. That disjoyned Diseases do require distinct Remedies so that they may be cured either severally or both together 2. That connex and complicated diseases if they consent may be cured either together or apart and you may begin with which you please and if they dissent we must oppose both with a kind of mediocrity if they partly agree and partly disagree we must begin with that which though the Cure of it do not help yet it hinders not the Cure of the other 3. In al diseases whether they be disjoyned or conjoyned respect must be had above al things both of that which urges and of the Cause or Concomitancy so that we must first cure that which urges most and that upon which the rest depend Under the Motion of Causality or Concomitancy come both al Impediments without the removal whereof no Cure proceeds as also the Foments upon which the other hurts being linked and chained together do depend in their production Now that is said to Vrge which exceeds the other hurts of the body either in magnitude and malignity or in the vehemency and celerity of the the hurt they do III. Touching the Place these things are observable 1. That the inclination of nature and conveniency of the Vessels must be observed 2. That the matter must be voided the nearest way by ignoble parts by a natural channel and by waies cleer and direct But of these things God-willing I wil treat most methodically and accurately in my Syntagona Chap. 3. Of the abstractive Method in Special and first of the taking away of Causes Article I. Of the taking away of Causes which offend in Quantity THe Taking away of Causes respects both Humors offending in Quantity Quality Motion and Place and likewise winds themselves of which notwithstanding they are not so exactly to be considered and by themselves but that they may somtimes be complicated together The taking away of Causes which offend in Quantity is performed by Blood-letting Frictions Fasting Bathing Haemorrhoides Monthly Courses Scarification Cupping-glasses and Horse-leaches I. Touchig Blood-letting these things occur considerable 1. Whether it is to be done or no. I. A Vein is not to be opened 1. If the forces of the body languish as being changed by Fevers long diseases distemper of the ambient air or other things some venemous quality immoderate evacuation of Humors Labour Grievous Pain and passions of the Mind 2. If a Woman be sickly and of a whitish color 3. If it be a child because its heat is apt to dissipate 4. If the Patient be over fearful 5. If the disease be in its highest vigor which attains the Crisis 6. If a crude distemper afflict without fault in the blood and it may otherwise be amended 7. If crude juyces abound in the whol Body especially in the Summer time the stomach being weakned the body soft and a fever be joyned 8. If a crude and cold juyce afflict the mouth of the stomach whence an heart-burning proceeds by reason of the vicinity of the Heart 9. If boyling juyces abound in the whol body which wast the Spirits and being carried into the stomach Cause a deliquium 10. If venemous diseases afflict the body 11. If a critical Evacuation were sufficient II. A vein may be opened 1. If the forces of the body languish being oppressed 2. If the disease be great which afflicts vehemently for a short time with a feverish heat and working of the blood 3. Yea in a person of seventy years of Age provided the pulse be considerable and the nature of the disease and plenty of blood require the same 4. Also in a Woman with child both in the first and last months if shee have an accute disease II. We are to consider at what time a vein is to be opened Touching which observe 1. That such diseases as are caused by a plethora in them a veine must presently be opened at any hour of day or night before it transfer it self into some noble part and the strength of the body come to languish 2. In feavers it must be done in the times of Remission and Intermission 3. If the greatness of the disease require not hast the best time is to open a veine in the morning an houre after the patient has been awake 4. When we would reiterate blood-letting for evacuations sake we must do it the same day III. How much blood is to be taken I. where observe I. Blood may be more freely taken away 1. When the Forces of the patients Body are lively 2. From Persons of a rosey-color of a thick and yellow habit of body haveing large veines and being formerly accustomed co blood-letting 3. In a vehement and great disease when the forces are vigorous we may let blood til the patient swoun howbeit we are not ordinarily to stay so long but when the color of the patient changes and his pulse growes weaker and when the blood runs with a lesser streame than before unless fat or some other gross matter hinder it then we must cause it to be stopped II. It is more sparingly to be diminished 1. In an impure plethora 2. In a melancholick plethora because it is not so hot as to require cooling 3. In a flegmatick plethora because the humor being exceeding cold is made more crude by blood-letting 4. In children and old people specially in the Summer 5. When the forces are discomfited and the disease is urgent for then it must be taken away by peecemeal at sundry times II. Frictions
greatness of the cause nobility of the part affected vehemency of symptomes and the Deaths of many persons It is undertaken I. By ridding away the poison which is done divers waies according to the differences of poisons II By administration of Antidotes both common and appropriate to every part of the Body where nevertheless we must not forget the manifest qualities This is an approved antidote viz. An Electuary of Masterwort Roots of sweet Angelica of Gentian of white thistle of each two handfulls terra sigillata six ounces Myrrh an ounce Venice Treacle four ounces Rosemary Rue of each one handful Birthwort three pound Bayberries one handful virgin hony clarified a triple quantity to al the rest Make al into an Electuary according to Art The differences are taken from the Causes I. Some spring from internal Humors II. Others from infected Aire The Cure consists in prevention of such aire and avoiding the same In purification of the infected aire respect being had to the Cause of the Infection By giveing of Alexipharmaca or Antidotes by which the Heart may be defended and the malignity driven away by sweat III. Some proceed from water For there are certaine metalline fountaines envenomed either naturally or by some occasion yea and drinking of water has brought many into the dropsie and the scurvy is caused by corrupt water Such fountains are to be avoided and faulty waters must be corrected by boiling straining putting in barley flower or Garlick c. IV. Others come from Contagion V. Others from Poisons whose Cure is doubtful if present poison be taken in and that in great quantity Impossible if the poison cannot be expelled neither by vomit stool nor sweat Respects 1. Expulsion by Alexipharmaca or Antidotes which differ according to the varieties of poisons 2. Evacuation especially by vomit that those medicaments may better penetrate unto the Heart 3. Prohibition of Sleep least the poison should thereby peirce the sooner into the Heart and inner parts The Differences are many I. Some are poisons taken into the body which are cured by a gentle vomit made of fat things By purgation if it stick in the upper Gutts By Vrine if it tend to the urinary passages and in all medicaments be sure to mingle Antidotes By Diet in which case Milke is exceedingly commended II. Others are externally applied to the body whose Cure consists in extraction or pulling out the said poison both by drawing medicaments and by such things as do it by a certain likeness which must be continued til the evil color pain and symptoms shal cease Interception which is excellently performed by binding somwhat very hard upon some part above the place affected Use of Alexipharmaca if the Poison have peirced into the Body as was said before Title II. Of organical Diseases Chap. 1. Of Diseases of Conformation AN organical Disease is the diviation or swerveing of the parts of Mans Body from their natural structure Now because to the said Natural structure Conformation Number Situation and Connexion are requisite therefore there wil be so many differences and to this title four heads are subjoined and also because in Conformation or Shaping three things are required viz. Figure Cavity and Surface there wil be consequently so many diseases Article 1. Of diseases of Figure A disease in Figure is the swerving of the parts of Mans Body from their natural figure depending upon certain peculiar causes The Signs are evident so that it is needless to speak of them The Causes are whatsoever may violate the figure of our bodies either by compounding or loosening distorting or exhausting The Cure is not difficult in such as by reason of the Humidity of their bones are yet in a growing condition It is hardly to be attempted in persons growen up in whom the bones whose figure the external parts do represent have attained greater hardness and dryness It is performed 1. By handling and working the part the contrary way 2. By binding with swathes and splints It may be repeated if the former succeeded not if the hurt be very great and the sick man lusty and that by breaking of the Callus emollients being premised It ought not to be repeated if the patient be old the hurt Less and the Callus hard The differences are from the times of swerving of the parts I. Either it happens before the Nativity in the womb and then the fault is in the shaping faculty and it is hardly cured II. Or in the birth and then either the Infant was too great or the Orifice of the Womb too strait III. Or after the Birth where the chief fault is overmuch repletion which must be cured with Evacuation Defect of Nutriment which requires meats easie of digestion of good juyce and of little Excrement See