Volume 1
A compendium of human & comparative pathological anatomy / By Adolph Wilhelm Otto. Translated from the German with additional notes and references, by John F. South.
- Adolph Wilhelm Otto
- Date:
- 1831
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A compendium of human & comparative pathological anatomy / By Adolph Wilhelm Otto. Translated from the German with additional notes and references, by John F. South. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![disease prevalent in Crim Tartary, are all considered, by Craigie, as probable varieties of the same morbid action. v. his Elem. p. 640. He also gives the following authorities.—On the Pellagra, v. N. X. Jansen de Pellagra. Ludg.1787 ; Holland, M.D. in Med. Chir. Trans. Vol. VIII. p. 3173; on Radesyge, Morbus quem Radesyge vocant, etc. Commentatio Auct. Fred. Holst, M.D. Christiane, 1817; Geographische Nosologie von Fr. Schnuner, M. D.; on mal di rosa, Thiery Observations de Physique et Médec. Vol. Il. Chap. VI.; on Scherlievo, Annali de Medicina; for Crim Tartary diseases, the travels of Falk, Guldenstadt, and Pallas. T.] (5.) Reuss De nevis maternis. v. Repertor. Commentat. Vol. X. p. 268, and Vol. XII. p. 332.—de Plouquet Repertor. Art. Neevus.— Wienhold Sieben Vorle- sungen uber die Entstehung der Missgeburten. Bremen, 1807.—Krause Ab- handlung von den Muttermalern. Leipz. 1758.—Jouard Des monstruosités et bizarreries de la nature, etc. Paris, 1806.—A good plate of a mother’s mark is to be found in Alibert's Nosologie Naturelle, Vol. I. pl. E, p. 350.—-Another kind in Walther, Ueber die angebornen Fetthautgeschwiilste und andre Bil- dungsfehler. fol. Landshut, 1814.—-J. Wardrop, in London Medic. Chir. Trans. Vol. IX. Part I.-——- One kind of mother’s mark is near akin to angiectasy, described in the vascular system.—No. 2877, of Bresl. Mus. exhibits a mother’s mark affecting the back of the head, the neck, and the whole of the upper part of the back.—[J. S. Elsholz Anthropometria et Doctrina Nevorum. 4to. Pat. 1654.—-P. Phinella Libri tres Nevorum. 12mo. Antw. 1632. T.] (6) Astruc Traité des Tumeurs, I.——Stahl D. de abscessu et furunculo. Hale, 1714.—Berlin D. de furunculo. Gott. 1797. -—- Heim’s Erfahrungen tiber die Furunkeln in Horn’s Archiv f. Medic. Erfahr. Vol. VII. Part I. and II. — Ritter in Graefe’s and v. Waliher’s Journ. of Chir. Vol. 111. Part I. p. 81. (7) Gilibert Adversar. med. pract. p. 140. Lyon, 1791. | (8) Voigtel, Hand. der pathol. Anat. Vol. I. p. 85, describes a few very in- teresting cases from Meckel’s collection. Also in the sebaceous follicles of brutes concretions are sometimes formed, viz. the so-called sTAGS’ TEARS, in stags, which even become bony. v. Eph. N.C. Dec. IT. Ann. IX. Observ. 15, p. 45. (8*) [The only kind of encysted tumours which occurs in the skin is, accord- ing to Craigie, the meliceris; v. his Elements, &c. p. 644. T.] (9) Compare § 64. (10) Good plates in Alidert, pl. 35 and 36. — Ludwig Histor. pathologica sin- gularis cutis turpitudinis Reinhurdi. fol. Lips. 1793, with engravings. — (11) For example, in Adelson, D.s. casum singularem morbi tuberosi, etc. 4to. Gott. 1822, with two engravings. A peculiar kind of fungous growth on the tip of the finger was observed by Boerhave, De morb. nervor. p. 282, and Stiebel Kleine Beitrage zur Heilwissenschaft, p. 111. 8vo. Frankf. a. M. 1828. (12) Alibert gives good plates of such ulcers under the name of ScROPHULE CANCEREUSE; further, in the Nosorocir NaTuRELLE, Vol. I. p. 548, pl. H, and p. 504, pl. K. (13) If mollusca be penetrated by boring muscles and worms, they do not close the opening with lime, but with a yellowish insoluble animal substance. § 92. PARASITIC ANIMALS! are very often produced in and upon the skin of man and animals; EXTRANEOUS BODIES also remain there either permanently or for a long time.’ Frequently also there is noticed some PECULIARITY in reference to the sECRE- TION FROM THE SKIN, thus the PERSPIRATION,’ * is produced only at certain parts, on one half of the body, acrid and corroding, or stinking, containing urine,’? unusually sour, or discoloured, reddish, yellow, green, bluish,’* even blackish*'—too thick, clammy, milk-like, &c. ;?* further, bloody-sweat,’’ and the ex-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33489166_0001_0123.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


