Homoeopathy; its principle, theory, and practice ... / Published under the superintendence of the English Homoeopathic Association.
- Sampson, Marmaduke B. (Marmaduke Blake), -1876
- Date:
- 1846
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Homoeopathy; its principle, theory, and practice ... / Published under the superintendence of the English Homoeopathic Association. Source: Wellcome Collection.
35/246 page 15
![treatment of infantile Rose, if not absolutely empi¬ rical, is at least not regulated by general or precise principles. Of the treatment of the gangrenous form of the disorder nothing is known with cer¬ tainty. LEPROSY. This is a perplexing complaint to treat, and the multiplicity of remedies which have been recom¬ mended from the earliest times puzzles the practi¬ tioner considerably. In analogous complaints, such as the various kinds of tetter, the practice is just as uncertain. The Lip-tetter, which is a very common form of the disorder, is generally very obstinate and resists every mode of management. MILIARY FEVER. For the extreme and alarming state of feebleness attendant on the miliary fever, several foreign au¬ thors have bestowed great commendations on such agents as musk, musk and cinnabar, and camphor. Such means I regard as utterly inadequate to the end proposed. RINGWORM. Ringworm and other forms of the fret-eruption run through a determinate course which cannot be controlled or accelerated by medical means. In the Herpetic ringworm [common to children and so frequently appearing in many of the same school or family at one time as to have been accounted contagious] solutions of blue-stone, and green](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29287431_0035.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


