OCR Text |
Show T320 7/" (Pathologic of the Concoflicac Frau/t}, eke. Book I. Partll. Book I. Part I 1. 7/29 ‘Pntkologre of the Comoflioe Facts/0, «Sec. 37, 1 Thefc {harp Particles difcompofing the Ferments of the Stomach, produce gPCCf'W'} norlome Exhalations, fireaming out of the Earth, or thickned with grofs and pntridc Vapors, albending out oflhgnant waters, which doaét the firfi parts in this Tragick Scene ofConcoéiion, and give the prime lll Tinéttlre to the Aliment, broken into {mall pieces. v: And afterward the Meat and Drink being conveyed from the Mouth, through the Guletinto the Stomach, are there allhlllted with more trouble- lome ialinc and acide Recremcnts of Scmus and Nervous Liquor, the {mall Veiiels, obltruéted in the Vilcera, and Glands, where. - lodged in they inbeing Ragnant, do 1012: their good Qualities, and Spirits, and grow flrli Saline, and then bya longer abode, do degenerate into In acide FerC . merit, and at lafi give {0 great a trouble to the Noble parts that they force thele indilpoled Humors to quit their Confinement, by lqueezing them out of the greater Branches, into the extremities of the Caliack Capillary Ar- teries, and Stomacick Fibrils into the Cavity of the Ventriclc, Where they firft accoli, and then enter into Converle with the broken Aliment, where- it is fecerned from the Blood, and difcharged with the Salival Liquor, by ex- 25:55?" cretory Duets into the Cavity of the Mouth, wherein the Aliment being prepared by Mal'tication, is infected, and afterwards vitiated by a new Af.‘ flux of faline and acide Particles, ejeél'ed the extremities of Agnes and Nerves, inferred into the Oral Glands, and from thence tranfmitted by excretory Velfels into the Mouth. An Iiiliance of this Diltemper may be given in a worthy Member of the Colledge of Phylicians, who was long perplexed with univerfal pains, raging in all parts of his Body 5 proceeding from Serous and Nervous Liqu0r, debafed with faline and aside Particles, which Nature difcharged frequently. out ofthe Oral Glands, in great quantity into the Mouth, wherein the falis val Liquor being vitiated, tainted the mafiicated Aliment, and indifpoléd it for Concoétion. by the purity of‘the alimentary Liquor is deflowred, by rendring it grab and Whereupon thefe Serous and Saline Recrements Nature often attempteth negating Vilcide, vulgarly called Phlegme, andris truly undigefled Chyle, which be. to evacuate by the Nerves, as well as Arteries, into the minute Conglome- $333,, rated Glands, befetting the Palate and Tongue to free her felt from theft: ill iixiiiiliilia ing accompanied With thefe fixed faline, and acide Ferments, doth make ( if leis abundant ) a Bradupepfy. or Dyfpeyfy," very exuberant, an Apepfy, the Dog-like Appetite, Pica, Malacia,and fevere Vomitings, caulE‘d by the tender Fibres of the Stomach, irritated by the acrimony of thefe lharp, and acidc Ferinents, rendring the nourifhing Liquor crude. This iiidigefied juyce is tranfmitted through the lnteflines, and the melentrick, and thoracick Milky Veilels, the fitbclavian Veins, and Cava, into the right Chamber ofthe Heart, wherein the Chyme being grols, cannot be well aflimilated, and thereby giveth a thiclriicls, and a dirpofition offiag4 "mm," nancy to the Blood, lodged in tlieVifcera ; and afterward the crudeChyme BM being impelled with the vital Liquor, out of the right Ventricle of the Heart, 21‘ by the pulmonary Artery into the fubliance of the Lungs, produceth a dif- ., if ficulty of Breathing; and being long extravafated in the {paces betWeen "19mg? it ' ' ‘ an illqualified alimentary Liquor, which being embodied with the Blood, is (dblyijn‘i‘ll'll: carried by the external Carotides, into the Maxillary and Oral Glands,where‘ 3:352:32 Companions, which converfing with Salival Juyce, dilturb