the chapter of Arrophia Violent motion either caused by the patient himself or by the Artist in which case fractures of Bones do chiefly happen The setling of one part upon another either by reason of the Resolution or Convulsion of the Nerves in which case we must have respect to the disease it self of the Nerves Article 2. Of Disease of the Cavities Point I. Of Diseases of the Cavities consisting in Excess Diseases of the Cavities are those wherein the natural passages of the parts are hurt By Cavities or hollow receptacls we understand both those large Capacities of the Stomach Brain Heart and Womb as also the passages of the Veins Arteries Ureters c. and the O rifice or Head of the Vessels and al Cavities whatsoever And because the Cavities are hurt either by way of excess or in defect the diseases of the Cavities are divided into such as consist in Excess and such as consist in defect Diseases of the Cavities in Excess are when they are greater than naturally they ought to be The SIGNS shal be set down when we come to speak particularly of them The CAUSE is what ever is of tendency to open or distend or fret and divide the Cavities The CURE is performed by Stopping They are divided into Anastomosis Diapedesis and Diairesis I. Anastomosis is when the mouths of the Vessels are too much opened and widened It is known by a plentiful shedding forth of such humor or matter which ought to be contained in the said Cavities It arises from such things either external or internal which are apt to loosen or distend The Cure tends to shut up by astringent med●caments of which in their place and has an Eye withal to their Causes The chief astringents are Leavs of Shepherds-pouch seeds of Purslane flowers of Balaustians smal Dasies bole Armeniack juyce of Slowes new Treacle pouder of Mans Bones Crocus Martis c. As for the differences 1. Either it springs from an External Cause as opening medicaments and then the causes preceding must be removed Or 2. from plenty of Humors especially blood burthening the faculty and then thē signs of those Humours are present We must go to work with blood-letting and purging
Choler and putrified matter is inflamed about those parts or when matter swelling and fermenting in the Veins rushes violently and settles it self thereabouts 8. Head-ach want of Sleep Apileptick Convulsions c. Of which in their places Title II. Of Vnputrid Feavers Chap. 1 Of the Feaver Ephemera UNputrid Feavers are either the Ephemera or the Synocha simplex The Feaver Ephemera is a feaver which arises from the Inflamation of the Vital spirits in the heart and continues the space of one day 'T is termed Ephemera because it transcends not the natural day as the Beast Ephemeron and Colchicum Ephemeron a plant so called The SIGNS are A sudden heat arises in the Body no loathing of meat or wearyness without cause deep sleep or frequent Yawning having preceeded with none or very slight shivering unless the Body be ful of bad juyce diffusing much and biting expiration which by reason of the colds stopping the skin or the closing up of the secret passages being suppressed smites the Nerves The Vrin in color substance and sediment is little or nothing differing from the natural unless the Cause which brought in the Feaver have raised some extraordinary mutation in the blood The pulse is more quick and frequent than ordinary but yet even ordinate great and strong Inspiration is greater and quicker than expiration The CAUSES are procatarctick of which in the differences The CURE is easie unless it change into a Synocha imputrid in a youthful and ful body or into a putrid the fourth or fift day in a body Cacochymical or into an hectick in an Hot Dry thin body 'T is Absolved 1. By Alteration through cooling and moistening things given inwardly and applied outwardly to the Region of the Heart the pulse and forehead 2. By Evacuation or opening a Vein if there be a plethora or by gentle Purgation if it arise from a redundancy of evil Humors and some light obstruction 3. By strengthening the Stomach Regard being had to the Humor and Symptomes The Differences of the Feaver Ephemera are taken from the causes I. One sort comes from Cold Air striatning the skin Then the beginning is without shivering The Urine and pulse are little changed the Heat is more moderate in the state T is Cured by removing the Cause II. Another springs from Buboes which is known by the presence of Buboes by a swift and great pulse by much heat by a ruddy Face 'T is Cured by blood-letting by which if blood be sufficiently taken away the Bubo appearing a little vanishes away by the use of repellers or relaxers if not it must by fomentations be brought to suppuration Vide B. 2. de Bubone III. Another from straitness of the skin which is known by the hardness and compactness of the Patients skin other things being as in other persons healthy It arises from plenty of blood cold binding or dryness 'T is Cured 1. By Blood-letting if the blood offend in quantity 2. By Purgation cutters being premised where there is plenty of thick Humors and swear is wont to follow 3. By relaxation with hot and moist things temperate baths moderate frictions frequent washing if it proceed from cold IIII. From Crudity and that nidorous which is known by the presence of such signs as attend a Diseased Stomach 'T is Cured 1. By Vomit if stomach sicknes and Aptitude to Vomit be present 2. By Purgation if there be danger in Vomiting 3. By Corroboration with Medicaments whose quality is opposite to the peccant Humor V. Another springs from Heat of weather Anger Sad Pensiveness Watchings Wearyness c. Of al which consult with Practitioners Chap. 2. Of the Feaver Sinocha Simplex THe feaver Synocha simple or the Ephemera of many daies is a Feaver without putrefaction arising of the Boyling and working of the spirits and blood without remission lasting three four or more daies 'T is termed also Inflativa or Puff-up because when the blood works and boyles the Vessels are distended and a wearyness of the body is perceived Its SIGNS are wearyness which comes of it self without any exercise of the Body Heaviness about the temples and forehead A certain Itch of the Nostrils a gentle Heat Moistness of the skin with distention of the Members A pulse great ful frequent quick Difficulty in fetching breath Urine thicker and more red than ordinary The CAUSE is the working and boyling of thin blood which arise from the hinderance of Transpiration in a plethorick body which sends forth many hot Vapours The CURE is not very hard because it seizes for the most part strong bodies or temperate ones or such as are hot or moist of middle Age of a fleshy square Alderman-like constitution unless it degenerate into another sort 'T is allayed and terminated somtimes by sweat or by plentyful Nose-bleeding within the fourth or at most the seventh day unless through some very great Error of the Patient the Physitian or the Assistants of the sick it turn to a putrid feaver or a greivous Disease which is wont to spring from fullness 'T is performed 1. By Blood-letting by which the Patient is cooled and the encrease of Vapors is diminished but it must be speedy little in quantity and divers times celebrated 2. By Evacuation of the first Region least more fumes be added to the store Tamarinds Rhubarb Syrupe of Roses solutive Cream of Tartar are good 3. By Alteration which ought to be performed by cooling potions the spirit of salt and vitriol being mixed therewith Clysters Oxyrrhodines Epithemes Bathes for such as are accustomed to them but not before the Rigor of the Feaver be over 4. By Corroberation with Manus Christi perled Diamargaritum Frigidum Conserve of Roses Vitriolated of Wood-sorrel c. 5. By a cooling and Moistening Diet. Title III. Of Putrid Feavers in General A Putrid Feaver is Generally or Specially considered A Putrid Feaver in general is a Feaver which arises from hot Vapors raised out of the Putrefaction of humors which affect the heart with a praeternatural heat SIGNS thereof are Invation with shivering and shaking no antecedent Cause having preceded No nor no procatarctick unless the body be so disposed that a smal matter affects it Accessions and Paroxysmes or fits which yet agrees not with al. The heat at the beginning is not biting by reason of suffocation biting in the augment by reason of a Fuliginous excrement The Vrine is crude or obscurely digested The Pulse is at first smal the contraction swifter then the dilatation by reason of plenty of sooty excrement It abates upon sweat or some other Evacuation The Causes immediate are putred vapors sharp biting plentiful so as they cannot be discussed The Mediate is the putrefaction of humors whose cause 1. In the first assault of the Fever is either their bad nature contracted from meats of bad juyce which soon putrifie from il preperation and use of diet and the faults of the Parts which serve concoction or an External agent where hindrance of
