IV 



INDEX. 



C. 



Cachexies, i. 320 ; ii. 560. 



Cachexy, ii. 585. 



Calculus renalis, ii. 83. 



Caligo, i. 333. 



Camphor., its use in continued fev- 

 ers, i. 632 ; in inflammations, 

 ii. 20 ; in epilepsy, 438 ; in 

 mania, 528. 



Cancer, i. 354. 



Canine madness, ii. 508. 



Cantharides, a diuretic medicine, 

 ii. 601. See Blistering. 



Cardialgia, ii. 465. 



Carditis, i. 268 ; ii. 69. 



Caries, i. 360. 



Cams, i. 293 ; ii. 332. 



Cataphora, i. 293 ; ii. 332. 



Catalepsia, i. 295. 



Cataract, i. 333. 



Catarrhus, i. 289; ii. 311 ; dia- 

 gnosis from phthisis, ii. 241, 

 improperly supposed to pro- 

 duce phthisis, 247- 



- , a contagio, i. 290 ; ii. 315. 

 frequently has a miliary erup- 

 tion, ii. 195. 



, suffocativus, ii. 67. 



Catarrhal symptoms in fever, i. 

 568. 



Cause, proximate, i. 441, 473, 

 474 ; remote, 443, 473 ; pre- 

 disposing and exciting, 474. 



CeUular texture, i. 12. 



Celsus, i. 383. 



Chalybeates. See Iron. 



Chamomile flowers, for the cure 

 of intermittent fevers, i. 674. 



Chancre, ii. 645. 



Chemical impressions giving 

 pain, ii. 55. 



Chemical sect of physicians, i. 

 367, 391, 400. 



Chickenpox, i. 277; "' 167- 



Chincough, ii. 455. 



Chlorosis, i. 301 ; ii. 293, 398 ; 

 produces dyspepsia, ii. 384. 



Cholera, i. 312 ; ii. 476. 



Chordee, ii. 643. 



Chorea, i. 304; ii. 439. 



Chrysippus, i. 376. 



Chyle, i. 190 ; not duly prepared, 

 ii. 564. 



Circulation of the blood, i. 158 

 172 ; its laws, 163 ; its dis- 

 covery, 367, 396 ; symptoms 

 of debility appearing in its state 

 in fevers, 580. 



Clavus, i. 354. 



Clonic spasm, ii. 400. 



Coagulable lymph, i. 194. 



Cceliaca ii. 486. 



Cold : its operation on the body, 

 absolute or relative, i. 546 ; 

 its effects, sedative and sti- 

 mulating, 548 ; astringent, 

 549 ; morbid, 549 ; con- 

 curs in producing fever, 550, 

 553, 557; causes inflammation, 

 ii. 14 ; produces catarrh, 314 ; 

 to be .avoided in gout, 139 ; in 

 phthisis, 262 ; may produce 

 dyspepsia, 374 ; diarrhoea, 484; 

 scurvy, 650. 



, its application in the cure 



of fevers, i. 606 ; as a tonic, 

 636 ; it is injurious in Cynan- 

 che tonsillaris, ii. 36 ; its use 

 in rheumatism, 100; its effi- 

 cacy in hysteria, 501, 505 ; in 

 dyspepsia, 383 ; in headach, 

 558; doubtful in mania, 527- 



air, its use in fever, i. 637 ; 



in smallpox, ii. 158; in measles, 

 173. 



bathing, in the treatment of 



amenorrhcea, ii. 294 ; not to be 

 admitted in melancholia, 535 ; 

 caution in dropsy, 610 ; power- 

 ful in preventing rickets, 626. 

 water, applied to the sur- 



face of the body in fevers, i. 

 637 ; used in haemorrhagies, ii. 

 226 ; applied to the lower ex- 

 tremities in colic, 474. 

 , sensation of, i. 34 ; modi- 

 fies the sensibility of the sen- 

 tient extremities, 40. 



-, febrile, not always real, i. 



483. 

 Cold stage of fever, i. 483. 



