Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Lectures on the study of fever / by Alfred Hudson. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
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![1 age. Cerebritis, case illustrating . 133 Cerebral lesions, their latency in in fever . , .129 their occasional connection with insolation 130 theirdependeuce on previous disease . 131 symptoms, from fever poison and fioni inflamma- tion contrasted . . 119 respu'ation, definition of. Graves . . .68 Cerebro-spinal arachnitis . 123 Cerebro-spinal lesions . .111 group of symptoms, indicative of . 123 summary of 145 functions, derangement of . . . .112 Cliambers, Dr. on the reception of fever poison . . 219 Chloroform in fever . . 241 Cholera, resemblance of, to ty- phoid . . .124 Circulatory and respiratory sys- tems in fever, rules for study- ing the . . .83 Circxilation and respiration, de- rangements of the . . 59 Circulation, signs derivable from the, in forming prognosis . 203 Clinical study of fever, the, in what it consists . .13 Cold, combined with alcohol, a predisponent . . 22 Cold, exposure to, a predisponent 22 and moisture, effects of, on the economy, Lehman's ex- periment . . .22 Coleman and Eeid'a experiments S3 Colour and expression, in tyjihus and typhoid, contrasted . 53 the, in epidemic relapsing fever . . .65 changes in, to what due 56 •Condition of the patient at the time of seizure, its effect on prognosis . . .195 Congestion, pulmonic, in fever 70 Consciousness, normal condition of, in typhus . .114 Contagion, of fever, imported . 35 typhus, typhoid, and epidemic fever, distinct 43 Convalescence in relapsiug syuo- cha, characteristic of . 170 in tyi)hoid, dangers during . . .210 Convulsion, its connection with crisis . . . 140 with blood contamination . 151 Corrigan's, Sir D. J. cxaini)le of the co-existence of diffe- rent morbid poisons , 40 on the uriue of fever . . , 103 on manage- ment, with reference to sleep 225 Crisis, what . . .11 duties of the ])hysician during the period of . 250 modes of, their influence on treatment . . 254 nervous symptoms as modes of . . . 140 prognostic signs observ- able at . . . 209 of relapsing synocha , 169 of typhus, characteristics of . . . . 171 of typhoid . .174 Critical days . . . 248 Critical and post-critical periods of the three fevers, contrasted 178 Crowding-over, its influence as a predisposing cause of fever . 20 as an exciting cause . . 34 ou prognosis . . . 196 Cullen on the effect of light in the treatment of typhus . 113 Cure, the, of fever ? . . 212 Cutaneous transpiration, how modified . . .56 Days, critical . . . 248 Day of the fever, what ? impor- tance of the question . 248 Digestive system, the, signs deri- vable from in forming prog- nosis . . . 204 Diagnosis of fever, as an essential disease . . . 159 Diarrhoea in fever, its import as a symptom . . .89 Delirium, characteristics and va- rieties of, in typhus . 113 importance of, in diag- nosis . . . 206 following crisis, treat- ment of . . . 256 tremens and typhiis, difficulty of diagnosis . 162 Discoloratious, yellow, in typhus, Hasse on . . .149](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21924168_0358.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


