A methodical system of nosology / translated from the Latin of Doctor William Cullen ; by Eldad Lewis.
- Cullen, William, 1710-1790.
- Date:
- [1808]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A methodical system of nosology / translated from the Latin of Doctor William Cullen ; by Eldad Lewis. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the National Library of Medicine (U.S.), through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the National Library of Medicine (U.S.)
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![Tritacophya clodes. S. sp. 5.* Febris continua elodes, of Vogcl. 5. Tertiana syncopal] s. Tritacophya syncopalis, S. sp. 1. Amphimerina syncopalis, S. sp. 4. Amphimerina humorosa, S. sp. 6. Febris continua syncopalis, of Vogcl. •. Tertiana algida. Amphimerina epiala, S. sp. 3. Amphimerina phricodes, S. sp. 7- Tritaeophya leipyria, S. sp. 9. TeHfcma leipyria, S. sp. 23. Febris continua epiala and leipyria, of Vogel. 7. Tertiana lethargica. Tritaeophya carotica, S. sp. 7- Tertiana apoplectica, of Morton. Tertiana soporosa, of Wtrlhoff. Febris epidemica Urbevetana, of Lancisus. The most remarkable instances of remittent tertians, that I have met with, are the following. Causos, of Hippocrates. Tritaeophya causus, S. sp. 2. Febris ardens, of Boerkaave. Remittens ardens, or causis, of Macbride. Tertiana perniciosa, of Lews Mercatus. This very mortal fever appeared under the deceitful form of a tertian, and was accompanied with numerous accidental symp- toms, of the most dangerous kind. Tertiana pestilens, of Diversus. Tertiana maligna pestilens, of Kiverhis. Morbus Hungaricus, of Sennertus. Languor Pannonicus, of Cobert. Amphimerina Hungarica, S. sp. 10. * The type of the sweating-fever mentioned by Boyer, in his Method of treating epidemical diseases, and referred to tins place by Sauvage, I cannot ascertain from the description of Boyer him- self, but suppose it rather belongs to the typhus. D](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21112095_0041.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)