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Show Book I. Part III, 4,88 mu illo pure impleremr, idque per menfim mtegmm 2'9- ampliwr .- Tandem «pm, app/iris remedii! ulm: deter/um, cicatrz'x induéia, ipfeque per/211mm" efl'. The raui'es if the Gangrene of [GC Kids ney. Sometimes an Inflammation of the Kidney, determines into a Gangrgen 0f the Stones of the [QM/my, (Sec. whereby the Tartar of the Potulent Matter adhereth to the {ides of the Vetfels, in its paffage through their Interfiices , and generateth at firfl: fmall which is derived ( as Iconceive) from an exuberant quantity of Blood, Stones, or Gravel, which grow greater by the accretion'of Saline and Earthy upon new firpplies of Tartar, ofl'ering a violation to the adjacent parts, by Fabritim- Hildanur dc Litbotomz'a chim, Cap. 2;. giveth an Inflance of this defperate Difeafe, in his Eldel't Son: Air ille Anna. 1593. obiit film: melts promogmitm, quz' ad feptimum iifq; anmmz Imlla unqmmz q'vflula defrtdfl- Particles , whereupon the Veflels ate more and more parted from each other, difordering their lituation, whence arifeth a painful difcotnpofure (caufed by the violent crowding the Nervous Filaments too clofe together) and a lloppage of the comic of Blood, in the Arteries and Veins, and of watry and {dine l‘uperliuities in the Urinary Dudls, produced by Stones lodged tn! fuit : Cum feptimo Matt's Alma per mum at altemm diem Cephalzerz afi. in the Interflices of the VclTels, comprefling their Coats, and firaightning 8M eflet, futteflit 730k" lumbarum cum Febre tonjunfim, flout etiam "Urine their Cavities. retentio, ita ut fert- are guttulam excemere poflit, (5‘ quamwir amnir ad/Jibita diligentz'a, "rim; tamen mm praceflit, atq; ita - epiima morbi die obiz't. quire greater Dimenfions, they do not only comprels, but gaul, and fame- Cadaver-e Dzflcc‘t'o, ingcntcm @- infignem renum ac partium circumjacmtium times I acetate the tender Capillaries, and caufe a Flux of Blood into the Parenchyma of the Glands, producing Inflammations, Abfcelfes, Ulcers, and llrflammationem in Gnflgmnam jam degeneratam reperimm‘. Othertimes, an Inflammation of the Kidney being ill treated by an impro- And when the Stones lodged in the Spaces of the Velléls , do ac- The Stones do break the tendcr Cwillary chlel‘s in th¢ Kidney wallini‘s of the Flelhy parts of the Kidneys. per Method of Phylick, and ill Medicines, endeth into a Scirrhus, coming from a quantity of grofs Pituitous Blood, whole thinner parts being Evapo« rated, the fubfiance of the Kidney groweth Indurated, and unable to per-. The Urinary Ducts, Papillary Caruncles, and Pelvis, are feats of Stones, as the grofs laline parts of the Urine pafling through the greater and leis Excretory Vellcls,do cleave to the infide of their Coats (in the manner of Tartar colate the Blood from its watry and faline parts, whereupon an ill habit of Body enfueth, a Lucopblegmatia, a cold Tumour of the Mufcular parts, to the Casks of Wine) and give a check to the firearm of warty Fxculencies by filling up the Cavities of the obftruéled Veflels, and by narrowing thole flowing from a quantity of Serous Recremenrs, lodged in the Interl'tices of of the neighbouring Dué‘ts, caufed by the compreflion of their Coats. The Bladder of Urine alfo is the Eat of the Stone, and is an appendage of the Kidney to wh'ch it is Faltned, by the mediation of the Ureters, as the Vellels. 