Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n lung_n right_a ventricle_n 2,433 5 12.8369 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29007 New experiments physico-mechanical, touching the air; New experiments physico-mechanical, touching the spring of the air, and its effects Boyle, Robert, 1627-1691.; Sharrock, Robert, 1630-1684.; Boyle, Robert, 1627-1691. Defence of the doctrine touching the spring and weight of the air.; Boyle, Robert, 1627-1691. Examen of Mr. T. Hobbes his Dialogus physicus de naturâ aëris. 1682 (1682) Wing B4000_PARTIAL; Wing B3942_PARTIAL; ESTC R23366 337,085 461

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

our Engine seemed manifestly for a pretty while and not long before he dy'd to move his Thorax as if he exercis'd Respiration the diligent Wallaeus relates that he divers times observed in the dissection of live Bodies that the Membrane that invests the Lungs had Pores in it as big as the larger sort of Peas which agreeth with the Observations of Chyrurgions and Physicians viz. That Matter collected in the Thorax hath penetrated into the Lungs and been discharged by coughing And I remember too that most of the Animals we kill'd in our Engine were Birds of whose Lungs Harvey somewhere informs us That he observ'd them very manifestly to open at their extremities into the Abdomen And by such perforitions we may well'suppose the passage free betwixt the external Air and that in the Abdomen But this Conjecture may be farther consider'd Besides to show that the Animals that died in our Glasses need not be supposed to have been kill'd by the want of Air we foresee another Argument that we must deal so ingeniously with Your Lordship as not to conceal You very well know that besides the generality of the Schools there are many new Philosophers who though they dissent from the old Peripateticks in other things do as they deny the possibility of a Vacuum and hold that those spaces which are devoid of Air and other grosser Bodies are all of them exactly replenished with a certain Etherial Matter so thin and subtle that it can freely permeate the Pores of the compactedst and closest Bodies and ev'n of Glass it self Now some of those Naturalists that are of this perswasion may object That the Animals that died in our Receiver did so not so much for lack of Air as by reason that the Air that was pump'd out was necessarily succeeded by an Etherial substance which consisting of parts vehemently agitated and so very small as without resistance to pass in and out through the very Pores of Glass it may well be supposed that a considerable quantity of this restless and subtle Matter meeting together in the Receiver with the excessive heat of it may be quickly able to destroy a little Animal or at least make the Air too intemperately hot to be fit for Respiration But though this be a Difficulty not so easily to be resolved without the assistance of our Engine yet I suppose we have already answer'd the Objection by our 38th and 39th Experiments which though we made partly for other purposes yet we premis'd them only to clear up the difficulty proposed Another suspicion we should have entertain'd concerning the death of our Animals namely That upon the sudden removal of the wonted pressure of the ambient Air the warm blood of those Animals was brought to an Effervescence or Ebullition or at least so vehemently expanded as to disturb the circulation of the Blood and so disorder the whole Oeconomy of the Body This I say I should have had some suspicion of but that Animals of a hot Constitution are not the sole ones that cannot in our exhausted Engine exercise the Function of Life But I must not now dwell upon matters of this nature because I think it high time to proceed to the consideration of the principal subject of our Engine namely the use of Respiration or rather The use of the Air in Respiration For whereas of the divers uses of it mentioned by Anatomists the most such as the Production and Modulation of the Voice by the Elision of the Air the Larynx c. the expulsion of Excrements by Coughing the conveying in of Odours by Inspiration and some others rather convenient for the well being of an Animal than absolutely necessary to his Life Whereas I say the other uses are such as we have said The great Hippocrates himself gives this notable Testimony to the use of the Air as to Animals endow'd with Lungs Mortalibus saith he hic spiritus tum vitae tum morborum aegrotis causa est Tantáque corporibus omnibus spiritûs inest necessitas ut fiquidem aliis omnibus cibis potionibus quis abstineat duos tamen aut tres vel plures dies possit vitam ducere At si quis spiritus in corpus vias intercipiat vel exiguâ diei parte homini pereundum fit Adeo necessarius est usus spiritûs in corpore Ad haec quoque quum omnibus aliis actionibus homines quiescant quod mutationibus innumeris vita sit exposita ab hâc tamen solâ actione nunquam desistant animantia quin aut spiritum adducant aut reddant But touching the account upon which the Inspiration and Exspiration of Air both which are comprehended in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Respiration is so necessary to Life both