J 68 NOTES TO THE 



whole substance of the lungs. Several observa- 

 tions* similar to these, and vi^orthy of attention have 

 been collected and published by Vallisnerif Op, ii. 

 p. i» 



(2) Collectio Societatis medicae hauniensiae, 

 p. SI. 



(3) Baglivi, Praxis medica, lib. i. 



(4) We read in the Ephemerides des Curieiice 

 de la J\^atiirc, dec. ii, an vi. obs. xxxiii, the history 

 of a case of insatiable hunger occasioned by lumbri- 

 coides. The patient, who was incessantly ill, found 

 no relief except in taking food. 



(5) Sauvages speaks, Nosologia method cl. vii. 

 gen. XX, spec, x, obs. cxviii, of a cardialgia, which 

 in a certain part of the country occasioned the 

 death of several persons. On opening the dead 

 bodies, lumbricoides were found so closely attach- 

 ed to the coats of the stomach, that they were even 

 perforated. 



From the same cause arose the volvulus of the 

 young woman who vomited up every thing ; see 

 Sauvages. 



(6) Set; Van Swieten, De Morhis infantum, etc, 



(7) Traite des maladies des enfans, etc, p. 313. 



(8) A young woman feeble and emaciated came 

 to the Clinical Hospital of Pavia, in the winter of 

 17^7 j she had been tormented for more than twen- 

 ty days with pains of the joints, which rendered 

 her stiff and immoveable. 



There was not any swelling of the articulations ; 

 both pupils were largely dilated, the mouth inun- 



