Volume 1
A manual of medical treatment or clinical therapeutics / by I. Burney Yeo.
- Isaac Burney Yeo
- Date:
- 1894
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A manual of medical treatment or clinical therapeutics / by I. Burney Yeo. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The University of Leeds Library. The original may be consulted at The University of Leeds Library.
37/664 (page 17)
![Cliap-i-] Acute Tonsillitis.' (Quinsy. In severe cases, and for hastening suppuration, we have found nothing more efficacious than a gargle of Ao^ water containing about 2 grains of borax or of bi- carbonate of soda to the ounce ; the patient should be directed to keep gargling or holding this in his mouth as constantly as possible. Inhaling the steara of hot water, or hot water containing some aromatic substance such as benzoin, camomile, sage, Jiops, camphor, or opium, is also very useful. Externally profuse hot fomentations, applied frequently with a large sponge, the head and neck being Jield over a large basin, and in the intervals hot moist sponges fastened round the throat, greatly hasten the progress of the case. If we can distinctly satisfy ourselves that there is a superficial collection of pus which we can easily reach by a guarded bistoury we should at once let it out, but patients constantly complain of being uselessly put to pain by these punctures which appear to give no relief. The swollen and (Edematous surface of the tonsillar swell- ing often gives a fallacious sense of fluctuation to the finger, which induces the medical attendant to puncture prematurely. Hypodermic injections of morphine and atropine are sometimes given to allay the suffering, and some physicians think, if given early, they tend to shorten the course of the disease. After suppuration and discharge of the abscess, tonic treatment is needed—bark and ammonia in rheumatic cases, or quinine and acid in non-rheumatic cases, or iron and quinine in cases of great debility. The following antiseptic gargle in acute tonsillitis, after incision, is recommended by Schnitzler:— Bt Sodii salicylatis Boracia ... Aqua3 laurocei'asi M. f. gargar. In children we have seen retrogression of the chronic enlargement, which remains after the acute 0—33 ■ iia 40 grains. 1 dram,](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2150930x_0001_0037.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)