Naturalists and Physicians do so disagree that it will be very difficult either to reconcile their Opinions or determine their Controversies For first Many there are who think the chief if not sole use of Respiration to be the cooling and tempering of that Heat in the Heart and Blood which otherwise would be immoderate And this Opinion not only seems to be most received amongst Scholastick Writers but divers of the new Philosophers Cartesians and others admitted with some variation teaching That the Air is necessary by its coldness to condense the Blood that passeth out of the right Ventricle of the Heart into the Lungs that thereby it may contain such a consistence as is requisite to make it fit Fewel for the vital fire or flame in the left Ventricle of the Heart And this Opinion seems favour'd by this That Fishes and other cold Creatures whose Hearts have but one cavity are also unprovided of Lungs and by some other considerations But though it need not be deny'd that the inspir'd Air may sometimes be of use by refrigerating the Heart yet against the Opinion that makes this Refrigeration the most genuine and constant use of the Air it may be Objected That divers cold Creatures some of which as particularly Frogs live in the Water have yet need of Respiration which seems not likely to be needed for Refrigeration by them that are destitute of any sensible heat and besides live in the cold Water That even decrepid old Men whose natural Heat is made very languid and almost extinguish'd by reason of Age have yet a necessity of frequent Respiration That a temperate Air is fittest for the generality of breathing Creatures and as an Air too hot so also an Air too cold may be inconvenient for them especially if they be troubled with an immoderate degree of the same quality which is predominant in the Air That in some Diseases the natural heat is so weaken'd that in case the use of Respiratic were to cool it would be more hurtfull than beneficial to Breath and the suspending of the Respiration may supply the place of those very hot Medicines that are wont to be employ'd in such Distempers That Nature might much better have given the Heart but a
quarter of an hour he seem'd not much prejudiced by the closeness of his Prison afterwards be●●n first to pant very vehemently and keep his Bill very open and then to appear very sick and last of all after some long and violent strainings to cast up some little matter out of his Stomach which he did several times till growing so sick that he stagger'd and gasp'd as being just ready to die We perceiv'd that within about three quarters of an hour from the time that he was put in he had so thickened and tainted the Air with the Steams of his Body that it was become altogether unfit for the use of Respiration Which he will not much wonder at who hath taken notice in Sanctorius his Statica Medicina how much that part of our Aliments which goeth off by insensible Transpiration exceeds in weight all the visible and grosser Excrements both solid and liquid That on the other side an Air too much dilated is not serviceable for the ends of Respiration the hasty death of the Animal we kill'd in our exhausted Receiver seems sufficiently to manifest And it may not irrationally be doubted whether or no if a Man were rais'd to the very top of the Atmosphere he would be able to live many minutes and would not quickly dye for want of such Air as we are wont to breath here below And that this Conjecture may not appear extravagant I shall on this occasion subjoyn a memorable Relation that I have met with in the Learned Josephus Acosta who tells us That when he himself past the high Mountains of Peru which they call Pariacaca to which he says That the Alps themselves seem'd to them but as ordinary Houses in regard of high Towers he and his Companions were surprised with such extreme Pangs of Straining and Vomiting not without casting up Blood too and with so violent a Distemper that he concludes he should undoubtedly have died but that this lasted not above three or four hours before they came into a more convenient and natural temperature of Air To which our Learned Author adds an Inference which being the principal thing I design'd in mentioning the Narrative I shall set down in his own words I therefore says he perswade my self That the Element of the Air is there so subtle and delicate as it is not proportionable with the breathing of Man which req●●●es a more gross and temperate Air and I believe it is the cause that doth so much alter the Stomach and trouble all the Disposition Thus far our Author whose Words I mention that we may ghess by what happens somewhat near the Confines of the Atmosphere though probably far from the surface of it what would happen beyond the Atmosphere That which some of those that treat of the height of Mountains relate out of Aristotle namely That those that ascend to the top of the Mountain Olympus could not keep themselves alive without carrying with them wet Spunges by whose assistance they could respire in that Air otherwise too thin for Respiration That Relation I say concerning this Mountain would much confirm what hath been newly recited out of Acosta