Physiological system of nosology; with a corrected and simplified nomenclature / [John Mason Good].
- John Mason Good
- Date:
- 1820
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Physiological system of nosology; with a corrected and simplified nomenclature / [John Mason Good]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
149/714 page 9
![Odontalgia hemodia. Sauo. Dolor dentium a stridore. Darw. Zahne-stumpf. G. Agacement des dents. F-. Tooth-edge. | a Astridére. From grating sounds. -@ Ab acritGdine. From vellication or acrid substances. 4. DEFORMIS. Deformity of the teeth from error of shape, position, or number. | 5. EDENTULA. Loss or want of teeth. Nodosia (vwdocia). Auct. Grec. Nefrendis. Vog. Toothlessness. acase of spongy and highly irritable gums (gen. 1.7. @.), and who observed, that just before the author saw him, he thought he should have gone mad upon hearing a woman cry bullaces for sale: it gave him a tooth-edge, that, to use his own terms, convulsed all his muscles, and seemed to run through his brain. 4. Odontia deformis. This species was called by the Greeks chau- liodos (svavaAiodos), as was also the person who was thus disfigured. Arist. de Part. an. iii. 1. Oppian. de Venat. ]. vii. See Hunter, p. 115, 199, for examples of a double row of teeth: as also Bloch, Medicinische Bemerkungen, p. 19. Triple row, Nean- der, Physic, Part II. Numerous and confused rows, Eph. Nat. Cur. Dec. 1. ann. iii. p. 566. ann. vii. viii. obs. 101. 3 5. Odontia edéntula. In the varieties’of this species.the affection seldom extends to all the teeth except in the case of old age. In the first, or that from constitutional defect, a few only in one or both jaws are left unprovided for; while sometimes an effort to this purpose ds commenced, but not carried to perfection. ‘ In the lead of a young subject which I examined,” says Mr. J. Hunter, ‘*1 found that the two first incisor teeth in the upper jaw had not cut the gum; nor had they any root or fang, excepting so much as was necessary to fasten them to the gum on their upper surface ; and on examining the jaw, I found there was no alveolar process nor sockets in that part.”. Nat. Hist. of the Human Teeth, p.'8, | a](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33289256_0149.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