Transpiration has place or from the straitness of the pores of the skin for hot things in an hot place if they have not freedom of a●●e doe suddenly putrifie or from the obstruction of the Vessels and Passages in the Body A Feaver Ephemera especially in hot Natures Heat arising from the Nonnatural things Nearness of putrified humors 2. In the Continuance is the fault of the parts ordained for Concoction Inquination or Defilement remaining after the Paroxysme which inserts the humors herein The Cure for the most part does not oppose the Feaver so as to neglect the Cause especially if the Remedies for the Feaver doe encrease the Cause unless the Feaver be very great Yet sometimes we may resist the Feaver and neglect the Cause namely when it is remiss The safest way is so to direct the Cure to the one as not to neglect the other It is performed 1. By Blood-letting which must be practised 1. For evacuation to put the blood in motion and to cool the same 2. In continual Feavers on the third day in intermitting Feavers after the third day in all having first given a gentle Lenitive if any thing reside in the first waies and when the disease is most remiss 3. When the evil humors are not in the first passages but are mingled with the blood in Vena Cava 4. When there is plenitude It must be repeated the same day if it be done for Evacuation sometime after if for Revulsion II. By Vomiting rightly instituted with Aqua Benedict a Rulandi Asarum Roots c. III. By Purgation then Lenitives ought to precede by reason of the stomachs weakness and plenty of humors in the Mesaraick Veins and stoppage of the Belly at the beginning either by Clisters or Potions Stronger Medicaments ought to follow 1. There having preceded both Coction which must be observed in Feavers especially such as are continual and acute according to the precept of Hippocrates by which Nature assisted with art makes separation of putrid humors mingled with the blood Praeparation which opens the passages and waies by opening Medicaments here Cichories Endives and Sorrels have place and impediments in the humors are removed where syrupe of Vinegar of the Juice of Citrons have place and a dram of Spirit of Tartar compound which must be given with caution in cholerick natures by reason of the Treacle water 2. Which must be omitted if the Humors are not in the first passages but mixed with the blood in the Veins If the Humors are turgent that is either move to some determinate part or are so disposed that they may run violently into some part For the feverish matrer is wont at the beginning though little because like Leven it corrupts the rest of the humors to be moved by nature and either to be thrown out of the body or to be thrust into the more ignoble parts of the body IV. By sweating provoked by Sudorifick medicaments and that not very hot least the Fever be increased yet sufficient least the matter should be only stirred administered after other evacuations least Transpiration should be more hindered Yet is it allowable in the beginning sometimes to give strong sudorificks that the said ferment may be dissipated to dispose the patients body to sweat through the whol disease that the body may freely transpire To repeat it as often as need shal be that the matter may be accustomed to expulsion Salt of Wormwod of Centory of Carduus benedictus Spirit and Rob or quiddinie of dwarf-elder of Elder Magistery of Mother of Perle of Crabs-Eyes Antimonium diaphoreticum c. are commended V. Diet in which are principally considerable 1. Meat which ought to be of good juice easie of digestion of small excrement so that great respect be had to the patients strength the disease and morbifick Cause The times of the disease it self must be observed least the patients strength be overwhelmed The Quantity Quality and manner of the use ought to be weighed Howbeit a more liberal diet may be used the strength of the Patient being diminished by Evacuation A thin when it is weak by suffoeation that plenitude may be diminished and nature the better betake her self to the Concoction of Humors A very nourishing one to preserve the strength Medicamental to drive away the Disease and its cause At any time when the strength is decayed by Evacuation and fasting In the declination or intermission the Patients strength being suffocated by the vehemence of the Disease 2. Drink which ought to be nourishing in the Patients weakness And Medicinal in reference to the Disease and its Cause Such is a Decoction of Barley Oxymel Whey corrected with Annis-seed Fennel-seed and Cumin-seed Cooling Juleps In the first daies of continual Feavers little afterwards more plentifully In Agues when the fit is near none at al least the separation and exclusion of the putrifying Humor should be hindred when sweat is ready to break forth hot to further the same The Wine in Agues must be austere and hard because such Wine moistens further excretions and is more easily distributed into the body in continual Feavers about the beginning of Coction little in quartans before in the Progress of the Disease more In the Declination if there be weakness The feaverish heat be not intense Crudity of the matter prohibit not Head-ach and like disorders be absent Chap. 1. Of Continent putrid Feavers Article I. Of the Synochus Putrida Putrid Feavers specially considered are either Continent as Synochus putrida Causus or Continuae Periodicae or Intermittents Synochus putrida is a feaver arising from blood putrified in the vena cava without any periodical Remission and Intention afflicting alike from the begining to the End It is also termed Pur Fire because of its very great Heat Assodes because it makes the Patient very unrestible Taraxodes because it vexes the Sick with imaginary Apparitions And Pericaes Puretos the burning fever because of the Excess of burning Heat The Pathognomonick or peculiar Signs are extream thirst and burning Heat howbeit the thirst is allaied by coughing which causes an Afflux of humors To these signes are added great tumblings and tossings of the Body by reason of great heat and the acrimony of thin vapours which in every part vex the body The Vrin is little in quantity through plenty of sweat and heat which consume the same somtimes t is crude and troubled which by the settling of the adventitious parts and evaporation of the turbulent spirits doth afterwartd waxe cleare somtimes t is thin very cholorick and flame-colored The stooles unless the dung be scorched and hardened by the feavers Heat are liquid and saffron-colored choler being shed into the belly and making the dung thin The pulse is quick frequent and unequal swifter in the Contraction because the Arteries by suddain compression indeavour to expel those sooty vapours which greiviously afflict the heart Breathing is laboursome and expiration is quicker than drawing-in of the air
the patient be troubled with Heart burning stomach fickness and desire to vomit but so as the humors be not thereby drawn out of the veins to the first passages Salt of vitriol Asarum Broome water of pismiers or Aunts are commended if warily administred 3. By Blood-letting if the Humor have penetrated out of the first region of the body into Vena cava which is known by the redness of the Urines and it ought to be performed upon the day of the Agues Intermission 4. By preperation with cooling medicaments moistening and such as cleanse the first passages Taraxacum or dandelion sorrel Barly Cichory Spirit of vitreol Cream of tarter Tartarum vitriolatum syrup of juyce of Citrons are good also these specificks Centory Devils-bit c. 5. By purgation down wards and that for the most part on the wel day yet on the fit day if the matter of it selfe encline to go away by stoole Rubarb is good and syrup of Cichory with Rubarbe 6. By sweat procured by sudorificks salt of wormwood of Centori of Cardus Harts-horn prepared Magestiry of Mother of Pearle which are to be given either before the fit or in the end thereof 7. By strengthening the Liver and stomach Salt of wormwood dissolved in spirit of Niter and againe coagulated into Christals is good being taken to the quantity of a scruple 8. By application of topicks such are the Cataplasme of Mynsichtus P. 368. The pouder of a dryed manchet beaten with greene sage the white of an egge and a little vinegar being added and so bound to the wrist The Herb Potentilla wild tansie or wild Aegrimony beaten with salt and vinegar and so applied to the pulses and the soles of the feet in the fit A Cataplasme or pultise of Bryony Rootes Black Hellebor bay salt white pepper saffron and figs. 'T is divided into Exquisit Bastard an Pernicious I. The Exquisit Intermitting Tertian is hereby known 1. In that the shaking coldness at the first comming is vehement and pricking arising from an humor and Vapour very thin and smal in quantity shipping out of the veins 'T is smal if the matter be plentiful and not easily moved more vehement by how much the matter is thinner and sharper the expulsive faculty stronger and the sence of the parts more exquisite 2. In that the Heat is much sharp and biting and spreads it selfe al over the body in the Hight of the Hot fit And if you hold your hand long upon the patient it grows gentler by reason of the easy discussion at what time the body is al over bedewed with a gentle moisture 3. In that the pulse at the Beginning of the fit is smal and slow the matter being not yet conquered by the oppressed heat yet is it not drawn back in the Progress of the fit 't is vehement swift frequent a little hard straitned by reason of the store of matter newly inflamed like green wood more swift in the Intermission of the dilatation by reason of the heat of the smal quantity of humor remaining in the Chimney of putrefaction communicated to the rest of the humors and carried to the heart 4. In that the fits last not above twelve howers 5. In that the Urine is reddish and yellowish of a midling Consistence shewing a white cloud or a swim in the first fit and then the Ague lasts not beyond the fourth fit It arises from choler sometimes resembling that which in the Gal-blader regurgitating into the first passages somtimes verdigreise colored or green bred in the stomach and veins The cure is now of the hardest for 't is terminated for the most part within the compass of seven fits It is ended either by sweat if the humor be cast bak into the veins which are in the surface of the Body or by vomit and stoole if to the stomak and entrals or by name of these if a great part consist in the misaraick veins and then the patient feels a pressure pains and Inflamations about the midrif Blood-lettiug must be administred before the third fit least it fal in with the state of the dissease The Bastard tertian is hereby knowne in that the Heat is milder nor is it diffused through the whole Body In that it is terminated neither by vomit nor sweat by by egresse