if we had sufficient reason to believe it But I confess I am very diffident of the truth of it partly because cause when I pass'd the Alps I took notice of no notable change betwixt the consistence of the Air at the top and the bottom of the Mountain partly because in a punctual Relation made by an English Gentleman of his ascension to the top of the Pike of Tenariff which is by great odds higher than Olympus I find no mention of any such difficulty of breathing and partly also because the same Author tells us out of Aristotle That upon the top of Olympus there is no motion of the Air insomuch that Letters traced upon the dust have been after many years found legible and not discompos'd whereas that Inquisitive Busbequius who was Embassadour from the German to the Turkish Emperour in one of his eloquent Epistles tells us upon his own knowledge That Olympus may be seen from Constantinople blanch'd with perpetual Snow which seems to argue That the top of that as well as of divers other tall Hills is not above that Region of the Air wherein Meteors are formed Though otherwise in that memorable Narrative which David Fraelichius made of his ascent to the top of the prodigiously high Hungarian Mountain Carpathus He tells us That when having pass'd through very thick Clouds he came to the very top of the Hill he found the Air so calm and subtle that not a hair of his head mov'd whereas in the lower Stages of the Mountain he felt a vehement Wind. But this might well be casual as was his having a clear Air where he was though there were Clouds not only beneath him but above him But though what hath been hitherto discours'd incline us to look upon the Ventilation and Depuration of the Blood as one of the principal and constant uses of Respiration yet methinks it may be suspected that the Air doth something more than barely help to carry off what is thrown out of the Blood in its passage through the Lungs from the right Ventricle of the Heart to the left For we see in Phlegmatick Constitutions and Diseases that the Blood will circulate tolerably well notwithstanding its being excessively ferous And in Asthmatical Persons we often see that though the Lungs be very much stuff'd with tough Phlegm yet the Patient may live some Months if not some Years So that it seems scarce probable that either the want of throwing out the supefluous Serum of the Blood for a few moments or the detaining it during so short a while in the Lungs should be able to kill a perfectly sound and lively Animal I say for a few moments because that having divers times try'd the Experiment of killing Birds in a small Receiver we commonly found that within half a minute of an hour or thereabout the Bird would be surpris'd by mortal Convulsions and within about a minute more would be stark dead beyond the recovery of the Air though never so hastily let in Which sort of Experiments seem so strange that we were obliged to make it several times which gain'd it the advantage of having Persons of differing Qualities Professions and Sexes as not only Ladies and Lords but Doctors and Mathematicians to witness it And to satisfie Your Lordship that it was not the narrowness of the Vessel but the sudden exsuction of the Air that dispatched these Creatures so soon we will add That we once inclos'd one of these Birds in one of these small Receivers where for a while he was so little sensible of his Imprisonment that he eat very chearfully certain seeds that we conveyed in with him and not only lived ten minutes but had probably lived much longer had not a great Person that was Spectator of some of these Experiments rescu'd him from the
moderate heat than such an excessive one as needs to be perpetually cool'd to keep it from growing destructive which the gentle and not the burning heat of an Animal's Heart seems not intense enough so indispensably to require These and other Objections might be oppos'd and press'd against the recited Opinion But we shall not insist on them but only add to them That it appears not by our foregoing Experiments I mean the 38th and 39th that in our exhausted Receiver where yet Animals die so suddenly for want of Respiration the ambient Body is sensibly hotter than the common Air. Other Learned Men there are who will have the very substance of the Air to get in by the Vessels of the Lungs to the left Ventricle of the Heart not only to temper its heat but to provide for the generation of Spirits And these alledge for themselves the authority of the Ancients among whom Hippocrates seems manifestly to favour their Opinion and both Aristotle and Galen do sometimes for methinks they speak doubtfully enough appear inclineable to it But for ought ever I could see in Dissections it is very difficult to make out how the Air is convey'd into the left Ventricle of the Heart especially the Systole and Diastole of the Heart and Lungs being very far from being Synchronical Besides that the Spirits seeming to be but the most subtle and unctuous Particles of the Blood appear to be of a very differing Nature from that of the lean and incombustible Corpuscles of Air. Other Objections against this Opinion have been proposed and press'd by that excellent