A treatise on medical sympathy, and on the balance and connection of the extreme vessels of the human body : comprehending, I. The nature of sympathy in general; ... II. The nature of febrile sympathy, ... / by Seguin Henry Jackson, M.D.
- Jackson, Seguin Henry, 1752-1816
- Date:
- 1787
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A treatise on medical sympathy, and on the balance and connection of the extreme vessels of the human body : comprehending, I. The nature of sympathy in general; ... II. The nature of febrile sympathy, ... / by Seguin Henry Jackson, M.D. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by University of Bristol Library. The original may be consulted at University of Bristol Library.
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![ieveral yacheg length. Tjb.ig m^y be looked ■ypoAi ^§ a fingyj^f inf]t3nc€ of fyinpath^ be-s |^ye6^l a« «p-f;f^y ^^nd ^ nerve, CCCLXXVI. The abforbent fyftem has yet to cu^ gage the attention of fpeculative men. it ipuft be left to the mutual labors pf in^enipus anatorplfts and phyfiologifts (CCCLXXIII.) to find oyt, by diflbaion jind ferious refledlioii; of what confequenc^ the abforbent Jyjiem is, in the pathology of the animal oeconomy. Its importance in ^he phyfiology of aii animal body is now very generally admitted. I do not doubt, byt that future inyef^igation will difcover, that it bears as important a concern in the pathology of fever, as is at prefent given to the extreme arier'wus vejfeh: for, it is certain, that many parts of the body fympathize with ^he abforbent fyftern. 9CCLXXVIL Mr. J. Hunter hiis mentioned fuch a cafe the follpwing, in proof of fuch iympa- thy.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21441996_0255.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)