of vapours in the Declination In that the Pulse is at first hard the hardness encreasing til the seventh day growing afterwards more soft as the Urines become better digested In that the fit lastes many times eighteen houers and the Ague reaches to the fourteenth and somtimes to the twentyth day It ariseth from cholor mixed with melancholy or flegme nor is it generated only in summer but in the Spring Autumne and Winter In the Cure a vein must be opened after the third fit when a good quantity of the morbifick matter is mingled with the blood in Vena Cava In the Praparation we must have an eye to the Diversity of Humors III. The Pernicious Tertian which happens from seven causes 1. If an Error be committed by the Patient or Physition 2. If that Humor which ought to be sent out of the vessels by reason of their closure do come to settle in some principal member 3. If it be too Thin and putrid For thence come frequent swownings and over great sweats without any ease to the patient 4. If it have some peculiar pravity either through adustion or badness of diet For the humors being inflamed roughnes of the tongue and unquenchable thirst are thereby caused Holowness of the eyes by reason of the wastings of spirits Fiery Urin with cholerick stools Anulcerous pain of the whole Body Paucity of sweat by reason of the thickness of the matter 5. If a thick humor melted by heat settle in some part Hence follows by reason of the difficulty and faculty of 't is inflamation an inequality of being heated The melting and plenty of a thick humor and which semed to be little in the greater vessells but by rarefaction caused by Heat it becomes in the smal vessels more in quantity Hence it is that the hot fit is interupted by a cold and the cold fit by an hot The Urin becomes watery of much and thick sediment The pulse is sometimes intercepted In the declination sweat issues from the navil to the head Neither Augment nor state nor declinotion are equal 6. If it a contagious or pestillent malignity 7. If ●he Heat either draw the womb in conceit and move the humors contained therein or cause a dangerous Catarh Tissick or Gout Article II. Of a Quotidian Intermittent A Quotidian Intermittent is a feaver arising from flegme putrifying in the misaraick veins and aflicting the patient with every day a fresh fit ' Its SIGNS are The foregoing of such causes as breed flegm ' Its dayly Assaults which are for the most part in the night time whence it is more dangerous by reason of the unseasonabelness of giving Physick at that time and they come
must be taken III. One sort is gentle of which in the premises Another is dangerous which is known hereby that on the fourth day the fit retures with extream weakness the Urine being exceeding red and troubled It arises from burning Diseases black choler being bred by the adustion and turning to ashes of the Melancholy Humor or yellow choler T is cured with extream difficulty Article VI. Of compounded Feavers Particularly the Semitertian Feavers compound are when one Feaver is joyned with another This Conjunction is various For somtime a nonputrid is joyned with a Putrid somtimes a putrid with a Putrid and that either with a continual or an intermittent with an intermittent or contrary wise The SIGNS are the same with the Signs of simple Feavers especially the return of cold shivering and shaking after some respite After many shaking fits one hot fit or after a cold fit no sweat The ' Contaction of the pulse is most frequent by which we gather a new motion of the matter and a new fit to follow The Cure is Hard because they vex more than simple ones and there is hardly time to use help It is apparent from the cure of the simple Feavers They are variously divided I. Some are confused when two Feavers begin and end at one time so as hardly to be distinguished because divers Humors mingled together putrifie in the same place Others Implicit when the nature of each may be distinctly known II. Some are Subintrantes interfering when the fit of the second begins ere the fit of the first be over Others are Coalterna keeping due times so that one fit being done after a smal space another begins Other Communicantes when the fit of one begins presently after the fit of the other III. Some are Intermittent under which are comprehended 1. A Tertian both double which comes either once a day or twice arising from choler putrefying in two places of the Mesaraick Veins and Triple which comes thrice in two daies once in one day twice the other and springs from choler putrefying in three several places 2. A double Quotidian which comes twice in twenty four houres 3. A Quartan both double which leaves one day free and comes the two next daies following and Triple in which the Patients are sick every day Both these are wont commonly to proceed from an unseasonable use of hot Medicaments especially Sudorificks IV. Some are continual such as is the Semitertian For it is a Feaver compounded of a continual Quotidian and an intermitting Tertian vexing continually but the third day with a shaking fit It is known by the signs of both Feavers It arises also from the same Causes but most frequently from the Inflamation of some of the Bowels 'T is Cured with difficulty For it is not simple but compound It frequently overthrows the stomach It hurts the Nervous parts which is wont to be the ground of its long lasting and vehemently stirs up what lies in the depth of the Body Respect had the Feavers and their Causes Agarick among Purges bears away the Bel in this Case 'T is divided two manner of waies For 1. One is Legitimate when the Quantity of Choler and Flegm are equal Another bastard when choler exceeds Flegm or Flegm Choler 2. One is Malignant Contagious and Epidemical which is known by signs of Malignity Another is of its own Nature intermittent but with the Inflamation of some Viscus or Bowel which is caused when part of the feaverish matter is thrust with the blood into the Entrals stomach Liver and bordering places Thin a Symptomatick continual Feaver is raised There are signs of Inflamation The shaking fit happens somtimes ordinately according to the Nature of the Intermitting Ague somtimes inordinately when the Inflamation happens to a new part or when Quitter is made The Cure depends upon the Cure of the Intermitting Feaver and of the Inflamation of the Bowel See Spigelius of the subject Title IV. Of the Hectick Feaver AN Hectick is a Feaver arising from heat in such sort Occupying the parts of the Body that though it be fomented by no cause yet it continues Its SIGNS are these Heat which causes no pain because the solid parts are already altered 'T is weak at first because of paucity of Vapors biting afterward because of the solidity of the Parts In the Arteries greater because of their correspondence with the heart An hour or two after meals T is augmented because of the Humectation of the dry and solid parts freely without compression without Horror and Rigor with a great and swift pulse the Meat being distributed it ceases It also dries up al the radical moisture consumes the secondary Humors and melts al the fat in the Body It s CAUSE is either other Feavers either burning or long-lasting or Diseases of the internal Bowels as cheifly of the hea●● and parts in the Chest the Kidneies stomach and Midrif Or External Evident Causes very vehement which consume much of the substance in the solid Members raise up very great and long heat yet introduce it not into the solid parts before they Have introduced it into the spirits in the first place The CURE is perfected 1. By Humectation and Refrigeration Internal by flowers of Violets Borrage Bugloss four coold seeds Milk of Perles of Corals and other gentle things least the weak heat of the Patient be overwhelmed External as Baths of fresh water of Milk of Oyl Olive Nointings of the Back-bone as with Oyl of sweet Almonds and of Violets 2. With convenient Diet Here Womans brest Milk Asses Milk are of use unless there be a Putrid Feaver Meats of Almonds Pine-kernels Pistachios c. Broaths of Snailes waters of Capons Eels River-Crabs of which see Joel in his fift Tome Aqua Mirabilis Ferdinandi which is made of the blood of a young Hog newly beheaded two pints one pound of Venice Terpentine half a pound of scraped Lycoris Corants five handfuls fifty Figs Orice Roots three ounces Pine-Apple Kernels claensed three handfuls Tobacco Leaves two handfuls Crums of bread half a pound distilled in a Glass Limbeck The dose is two ounces with Sugar See him in his Observations History the 21. An Hectick is divided two manner of waies I. One sort is without a Consumption when the dewy moisture of the parts is not yet consumed When it begins t is hardly known unless a man may gather it from the bodies leanness its Chollerick Complexion and straitness of the Brest In the Progress and Ephemera being present the Heat lasts beyond a day with encrease about the third day the heat is encreased after meat Another is with a Consumption and is two-fold the one cald Marasmodes when the dewy moisture is consumed and the fleshy substance begins to be preid upon Then the body grows leane the Temples fal the palms of the Hands and soles of the Feet are hot and those other accidents follow before mentioned The stooles have a greasie substance among them It is
