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.
98/232 page 84
![OP WS le ‘Of a hefenfi. . 0 ^ | fion however, that they are not to be Bi- 4 ven, while the phlegm in the. ftomach is. tough. For a very common diforder of M the ftomach is relaxation; and. that cer- tainly requires.the bmcing of its fibres, Au SECTION Pic] Of. ü Vofenefs. | uA LOOSENESS is eafily ftopped. If bis that fort, whichis without a fever *. fot ~ when it Comes on a fever, we are to confi- . der, whether i it; may. not prove ja erifis. of the difeafe. | But when the cafe is.a loofe- nefs. alone, it willbe, generally fufficient, af- | fet a. vomit or two with ipecacoanba wine, to purge with fome dofes of rhubarb; and _ _ then. to ftrengthen the inteftines. Wm aro- gnatics and chalk or french bakes. odo sf | fli The Hrid) Aveta ris ifi f - tsBuT. the. cafe is attended. with. greater | difficulty, when thé. loofeneís. is accompa- ~ med with a bloody flux or fevere gripes. | n ab or then the inteftines are commonly ulce- .. rated, and difcharge blood ;, which comes away, fometimes . with liquid. excrements, à](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33017852_0098.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