Anatomist and my Industrious Friend Dr. Highmore to whom I shall therefore refer you Another Opinion there is touching Respiration which makes the genuine use of it to be Ventilation not of the Heart but of the Blood in its passage through the Lungs in which passage it is dis-burthened of those Excrementitious Steams proceeding for the most part from the superfluous Serosities of the Blood we may add and of the Chyle too which by those new Conduits of late very happily detected by the Famous Pecquet hath been newly mix'd with it in the Heart And this Opinion is that of the Industrious Maebius and is said to have been that of that excellent Philosopher Gassendus and hath been in part an Opinion almost vulgar But this Hypothesis may be explicated two ways For first The necessity of the Air in Respiration may be suppos'd to proceed from hence That as a Flame cannot long burn in a narrow and close place because the Fuliginous Steams it uncessantly throws out cannot be long receiv'd into the ambient Body which after a while growing too full of them to admit any more stifles the flame So that the vital Fire in the Heart requires an ambient Body of a yielding nature to receive into it the superfluous Serosities and other Recrements of the Blood whose seasonable Expulsion is requisite to depurate the Mass of Blood and make it fit both to circulate and to maintain the vital heat residing in the Heart The other way of explicating the above-mentioned Hypothesis is by supposing that the Air doth not only as a Receptacle admit into its Pores the Excrementitious vapours of the Blood when they are expell'd through the Wind-pipe but doth also convey them out of the Lungs in regard that the inspired Air reaching to all the ends of the Aspera Ateria doth there associate it self with the exhalations of the circulating Blood and when 't is exploded carries them away with it self as we see that Winds speedily dry up the surfaces of wet Bodies not to say any thing of what we formerly observed touching our Liquor whose fumes were strangely elevated upon the ingress of the Air. Now of these two ways of Explicating the use of Respiration our Engine affords us this Objection against the first That upon the exsuction of the Air the Animals die a great deal sooner than if it were left in the Vessel though by that exsuction the ambient space is left much more free to receive the Steams that are either breathed out of the Lungs of the Animal or discharg'd by insensible Transpiration through the Pores of his Skin But if the Hypothesis propos'd be taken in the other sense it seems congruous enough to that grand observation which partly the Phaenomena of our Engine and partly the relations of Travellers have suggested to us namely That there is a certain consistence of Air requisite to Respiration so that if it be too thick and already over-charged with Vapours it will be unfit to unite with and carry off those of the Blood as Water will dissolve and associate to it self but a certain proportion of saline Corpuscles and if it be too thin or rarefied the number or size of the Aërial Particles is too small to be able to assume and carry off the halituous Excrements of the Blood in such plenty as is requisite Now that Air too much thicken'd and as it were clogg'd with Steams is unfit for Respiration may appear by what is wont to happen in the Lead-Mines of Devonshire and for ought I know in those too of other Countries though I have seen Mines where no such thing was complain'd of for I have been informed by more than one credible Person and particularly by an Ingenious Man that hath often for curiosity digg'd in those Mines and been imploy'd about them that there often riseth Damps as retaining the Germane Word by which we call them which doth so thicken the Air that unless the Work-men speedily make signs to them that are above they would which also sometimes happens be presently stifled for want of Breath and though their Companions do make haste to draw them up yet frequently by that time they come to the free Air they are as it were in a swoon and are a good while before they come to themselves again And that this swooning seems not to proceed from any Arsenical or Poysonous Exhalation contain'd in the Damp as from its overmuch condensing the Air seems probable from hence That the same Damps oftentimes leisurely extinguish the flames of their Candles or Lamps and from hence also that it appears by many Relations of Authentical Authors that in those Cellars where great store of new Wine is set to work Men have been suffocated by the too great plenty of the Steams exhaling from the Must and too much thickning the Air As may be gathered from the custom that is now used in some hot Countries where those that have occasion to go into such Cellars carry with them a quantity of well kindled Coals which they hold near their Faces whereby it comes to pass that the Fire discussing the Fumes and rarefying the Air reduceth the ambient Body to a consistence fit for Respiration We will add by way of Confirmation the following Experiment In such a small Receiver as those wherein we kill'd divers Birds we carefully clos'd up one who though for a