the Crown of the Head a Powder compounded of Long Pepper one scruple the Juyce of Acacia and Tormentil Roots of each two scruples so blown in after the use of an Astringent Gargarism II. The Inflamation of the Wesand is the rising or swelling of the same from a Cholerick Blood fallen down into it with a redness burning heat pain danger of suffocation and somtimes also with a Feaver The business is here alike as in other Inflamations Title XV. Of the Affects of the Tonsils THe Principal Affects of the Tonsils are an Inflamation and an Vlcer I. The Inflamation of the Tonsils is a rising or swelling up of them produced by the afflux of Humors It is known within under the Jaw-bone by the touch and by the sight thereof where like unto a smal Gobbet sticking in the Jaws it presseth by its weightiness and hindereth so that neither Meat nor drink nor spittle can easily pass through either up or down There are also present pain a burning heat redness and a thirst and it falleth more easily into the Tonsils than the Wesand by reason of the sostness and loosness of its proper Temperament and likewise its place It ariseth Externally in little Children by Reason of their Voracity and insatiable feeding the Greeks cal it Addephagia unto which there is likewise added a weak and tender Constitution of Body in Children that Suck by Reason of some fault and pravity in the Milk in Girls from an insufficient Purgation of the Menstrua or Monthly Courses in those of Riper Age by Reason of their overmuch drinking of that wine that is not first diluted and weakened as also their much and more greedy of al sorts of Meats but more especially those that are sharp and rough Internally from the afflux of humors that are hot and sharp Cured it is after the same manner as are other inflamations yet this notwithstanding is attentively to be heeded that somtimes the Tonsils are made the harder by the over frequent use of Coolers and Repellers II. Touching Vlcers these things come in the next place to be taken notice of I. That there is the less danger in them if they be without a Feaver II. That those of them that appear in the heat of Summer because they then immediatly creep forward are worse than those that arise at other times III. That they may somtimes be and appear without any Inflamation at al either from some Salt distillation eating through those parts or else from some Vapor or Exhalation ascending upwards which happeneth in the Venerial or French disease and somtimes again from other Causes the Spring time and a Pestilential Air. IV. That some of these Ulcers are Familiar and milde which are smal clean not descending very deep neither inflamed nor exciting any pain Others Malignant and Pestilential and these are broad Hollow growing Nasty and filthy by reason of some congealed Humor that is either white or black or Livid black and blew but now if these aforesaid congealed impurities descend deeper then there is bred that which we term an Eschar or Crustiness V. That those of them that Creep about the Jaws with much trouble and annoyance Cause a difficulty of breathing but that if by the Trachaea Artery they Penetrate into the Brest they then strangle the Party the very self same day In the Cure we are to understand that al the Ulcers of the Mouth as wel lest that they Creep and proceed further as also because that they evermore become the moyster by Reason of the Spittle do need and require the stronger sort of Astringent Medicaments And thus much touching the Diseases of the Head THE NINTH BOOK OF THE IDEA OF PRACTICAL PHYSICK Of the Diseases of the middle Venter or Region Title I. Of the Diseases of the Jaws or Angina that is Squinancy ANd thus much shal suffice to have been spoken touching the Diseases and Affects of the Brain There follow now the Diseases of the Middle Region which Contain and Comprehend under them the Affects of the Jaws the Throat the Aspera Arteria or ●ough Artery the Lungs the Chest the Teats and the Heart The Disease of the Jaws is that we cal Angina or the Squinancy but more vulgarly the Quinsey or the shutting up as it were of the Jaws that is of the Supream parts of the Gullet and the throat through which is an entrance and Passage not only for the meat and drink but likewise for the Breath Producing and Bringing along with it a Difficulty both of breathing and Swallowing The Common signs are Difficulty of breathing in regard that the Throat is in a manner stopt and shut up the Impediment or hinderance of the Swallowing as wel in regard that the Gullet is obstructed as that likewise the two Muscles deriving their Original from the Larinx called Oesophagici and Circulatores because they embrace and encompass about the Oesophagus with their transverse Fibres resembling a Semicircle are busied in helping forward the thrusting down of the Meat and Drink unto the inserior parts whilest that they draw up the Larynx in the time of swallowing that so it may give way unto the food whether Meat or Drink as also in regard that the Muscles of the Jaws thrusting down the food unto the Oesophagus while they are Contracted and drawn together unto the place where they begin do here suffer A pain about the Jaws which is either augmented or diminished according to the quality and condition of the Causes and the subjects The Causes are al things whatsoever that are apt to stop the breath as we shal further shew you in the differences So for Cure in the differences In regard of its causes it is divided into three sorts or kinds the first whereof hath comprehended under it four species I. One is from an Inflamation which is knowen by the continual fever accompanying if withal there be together present such other things as usually concur It hath its original from that blood that floweth into those parts from out of the branches of the Jugular veins there going before for the most part a difficult moveing of the neck without any apparant causes and withal a certain pain as likewise an unusual heat about the Jaws It is very hardly cured if there be present a great and Intence feaver the spittle somwhat dry Clammy and thick The Event of the Cure is somewhat doubtful if the matter being transmitted into the Lunges there arise an Empema or impostamation of the Lungs to the Head if it exciteth and causeth a doting or delire if to the Pleara Membrane it causeth a pain of the whol Breast with a cough and difficulty of breathing if unto the heart it then introduceth and brings along with it a kind of trembling and almost undiscernable beating of the pulses There is no hopes at al if the fever prevail the greatest heighth and intensenes if the face of the sick person become greenish if the angles or corners of
patient in his fever is even scorched with a more ehement and intence burning heat Chap. 3. Of the streightness or narrowness of the Lungs The streightness of the Lunges is the interception of the vessels thereof by reason of obstruction Compression or exsiccation producing a Cough oppression and a difficulty of breathing As for the Signs Causes and Cure thereof let them be al sought our from the differences The differences are taken from the Causes and the parts affected I. One is of the rough Arteries touching which let the Reader advise himself further and satisfy himself fully from the following differences the which proceedeth from an obstruction c. Another is of the smooth Arteries which is known from the breathing which is with much difficulty yet not only in the beginning but likewise in the increase thereof from the pulse being altogether various unequal intermitting great swift slow rare frequent vehement by reason of the Combare betwixt nature and the Morbifique cause she being not able to expell the fuliginous or sooty fumes by reason of the streightness and narrowness of the Arteries from the palpitation or beathing of the heart it being now very much oppressed and from fainting and swooning It a●iseth either from thick Visced or clammy and flegmatick humors and then the pulse is by the extension it differeth much from it self but yet it is for the greatest part more equal in it self and this is not very hard to be cured especially if it newly begun the cure remameth to be spoken of below Or else it ariseth from a little riseing or swelling and then the pulse is hard by extension and dryness its inequality is uniform by reason that the Cause is more fixed Touching the Cure we shal speak more anon II. One is understand this of the Rough Arteries from an obstruction by blood a humor c. Touching which more below Another from Compression and almost from the very same causes as in the dropsy Another from Exsiccation very frequent and incident unto such as work in Metalls and this for its cure requireth almond milk III. One is from blood obstructing or compressing the rough Arteries expelled and driven forth thither either from the Lungs or from else where which is to be driven back and evacuated And lastly if it become Clotted by Oximel scillitick and a posset that is a mixture of water and vinegar six ounces thereof in weight so that it be pleasant to drink and likewise so that by reason of the vinegar it provoke not to Cough and this to be administred blood warm three or four times in a day it is to be dissolved Another from a Humor and especially that that is Phlegmatick which is plentifull and abounding and then if by distilling it flow forth only into the Membrane that surroundeth and grindeth in the throat it obscureth the voice and causeth a hoarsness if this humor fal into the hollow the channel of the throat it produceth a little sheeps cough as we cal it with a certain sence and feeling of an acrimony that continually provoketh to Coughing or else the sayd humor is thick and viscid or clamy but this is very rarely generated in the Lungs in regard that they are nourished by a thin and pure blood it almost alwaies ariseth from Catarrhs falling down from the head the which in tract of time by the force of the heat is changed into a Glassy or Plasterlike Phlegm which being by the many distillations returning in a round as it were and circuit stored up in great abundance causeth the Asthma The same likewise exceedingly afflicteth the Patient with a kind of dry Cough by the which there is hardly any thing expelled and brought away it rendereth the breathing difficult and causeth in the taking in and puting forth of the breath a snorting or wheezing as we term it in regard that it is impacted and pertinaciously stuffed into the Lappets of the Lungs it hath signs and