OCR Text |
Show Time of inflammation €60 ~ flirt/221' illustrated. heral without complaint of thirst ; worms dead and living, void. striction, or rather an insupportable load at the heart and ed upwards and downwards spontaneously or from emeticocathartics: some constipated, others harrassed by a fetid, serous, yellow diarrhma-difficulty in making water frequent-urine stomach; oppressive sweats which go no lower than the chest; high coloured and ardent in var. 2 and 3-natural in var. 1, 4JJUW§ , l' belly more or less raised; tension or simple meteorismus time-rambling of the head, at times syncope-pulse weaker, tinequal, incipient subsultus of the tendons of the wrist." .5. " At this period there appeared within the fore-arm, creasing to haemorrhage-miscarriages." wrist, and thighs, on the breast, neck, and belly, an urine natural, sometimes cloudy ; in many quite suppressed ;» with sensibility to the touch or pain in some: delirium with convulsive movements, or coma and sometimes general tetanus-involuntary stools, fetid, of a light yellow, strongly Many have small bleedings at the nose-the menses at a wrong HH'WH 107 a red staining the linen, gangrene about the nates; menses in- " 9. Last stage. Liquids refused, or an obstacle to deglu- niiliary eruption, continuing sometimes as long as the fever, and scaling off-In most instances it went off and returned, tinually aiming to get out of bed, pulse extremely feeble and or quite disappeared in the acme. unequal; sudden subsidence of abdomen; cadaverous stools The same with regard to tition, patients twist the bcdclothes, catch as if at flies, con- red spots-we seldom saw any purple or black spots. Miliary eruption white in some." " 6. This second stage was not so alarming in variety 2nd. with dead worms 3 rattling in the throat; dissolution." The patients had exacerbations in the night terminating in occasionally were the prelude to mortal gangrene, whether sweat, and more severe the alternate days-body generally bound-tongue not dry as in var. 1,-pulse not oppressed nor associated with blebs or not. In a few the erysepelas was of a pale red, succeeded by large blisters, with yellow lymph unequal-redness of eyes and cheeks, and pain of loins aug‘ merited." (these appeared to be critical: the rose bullala of authors). (‘5' /. In the acme, prostration great, pulse depressed, weak, " 10. In the acme, some patients had large erysipelatous patches, Sometimes covering the whole foot or leg; these Dr. Chuflfart and myself, had each a patient in this state, who both recovered-At this stage, parotids appeared in some can- frequent and irregular, at times scarce any pulsation, but 3 tons without disposition to form abscesses. simple creepirig-countenance livid or yellowish, sometimes sunk under two monstrous parotids, which, with a spasmo- dic constriction of the fauces, prevented swallowing-These stages last a different time according to the violence of at- bloated-the checks of a purple red, eyes tarnished or sparkling, lips dry, pale, foul, nostrils dilated, dry within, as also the teeth, gums, and the whole tongue ; or else the tongue ,Of a deep red ; often with white patches upon it, like plaister of Paris, with apthous excoriations, extending to the faucesi tack. A woman of GO A woman died the 7th day, in whom the disorder an- nounced itself by a bubo-like tumour on the arm, which did not suppurate-she died with true purple spots. Those most the patients then complaining of sore throat with difficulty of swallowing." violently attacked died the 9th or 11th days, whether it were " 8. At this stage, more or less embarrassment at the chest, however the attack may have come on, respiration laborious; --most of those who passed the 17th day recovered." slight expect/Jititiou often tinged with blood : violent con~ of gangrene and even of sphacelus in the different viscera; Stt‘ictiolh from lymphatico-purulent depositions or gangrene of the lungs " Dissection showed marks of gangrenous inflammation, m 4., . , iiom ‘ M098? |