the firfi rudi- (aiming: ment of Digel‘tion above in the Mouth, and the greater elaboration of it in $332" fimfidm‘ the Ventricle below. That the difaffeéiions of the Stomach, in reference to Concoéiion, may $243333" be more clearly flared, I will make hold to propound the Various kinds of ill Mc-It. Digefiion, the Firlt is called amt-Lint, where little or no alteration is made in ézn'c'g‘mf [heaAiiimcm' out of which, very little or no Alimentary Liquor is ex- gym, or IC' 1: very tra C . The fecond kind of ill Concofiion is made, when the Aliment hath a 3:39;?" longer flay in the Stomach, then is fir ; or when all the Meat and Drink do notkadmit a laudable Concoétion, which is {filed tannin, a flow, or imper. feet Concoétion, wherein the alimentary Juyce is very grofs and crude; the Veiiels, calilEth a Peripneumonia, an inflammation of the Lungs; and The third fort of illConcoétion, is made when the Aliment degenerate's this indigefied Phlegme, the product of an ill Concoé'cion , accompanying into a putrid or factide Chyle, which is the worfl of kinds, called Manta. m winded; straw, the depraved aéiion of the Ventricle, where the alimentary Ex‘. tract is defpoiled of its amicable Dil'pofition, acquiring a corrupt Nature, deliruétive of the Blood. the Blood, being alfo tritilinittcd by the alcentlent Trunk of the Aorta, and alterwards by the internal Carotides, into the Membranes of the Brain, creates fometimcs a Phreniris, and great pains of the Head : and if the crude Chyme 31323120 be tiilperlcd into the Cortex, and Medullary Procefles of the Brain, it is pro$323,119? duc'iive of Soporilerous DilEafeiz, as Lethargick, Comatofe, Carous, and Apo- Await is a total difappointment of Nature, in point of Concoaion, where- $135133 E‘jtcgrifims pleétick Diliempers. in the Stomach is rendred deliitute of its more noble Operation, and End, mnemthe extraaion of Chyle, as being able to make little or no impreflion u on flfififig": A ,wm,' (P But ifcrudc Chymc,affociated with Blood,be impelled out of the LeftVenmn‘amav tricle of the Heart, into the defcendent Trunk of the Aorta, and Inter- Meat and Drink, which remain unaltered in the Stomach (proceeding om aim" an ill temper, or a vitiated Conformation, a violated union of parts, and ?Si‘f: mm colial Arteries into the Pleura, ir produceth a Plenrifie, fornetimes for want of laudable Ferments, or from an Emmal Caufe, too great a quantity, or from the ill quality of Meat and Drink. An Apepfy is contraéied alfo, when the Tone of the Stomach is lofifiaull "3555?"! ed when the current of animal Liquor and Spirits is intercepted in the Ori- ilieioit Tons :f'l'f‘fih'f‘lg' my" And if the ill-Concoéted alimentary liquor incrallating the Blood, be carried by the grearei‘,Trunks into the (mallet Branches, and Capillary Ar- Eliziirictranf- terms into the lnterfiices of the Vellels, {cated in the Mufcular parts, It g6mifmr "in, nerates a Difeafe, called Leumpblegmalia. {ififljffl‘m Other times thcfe Saline and Acide Particles of the Fetments, make the $353,311? lame imprefiion in the Chyle, which being tranfmirted with the Blood into rcrlliccsofth: Membranes, covering the Mufcles, and the Interfiices of the Nerves (1-83? Nervous Filai _ . . . mcnrs.doth ed in the Carnous parts) do produce high afllléhve Pains, called by the MO' "gum",«m, dern Phyficians a Rheumarifme. generatca There gen of the nervous Fibrils, produced fometime by the compreflion of them, $2155" caufcd by the rumor of the adjacent parts, in the inflammation of the Dun, and (Pie Mater, comprefiing the extreamities of the Nervous Fibres (soared in the Ambient parts of the Brain) whereupon the Fibres of the Stomach, derived from the Par wagum, being defiitute of their Liquor and Spirit, 'do 101?: their Vigor and Tenfenefs. 0006 Of |