tokens foregoing of a distillation either from the head brain or from the neighboring parts In the Cure whilest the matter is in preparing with Colts foot Horehound and other attenuateing and cutting Medicaments let Borrage Liquorish and Raysons be mingled together The purgation is wel performed with Agrick Another is from the Pus or purulent Matter that is powred forth out of some Apostume and then expectorating Remedies have their place IV. One is from Causes that in their whol kind are preternatural amongst which are I. Little Substance some of them very hard and solid others of the consistence of old Cheese all of them included in their own proper Cisterns and Bladders and producing the Asthma II. Little Risings or Swellings which have their Original from a matter collected in one part and thence strutting and standing forth without any token or sign at al of any distillation preceding and these said swellings adhere and stick close unto the Aspera Arteria or great rough Artery They are divided into those that are Crude or raw which are very hardly known and they are never suppurated neither have they any Feaver joyned with them and such as are Suppurated in the which the Pus or filthy corrupt matter is so strictly and closely shut up in its little Membrane and proper bladder that hardly can there any noysom and stinking smell expire and breath forth of it into the Body Then the sick persons are of a black blew or leaden color their Tongue is replenished with a certain kind of Clamminess especially when they have abstained long from Food the Urine is dyed and hath a tincture either from the vehement motion and stirring of the Body or else from meat and drink that is hotter than ordinary after an extream and violent motion there are little pils and smal round bals or pellets like unto a smal Pease included and wrapped up in a little Membrane ejected and cast forth of the Lungs There is then likewise a troublesom Cough and a difficulty of breathing excited A pain there is that continually affecteth sick persons but then chiefly when they are moved with a more vehement and violent morion The Patient recovereth not to be well of these unless 1. The Suppuration be speedily wrought 2. Unless the Suppuration when it is made suddenly break forth 3. Unless it tend upwards and be cast forth by Coughing 4. Unless al the Pus and the whol filth be evacuated and emptied forth 5. Unless the belly that is that Cavity in which the Pus or purulent matter was contained be perfectly agglutinated and united as formerly Chap. 4. Of the Wounds of the Lungs THe Wounds of the lungs are wel known by the difficulty of breathing by reason of the hurt the organs have received by the casting out of froath and blood by the mouth with a cough by the spitting up of a red and froathy blood out of the chest without any pain at al by the swelling and strutting of the neck veins and lastly
by the various color of the faceone while red and as soon again pale and wane Now these wounds are Caused in a twofold manner For Somtimes it so chanseth nhat the fleshy substance of tee lungs may be hurt and then in regard that the blood destilled inthe Cavity of the Thorax and that neither a spitting of blood nor any Cough whatsoever urgeth the party the breathing thereupon is not without much difficulty ther appearreth a virlssitude or interchange of heat and cold by reason of the exhalations and fumes from out of the heart Sometimes the veins of the Lungs are affected and then there floweth forth in great abundance a blood somwhat red black and frothy the Cough likewise is perpetual unless perhaps there be present a prostration and decay of the Natural strenghth and vigour or an oppression of the Lungs from the blood They are Cured I. If the profuse flux of blood be stanched and the inflamation unto which the Lungs by this means becometh obnoxious be prevented and hindered by venesetion II. If the blood in him where it was poured forth into the Cavity subsist and abide there III. If when the sayd blood cannot flow forth by reason of the narrowness of the wound the said wound be widened with a penknife Among those Medicaments that stanch and stop the blood there are these viz. The Strawbery bush Betony Scabious the herb Ladies mantle sanicle Comfry c. without these are altogether void of any biting quality viz. Bole armeniack Frankincense c. Read more of this subject in the guide to Physick and Chyrurgery Riverius Practice of Physick and his Observations and the London dispensatory al the last Editions englished by me Chap. 5. Of the Ulcer of the Lungs or Phthisis PHthisis is an Exulceration of the Lungs from a sharp corroding matter with a gentle Fever a Ccough and a spittle that is both bloody and purulent by the which the whol body is sensibly and by little and little consumed and extenuated The Subject of this exulceration is the Lungs together with the parts thereof towit the fleshy substance the lappets the vessells and the Membranes in those especially that have their heads easily and soon filled and where the head sendeth many distillations unto the organs of breathing in those that from their very nativity have their Lungs of a vicious substance that is such as is tender soft and easily wasted as being most subject to corruption And hence it is that such as are descended of a tabid stock that is to say those that issue from parents affected as beforesayd do all of them at the length as it were by a right of inheritance necessarily wast away and consume in the aforesaid manner in those that naturally have a streightness and narrowness of the Chest and likwise a depression of the same a streight neck or narrow throat a lean and spare body and their shoulder blades sticking out behind them like as if they were wings The Signs are a Gentle and moderate Fever proceeding from vapors elevated and arising out of the Lungs and assaulting the heart by their sudeen and violent irruption therunto with which there are also joyned other feavers that are otherwise sometimes Erratick and fleeting and sometimes again invading the patient after the maner of a Tertian whilest that the humors within the veins by that heat as were kindled and set on fire corrupt and putrefy and this the truth is being by its continuance and without any the least intermission turned into the Hectick immediately after meales and in the night time like as do others increaseth and groweth more prevalent 2. A frequent Cough like unto that of foxes without any great pain which cheifly afflicteth and troubleth the party in the night time and it hath its existence from a matter that is sharp by reason of the irritation of the Lungs 3. A bloody and purulent spittle but this is not in al. Some there have been found who after their retching and the spitting up of a liquid and yellow humor being soon after seazed upon by a light and gentle fever have thereupon begun to fal away and wast and after som time have cast forth by retching a certain smal quantity of blood together with a kind of Pus or corrupt matter and many have been by sensible degrees taken away in whom throughout the whol course of their lives there appeared nothing at al of this bloody and purulent spittle But I must tel you that this Phthisis is incident unto those that are young rather than unto aged persons in regard that young persons most commonly abound with blood and consequently are affected with the heat and acrimony thereof with the laxity or loosness of the vessels and likewise the hardness of the same and in regard likewise that these excercise themselves in a more violent manner and have little regard to their diet This hath one thing singular as propperly and peculiarly belonging thereunto towit that it proceed from the very substance of the Lungs it is then frothy and if it be put into the fire it stinketh and is very offensive to the scent 4. The extenuation of the body which is from the aforesaid continual but gentle fever the which by its fiery heat dispersed throughout the whol body dissolving the Arterial blood the mingling whereof together with that of the Veins is altogether necessary unto Nutrition hindereth the Concoction of the Aliment in the whole body and by its preternatural heat wasteth and consumeth that which is Concocted and stored up The CAUSE is a sharp corroding matter fallen down thither of which we shall speak further in the differences The CURE is not to be despaired of no not though it be attended with an Ulcer already appearing For Galen sendeth such to Tabae a City in Cilicia and prescribeth milk for their Diet. Yet notwithstanding it is something Difficult as wel in regard that the filth and purulent matter sticking in that soft and Spungy flesh cannot without a Cough be purged forth by which the Lungs are from day to day more hurt and prejudiced as because that in this dayly motion of respiration or breathing unto which there is moreover added and adjoyned a violent cough there cannot possibly be any Consolidation made and also in the third place because that Medicaments in their ful strength and Virtue cannot penetrate so far and lastly because that Feavers require moistening Remedies which are altogethet hurtful to an Ulcer The Cure hath cheifly respect unto these six things in Particular I. The removal and taking away of the Catarrhe touching which more below in the Difference II. The Cure of the ulcer here there is commended Flores Sulphuris or the flower of Brimstone as we commonly cal it with a soft and rere egg syrup de Erysimo or water Cresses of Lobelius of the Juyce of Ground Ivy with the Flower of Brimstone of Marsh-Mallows of Fernelius of the Juyce of Mouse
