Medical precepts and cautions / Translated from the Latin, under the author's inspection, by Thomas Stack.
- Richard Mead
- Date:
- 1751
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Medical precepts and cautions / Translated from the Latin, under the author's inspection, by Thomas Stack. Source: Wellcome Collection.
62/232 page 46
![5 ou6 07 The palf.. 1 becaufe they will: difcharge] more blood, p the gala te arteries can. : d iBtISTzRb: are Jew He to be laid « on vite HM n5 and all the limbs; and' cathartics are 2 . -meceffary, taken both by the mouth and’ by away of clyfter: but they muít be acrid and 1 S deri ud ftimulating ; becaufe the ner- ! vous fibres are become very torpid. p 7 Tur letbargy and carus are pup Qa m _» cies of the ORA E SECTION din B rosse The pally. P ic THE apoplexy, when it is not mortal: (0 syery frequently terminates in a palfy, which. «is the crifis of the difeafe: and this palfy _ And what the above-cited Morgagui ob- | sferves after Valfalva, that on diffection of the bodies of apophGics, who had been feiz- ed with a hemiplegia, be always found the , caufe of the difeafe in the oppofite fide of the | brain (1), I have formerly found true more- than once in St. 7. bomas’ S hofpital. she \ Ti HERE](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33017852_0062.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


