Nosologia methodica oculorum, or, a treatise on the diseases of the eyes, selected and translated from the Latin of Francis Bossier [sic] de Sauvages; wherein the whole are methodically arranged: to which are also added, the descriptions and modes of cure, ... / with annotations by George Wallis ...
- Date:
- MDCCLXXXV [1785]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Nosologia methodica oculorum, or, a treatise on the diseases of the eyes, selected and translated from the Latin of Francis Bossier [sic] de Sauvages; wherein the whole are methodically arranged: to which are also added, the descriptions and modes of cure, ... / with annotations by George Wallis ... Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
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![SECTION the TWELFTH. Bulb of the Eye. §• i- I. Ex ophthalmia -purulent a.—Ma i t re-j an. Part. 2. Chap. 6. Exophthalmia hypopy- ica, Boerhaave. Purulent Exophthalmy. [''HE hydropic exophthalmy terminates in this fpecies, if the inflammation, arifing from acrid ferum poured into the Eye, runs into fuppuration—after very fevere pain, inflammation encreafed externally and inter- nal]_y-y great tumefafhon of the membranes forming the white of the Eye, mvernon of the palpebrae, an hot and acrid epiphora, at length the Eye grows muddy, and a fuppu- ration, as alio a definition of the internal parts enfues. In procefs of time the Eye burfts, and is exulcerated with efflux of pus, alleviation of pain, a fucceflive deterfion of the parts, a di- minution.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28042815_0325.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