blood warm unless it be in the summer time and the Breast therewith anoynted II. The Tumors or swellings of the Diaphragm are of two sorts Some of them are Cold which are known by the difficulty of Breathing the stretching out of the hypochondria yet no swelling appearing in them upon the touch and no deliry or dotage accompanying it They arise from a matter that is crude and thin penetratting into the thickness of the diaphragme either from the compression or wounding thereof They are hardly Cured if they be of long standing in regard they bring the sick person to a consumption but more easily if they be Recent and newly begun but not at al if there follow a deliry or doting First then we are to administer those medicaments that evacuate the prepared matter among which those we term Hydragoga or water purgers are especially commended and afterward with those things that mollify and digest and cheifly Sarsaparilla unless the humor hath begun to be hardened Others are hot which are known in their first rising by a feaver that is both continual and accute a pain the breathing little but often the extension of the Praecordia a palpitation or panting neer unto the diaphragm and somtimes a kind of leaping in that place in the Progress by the doting that attendeth it the unequal respiration or breathing being sometimes smal and sometimes great swift and as soon again altogether as slow and rare They arise from a blood hot and cholerick The Cure is difficult in regard of the extream peril therein It likewise resembleth the inflamation of the Lungs Chap 2. Of the Pluresy THe Pleurifie is an inflamation of the Pleura Membrane and the adjacent muscles arising from the influx or flowing of a hot humor with a pricking pain of the side a Cough difficult breathing a continual acute Feaver a hard pulse unequal and frequent The SIGNS Pathognomick as we cal them are an extream pricking pain because the aforesaid membran which we cal pleura being of a most exquisite sence is extended by a sharp matter A Puls that is hard unequal and bearing a kind of resemblance with a Saw in regard that the part that is inflamed is Nervous A Cough by reason of irritation and transudation to use the terms of practitinors which in the beginning is dry but in the progress adjoined with and attended by a spittle that is bloody and purulent A Breathing frequent and but very weak and smal in regard that the muscles by reason of the extream pricking pain cannot be sufficiently dilated An acut feaver in regard that the inflamation is so neerly neighboring unto the Heart And al these signs ought to conspire and meet al together and not to be present in a scattering manner one after another The CAUSE is an extream hot matter or blood either pure or impure which floweth forth especially out of the vena cava or great hollow vein adjoyning to the heart by the Branch that is termed Azugos into the little thin stems and sprigs thereof which being opened broken or the pors therof dilated it ●unneth violently into the plura membran and somtimes it likewise rusheth thereunto through the upper intercostal membran but more rarely through the thoracical and that we term mamaria The Supply of the aforesaid blood is from a Plethory Cacochymy and the overgreat heat of the Sanguifying bowels It is promoted and furthered by various external Causes and cheifly a sudden chilling and cooling cold northern blast after the great and warm south wind over much and violent exercise c. There is good hope of a CURE if the spittle receive a mature and speedy concoction and be easily and fitly cast forth and if on the foruth day the sick person spit forth that that is white light equal and this by coughing three or four times be terminated on the seventh day and if on the seventh that then it be not extended beyond the leventh or foreteenth day at the furthest if on the crittical day there happen a flux of blood out of the nostrils the Hemorrhoids or the womb with signs of Concoction if which is indeed very rare there chance a Metastasis or translation of the matter unto the joynts and the members of less account It is doubtful if there be spit forth only thin Ichores which are a sort of little ulcers if yellow choller very much mingled with spittle appear long after the beginning in regard that hereby is signified that nature attempteth nothing against the disease If the Spittle be yellow sincere and mingled with much watterishness if the said spittle be Glutinous and Clammy because this clammy quality is contracted from a burning and scorching heat if it be ful of a green ●ustiness and very frothy if it be black because hereby is signified the pravity of the humor and the extinction of the native heat if striving much by reaching doth not stay the Cough and facilitate the Breathing because hereby is manifested either the Malignity of the matter or the weakness of the expulsive faculty if after fourteen dayes it turne into the Empyema if it degenerate into the Peripneumonia or inflamation of the Lungs if it befal aged persons because that through the want of heat the matter is not concocted if it happen to those that have thick bodies and that are accustomed to excercise al things else being thereunto answerable No hopes at al if in it there be nothing spit forth if the pulse be hard little and by reason of heat very thick and most frequent if there happen in the begining thereof a flux of blood without any alleviation or ease in regard that in this case the patient most usually dyeth on the fourth day if the pleuresy be so great that the liver and the stomach be likewise drawn into a consent and fellow suffering and that also the flux diarhoea follow upon it if the pleuresie invade a Cachectical Body after some other long continued disease if from the spittle there arise a noise and much ratteling in the breast and that the continuance be dejected and the eyes veyled and blind with mists and darkness or as many times it is with the yellow Jaundis The Cure when we set upon it hath respect I. Unto the humors already flown in and likwise to those that are like to succeed and follow which are to be drawn back II. Those that are at present flowing which are not to be intercepted neither driven back but derived III. Those that are impacted and stuffed up in the part affected which are to be dispersed and scattered or removed by any manner of means IV. The Pain which is to be mitigated V. The Feaver which is to be kept under and moderated VI. And lastly the natural vigour and powers of the Body which are to be Corroborated Touching al these let what followeth be wel observed 1. That Venesection is with al speed to be administred on the opposite side for repulsion if
the Epigastrical branch of the Vena Cava and are disseminated to the external parts of the right Gut viz. The Muscles of the Anus but they are two having an Artery joyned with them from the Hypogastrical Artery Yet they seem al to have communion one with another It is known by the sight and because 't is greater 't is also more dangerous In the Cure external things have a convenient Application II. One is by default of the blood which either is too much and then there are signs of fulness we must revel by bleeding in the Arme or if strength wil not bear it by fixing Cupping-Glasses to the Loyns or Hypochondries Or sharp and thin and then it happens most to Southern people especially to men that are Sanguine Serous Humors if strength wil bear it ought to be emptyed if not we must use coolers and things that thicken the blood amongst which Purslane Trochiskes of burnt Ivory and Amber do excel Or it flows from the Liver and then 't is like to Water in which flesh new kill'd is washt The Syrup of corals is good Or from the upper Parts and then the blood is black and burnt Or from the Mesentery and then 't is little somwhat white Serous Or from the Guts and then 't is mixt with the Excrements Another is by default of the Veins which either are opened in which Cause we must use Agglutinatives as the Mushrum which is called the Wolfes Fart c. Burning and cutting the which are dangerous especially in those that are inveterate and of long continuance Or Eaten through and broke and this Evacuation Casts a man into a Dropsie and other Diseases II. The Suppression of the Hemerhoids is an interception of the blood endeavouring to get forth through the Veins of the Anus from whence they are raised up into a Tumor with pain The Signs are a tumor and bunchings out in the heads of the veins of the Anus sometimes hard like unto warts somtimes soft caled like to mulberries somtimes of a purple colour and like to grape stones the pricking paine is somtimes milder somtimes more greivous the Veins being distended whose Mouths hangs as it were out of their heads and the membrane which covers the orifices of the Veins stretcht and prest The CAUSE is Faeculent and thick blood desiring to get forth The CURE must be hastened both because it threatens a dropsie if the blood run back to the liver and because unless it be seasonably remedied by reason of the great attraction and flux of humors it causeth inflamation impostumation or a fistula It is performed 1. By mitigation of the pain which is asswaged by the crum of Barly bread steeped in womans milk adding the yolk of eggs and saffron 'T is taken away with laudanum dissolved in womens milke applied with honey but most of al with Butter Sugar or anima Satur●● with flies of sheeps dung boyled in oyl of flax to the consumption of the creatures with the ashes of corke burnt and boyled with capons grease with the oyntment of road-flax concerning which see Hartman 2. By opening them universals premised by application of leeches or before that be done by an ointment of the Pulp of Coloqintida and oyl of sweet almonds by the juice of onions mixt with aloes applied rubbing first the part with a course cloth Sharp glisters do hurt the guts more then they provoke the hemorrhoids Unless they swel very much and be very painful they ought to be left to nature In the differences of the internal end external veins we must have a care The suppression of those is perceived by the squeezing of the Anus and thrusting up a probe Of these is