Principles of the theory and practice of medicine / By Marshall Hall.
- Marshall Hall
- Date:
- 1839
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Principles of the theory and practice of medicine / By Marshall Hall. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Lamar Soutter Library, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the Lamar Soutter Library at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
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![4(^,Hlnrifimtinn 5 Susceptibility to cold. . VyaiUXlllL/CllUJil. J Temperature ol the extremiUes. . fCBdema. 5. »ecretlon.i?:'■^^p'^?°.• ^ Lnoary umcUon. ^- 6. Nutrition. (Weight at different periods.) 7. Innervation. 8. Reproduction. puberty, menslruaiion. parturition. V. Previous Special Diseases. Chronic. 1. Scrofulous affections. Swelling of glands. Caries. Affections of the joints. Ophtbiilmia. OuianeoQs eruptions of scalp. Worms. 2. Syphilitic.—(Use of mercury.) 3. Cutaneous diseases. 4. Rheumatism. 5. Gout. Acute. 1. Fevers, continued, remittent, and intermittent. 2. Eruptive fevers, ll 3. Erysipelas. 4. Local inflammations. 5. Asiatic cholera. ' Variola, ' Scarlatina. * Rubeola. VI. Medical History of the Patient's Family. T ^ Age of parents at the patient's birth. 1. Ascenains:. ll^^^]^ habitual health. o ^1 hen: special diseases. 2. Collateral. 3. Descending. VII. History of the Present Disease. 1. Supposed epoch of its invasion. 2. Existence and nature of any preliminary symptoms. 3. Cause and nature of the morbid changes in the functions or parts specially implicated. 4. State of the other functions and parts since the com- mencement of the disease. VIII. Supposed Causes of the Disease. IX. Treatment, and its Effects.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21197908_0028.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


