FOURTH LECTURE. S43 



(1S3) Ved Hiingerbyler de oleo ricini medica- 

 mento pergante, et anthelmintico praestantissimo, 

 trihiirgi—Bres;ov. 178O, 8°. 



(184) Medicina clinica, Ticini, 1794, 8°. vol, 

 hp. 146. 



(185) See Venel, Precis de matiere medicale, 

 augmente de notes par Carrere, Paris, 1787, torn, 

 ii, p. 387. 



(186) See ^ CXXXII. 



(137j See Journal de Medecinef an, I768, torn, 

 XXV iii, p. 44. 



(188) See § CXXXV. 



(189) See note no. 115. 



(190) See § CXLVIIT, Case and § CXLIX. 



(191) Traite de la generation des vers, etc. p. 2S. 

 (19S) Tlie J^ew Dispensatory, iii edit. London, 



1770, 8°. p. 303. 



(193) Arsenic and antimony are very often 

 combined with tin. 



(191) See Hagin, Diss, exhibens stanmim, Re- 

 giomonti, 1775, 4\ part I, § XXV. 



(195) A patient entered the clinical institute of 

 the hospital of Pavia, in the winter of 1/97? who 

 was suspected to have taenia ; he took six grains of 

 tin filings three or four times a day. Being called 

 by the government to Milan, I committed the pa- 

 tient to the care of aa intelligent physician, my col- 

 league, who, after the manner of the English, pre- 

 scribed, in one day, an ounce of the filings of our 

 tin. Returning two days after to Pavia, I found 

 the patient attacked with a genuine saturnine colic. 