489 pulling from the Tetminations of the Arteries, to the Roots of the Veins, impelled into the lhbl'rance of the Glands, which Nature being not able rd govern by turning it into a Pus, fnflbcates the heat of the Kidney, and pro- duceth a Gangrarn. The Stirrhus of the Kidney. Book I. Part Ill. Aqutduéts, conveying warty Excrements into the Cil'cem of the Bladder, to whole {ides the feculent {alt parts of Urine do adharre, as Tartar to the C H A P. X XVI. 0f the Stones of the Iancyr. HAving given an Account of the Struéture of the Kidney, and its Apparatus ‘of various Utenfils, fer in excellent order ( {peaking the great Power and, Wifdom of ‘the Creator) as the Colatories of the Blood. It may not feern altogether difaggteeable to Method, to thew how the oeeco- riomy of Nature is perverted, and the percolation of the Vital Liquor is hindred, and the‘Current of the Serous Recremcnts is intercepted, by Stones generated in the lubfiance of the Kidney, Urinary Dufts, Papillary Carun~ cles, ands-Pelvis: "And here I make bold to offer you the Subject, the Maxrial,‘ the ,Inf'trtnnEntal, and principal Efficient Caufes, and manner of ProStones are found in all parts of the BJIJ)‘. ‘duéti'ori'of Stones in the Kidneys, and all other parts of the Body. ~ ‘ ' "T‘his‘Dilealf being often as fatal as troublefome, may be feared inall‘Apar.timents of the Body, in the Head, Tongue, Heart,» Stomach, IntefiineS, Melentery,_Liver, Bladder of Call, fi'ancrem‘, and Spleen: And Stones are 33,115.?! P" W'U'WWfidn, 6" ' Km' 'EEw: Thofe that are placed in the Kidneys, and Bladder, as the melt common and bell: known. ' The Quiet of \~ The‘KidneysVas c'onfilting of divers parts, are fomahy Receptacles, and the Stone of feats of'&ones, {'Ometimes they are lodged in the fubflzance of the Glandfis the Kidney. Which'proc‘eed (as! conceive) from Serous thrernents mixed with Big"; pa rug {ides of the Urinal. The Material Carries concurring to the produélion of Stones in Animals, Thematcria! tanks in the ‘. may be reduced to two kinds ; either Remote, or more Near and Immediate. madam" ‘1 As to the firl‘t, All grols liquors, whether Chyle, Chyme, Vital, and Ner- Sm" vous Liquor, do contribute at a diltance to the Procreation of Stones, in which crude indigelied Chyle may claim a great (hare, proceeding from grofs Diet, of a \rilEOiis nature (as great Filh, Skait, Thornback, Eels, and di- vers forts of Shell-Fifh, (5w. ) or confifling of Earthy and dry parts, as Beef, and Hogs-Flclh, highly Salted, and hung up in the Smoak; as alfo grols heavy bodied, and {mall {our Wines (growing in Earth, imprzgnated with Mineral Salts) as all forts of finall Rhenilh Wines, Bayray, Manbeck, Di- thSmaIIWineC remote back, and the like. Crude Chyle a remote caufe of Stones, doth not only canfesofthc proceed from grols Aliment, but alfo from ill Ferments of Serous and Ner- Exam" vous Liquor ( defiilling out of the Glands, into the Cavity of the Stomach) and Stagnant Air, as encornpafTed With Woods, and Prenched with Lakes, Ponds, and Ditches, exhaling Vapours, and Earth great with Minerals. The Chyle is farther rendred crude, by ill Ferments of the Guts, by acid Pancreatick Liquor, and grols Bilious Recrements, vitiating the Alimentary Li- quor in the Intellines, which being carried through the Mefentetick and Thoracick Dué‘ts, into the Subclavian Veins, doth deprave the Blood, the remote matter of the Stone ( as a caement of Concreted Particles) confifiing of a Glutinous fubfiance, coming from crude Chyme, not capable tobe perfectly aflimilated into Blood. Another remote caule concurring to the Production of the Stone, may be the Adult Blood 1 emote canfc adult parts of the Blood, often (can in Hypocondriacal Difegfes, wherein f, f :21! Stone! Kkkkkk ‘ thg |