A treatise on the nature and cure of gout and rheumatism, including general considerations on morbid states of the digestive organs; some remarks on regimen; and practical observations on gravel / By Charles Scudamore.
- Charles Scudamore
- Date:
- 1819
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A treatise on the nature and cure of gout and rheumatism, including general considerations on morbid states of the digestive organs; some remarks on regimen; and practical observations on gravel / By Charles Scudamore. Source: Wellcome Collection.
352/368 (page 326)
![Gravel, as a symptom of faulty digestion 53,256 —, external characters of 35 ~—, occurs to gouty persons chiefly early in life 53, 226, 249 —, theory and treatment of 249, 256 — and gout considered patholo- gically in a comparative point _ of view 250 —, giving rise to inflammatory, action of the kidneys, how to be treated 259 —, how distinguished from lum- bago 308 Gravity sp. of urine 31 Greeks, their various terms for gout (a Greek motto ye tees to gouty perons: 43 Gregory, Professor, Edin, his ob- servation with regard to the east wind 58 —-—,; gout scarcely known among his clinical patients Grosvenor, Mr. of Oxtord, his treatment by friction recom- mended in certain states of the _ limbs induced by gout —, his peculiar practice when useful i in chronic rheumatism 316 Guaiacum, its use in rheumatism considered 313 —-, sometimes an useful addition to purgative medicines in gout 189 Al aor Te Hemorrhage spontaneous, to a certain extent salutary 228 Hemorrhoids in gout 32, 49,74, 181, 202, 225 Haller, his opinion that the nerves are the seat of disease in gout 85 Hamilton, Dr. Lynn Regis, his divisions of gout into acute and chronic 8 —-— his opinion that in gout a fluid is formed sui generis, which he callsthe gouty fluid 94 Hamilton, Dr. Edin. his method the alimentary canal 235 Haygarth, Dr. his statement of the rarity of the acute rheuma- tism compared with cases of the chronic 184, ~~, his diagnostic distinctions ob- jected to 185 —, his strong recommendation of the Peruvian bark, asa remedy in acute rheumatism 298, 306 Health, the true method of) pre- serving 280 Heart, diseases of, as stated to be in’ connexion with rheumatism by Sir David Dundas 289 Heat of the fire in the apartment to be guar ded — in the - paroxysm 134. children do not have gout. 34 —, his caution on the use of the Bath waters for the gouty 190 —, his forcible description of the calamitous consequences of gout . 225 Hellebore tincture of, its very in- jurious qualities as a remedy in gout 104, 167 —, tinctura of, with laudanum, its sensible properties Helmont, Van, that the gout is 110 contagious 72 Henry, Dr. Manchester, referred to respecting urea 242 Hereditary predisposition — to _ gout, the question considered 2, 30, 74 — and acquired gout, compara- tive tabular view of Sl — structure as a remote cause of rheumatism considered —292 Hermodactyl of the ancients 105, 10S Herring, the praise of, as a re- ‘medy in gout, by Dr. Clerk 269 Hippocrates, his aphorism as to the adult age in connexion with gout | ‘34 —, as to the er of life when gout attacks females — advised the burning of gouty parts with raw flax Home Sir Everard, on the irri- table state of the ‘urethra in gout 1] — —, hisrecommendation of the use of magnesia in gout and gravel, referred to 295 —-—-, his opinion of the col- chicum autumnale and eau Home, Professor, Edin. his case _ of retrocedent gout,which prov- ed speedily fatal 213 Horace, his poetical pathology 60 Horse exercise, a valuable re- medy in most chronic diseases 264. ——, when useful in chronic rheumatism 315 133](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b32886470_0352.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)