obvious to the sight Title V. Of the affects of the Mesentery Chap. 1. Of the distemper and obstruction of the Mesentery THe affects of the mesentary are distemper obstruction inflamation impostumation and pain I. The distemper of the Mesentery for the most part is hot and dry which ariseth from the like matter which either is collected there of sent thither from some other part It is collected either in its veins and arteries and then because the breast hath the greatest consent with the hemorrhoidal artery because the trunke from whence the artery ariseth descending from the heart presently at its first rise doth propagate the intercostal branches there are continuall pains felt in the breast or also in its glandules by their laxness easily drinking up the matter The cure must not be neglected because 't is wont to fore-run a dry dropsy But it hath nothing singular except this that by those arteries not onely the first passages but also the whol body might be purged whether you give purging medicines or inject glysters and this perhaps is the cause that purging medicines layd to the navil do move to stool II. The obstruction of the mesentery is twofold one when the milky veins are obstructed which is knowen by this that a chylous and white flux of the belly doth molest and a consumption follows the matter necessary for the nourishment of the body being denyed That ariseth either from a thick crude clammy viscous chyle generated of the like meats or from a tumor of the glandules compressing them Another is when the mesaraick veins are stopt which is known by this that the matter restrained causeth a sence of distension and heaviness beatings of the arteries about the back are troublsome after taking of meat the evil grows more fierce and the stomach is comprest c. That ariseth either from vaporous and thick winds or from sharp humors and then the paine is more vehement sometimes while the evaporation lasteth the evil possesseth the whol cavity of the breast that somwhat is at hand like unto a suffocation somtimes there is a tumor raised about the mouth of the stomach and vaine belchings are produced those things being supprest that should be voided by the lower parts The cure is perfected 1. By openers and those indeedgentle That give strength to the liver and Stomach penetrating incisive drying lesning putrefaction and a little while astringent not by sweet things but bitter reduced into the forme of electuaries or pills but that liquor be drunk after them By tartarous things unless the saltness or sharpness of the humors do hinder by things that savour of Oxymel 2. By purgers unless windiness do hinder and those gentle not constant after the same manner given by little and little liquid 3. By vomiters but not violent Platerus his essence of broom is commended 4. By diuriticks that make thick humors fluid c. the liver is strengthened by Leonius his pills of the refuce of Iron By Mercatus his antidote of steele By Penotus his arcanum of vitriol sulphur and sallows c. Chap. 2. Of the inflammation and impostumations of the mesentery AN inflammation of the mesentery is a tumor of the same arising from humors poured forth with the nourishing blood into its
makes motion difficult but presently 't is discust Yet al these Signs do not happen in al. There have been those who were troubled with continual laughing the Vapor insinuating it self into the Membranes of the Breast there have been those who seemed to frame the hissing of Serpents the croking of Crows c. According to the proportion of the passages and breath breaking forth It differs from an Epilepsie because in this the Convulsive motions are more universal they have no remembrance of those things after the fits which happened to them in the fits the Pulse is greater than before a foam flows about their Mouth From an Apoplexy because in this the fit is suddain without any notice a singular snoaring afflicts them in breathing there is so great a resolution of the Parts that though they be prickt yet they do not feel From a Syncope because there are no presages in this of the fit to come the pulse failes to the sence cold sweats afflict it vanisheth in a short time when as the Hysterical passion lasts somtimes a day or two From the dead they are distinguisht by Sneezing Caused by Sneezers and other means The CAUSE is a malignant Vapor thin and spirituous in one moment penetrating the whol body and raised from the matter corrupted after a peculiar manner in the womb and stirred either of it self or by external things as things sweet-smelling fear Anger and ascending upwards not only by the Veins and Arteries but also by occult passages But what that is shal be said in the Differences The CURE is somtimes of doubtful hopes If it long afflict old women because it infers an impeachment of the strength and shews a plenty of humors If it happen to breeding women a hard labour or abortion going before if it assaile great bellied women because it strikes a feare of abortion of better hopes if breathing be not hurt too much if the fits do not return often It respects 1. The time of the fit where care must be had 1. To intercept it by binding of the belly about the navel with a girdle made of the skin of a hart kild in the act of copulation with the doe 2. To raise her by ligatures and painful Frictions by pulling off the hairs especially of the priveties by suffumigations made of partridg feathers horses hoofs and Eel skin By applying of assa faetida oyl of tartar to the nose c. 3. To reveal by ligatures frictions of the lower parts glysters discussing wind cupping-glasses without scarrification applyed with much flegm first to the ancles and thighes by and by to the groines by putting up sweet things into the privities as are oyl of Civit half a scruple with oyl of nutmeg by expression one scruple 5. To discuss and that outwardly by oyl of white amber with the pouder of walnut flowers By extract of castor of liver-wort Mynsichtus his specificum diajovis The same Authors Theriaca mulierum Hartmans essence granorum Chamaeactes in pennyroyal water Treacle water others that are appropriate Outwardly by putting into the navel oleum Jovis the salt of the same described by Crollius By plaisters made of the fat of a black cow fed with utrine plants clary boyld in butter adding gum tacamahach carama 2. The time out of the fit in which 1. We must empty by Grulingius his extract of bryony of which in his cures by Agricola his flores virtioli Veneris et martis 2. The womb must be strengthened by things internal and external that do resist the malignity also The faecula of briony is commended Castor c. 3. That diet in which odoriferous and sweet things are which are wont to move the womb must be shunned For preservation see Zacutus his Hysterical Pils Prax. Hist l. 9. c. 12. The Difference is taken from the causes One is from the seed corrupted by the fault of the parts or humors mixt with it and sending forth such a vapor which is known by this that the courses are right in the patient Al the Symptoms are more vehement the fit declining a humor like to seed flows forth of the privites 'T is Cured universals premised by emptying of the seed by glysters and utrine pessaries by prohibition of the same by medicines diminishing the seed or by slender diet Another from menstruous blood stopping and therefore corrupt which is known by this that the menstruous blood is joyned with vitious humors especially a melancholly one The symptoms are milder with the signs of a suppression The Cure must be turned against the suppression of the cour●es Another from vitious humors concerning which consult with the chapter of the distemper of the womb Article III. Of the madness of the womb and Melancholly of Women The Madness of the womb is an immoderate desire of Venery almost making women stark mad arising from the plenty of seed acrimony and peculiar quallity of it The subject of this affect are either wel flesht virgins black and having adust blood or the youthful flourishing widows or married women that are barren by the impotency of the husband The Signs are various some wast away in sadness and silence suppressing their desire others reason being overcome do prate are lascivious break into anger laughter weeping wanton and baudy discourses Some freely prostitute themselves to men The Cause is the plenty heat and accrimony of the seed which ariseth if you consider the internal causes from the heat of the womb the distemper of the stones especially and spermatick vessels hence many labor of an inflamation of the womb and itching which are not affected with this madness If the external from a diet generating plenty and accrimony of blood by a drauft of hippocras in which there was some Borrax c. dissolved The Cure is accomplisht 1. By bleeding if blood do abound 2. By purging if hot and adust humors be mixt with it 3. By alteration by coolers as are Letice Purslan water-lilies Ladies navil by things that act by an occult quallity as are the chast tree rue hemp Camphire hemlock which are rather to be used in Nunneries The Melancholly of Women is a dotage with sadness anxiety weeping or laughing by intervals invading without a feaver arising from a melancholly vapor darkning the animal spirits The SIGNS are various the women are sad complaine of a grief at heart yet are not able to express the cause of it The Arteries about the Spleen and back do beat more vehemently than usual a pain of the left side against the heart afflicts somtimes seazing on the left breast the Vapors from the intercostal Arteries being poured forth into those places and pulling and distending the Membranes of the Breast a dryness of the Jaws somtimes troubles them with a suffocation But these symptomes affect by intervals because the Vapor is dispersed and the stirring of the blood in the Arteries ceaseth The CURE respects 1. Bleeding which must be ordered at the beginning if