INFLAMMATIONS. 143 



hazarding all the consequences of bleeding with regard to the 

 constitution in general, when life is immediately at stake. 11 



DLXXXIV. Whether the translation so frequently made 

 from the extremities to the kidneys, is to be considered as an in- 

 stance of the misplaced gout, seems, as we have said before, un- 

 certain ; but I am disposed to think it something different ; and 

 therefore am of opinion, that, in the Nephralgia Calculosa, pro- 

 duced upon this occasion, the remedies of inflammation are to 

 be employed no farther than they may be otherwise sometimes 

 necessary in that disease, arising from other causes than the 

 gout. 



