INDEX. 



IX 



H. 



Habit a cause of irritability, i. 

 100. 



Hcematemesis, i. 288 ; ii. 300. 



Hcematuria, i. 288 ; ii. 306. 



Haemoptysis, i. 284; ii. 233; 

 cause of its occurrence after 

 the acme of life, 210 ; does not 

 frequently produce ulceration 

 of the lungs, 245. 



Haemorrhagies, i. 283 ; ii. 201 ; 

 this order comprehends only 

 active haemorrhagies, ibid ; 



, phenomena of haemorrhagy, 



ii. 202 ; proximate cause, 203 ; 

 an inequality of the distribu- 

 tion of the blood, 206; causes 

 of its occurring in different 

 periods of life, 206 ; remote 

 causes, 214; cure 215. 



, a cause of syncope, ii, 364 ; 



of epilepsy, ii. 422. 



, symptomatic, i. 288 ; ii. 



300. 



, produced by hooping- 

 cough, ii. 457. 



Hcemorrhagia cerebri, cause of 

 apoplexy, ii. 213, 338. 



Haemorrhoids, i. 285 ; ii. 267 j 

 their cause from the state of 

 venous system, ii. 2] 3, 270 ; 

 their cure, 273. 



Haemorrhoidal headach, ii. 553. 



Haen (A. de) on the critical 

 days in fevers, i. 593. 



Hahn, at Breslaw, proposed the 

 application of cold water to the 

 surface of the body in fever, i. 

 636. 



Hatter (A.}, opinions on the 

 mind, i. 21 ; on muscular mo- 

 tion, 68 ; on irritability and 

 sensibility, 411. 



Harvey, i. 368, 396. 



Headach, lecture on, ii. 537 ; 

 dissections of cases of, 540 ; 

 causes of, 544 ; paroxysms of, 

 547 ; forming a topical fever, 

 550 ; a symptom in fevers, i. 

 485, 565. 

 Heart, inflammation of, i. 268 ; 



ii. 69; its organic affections 

 produce syncope, ii. 367 ; pal- 

 pitation, 443. 



Heat, external, to be avoided in 

 contiuued fevers, i. 601 ; brings 

 on asthma, ii. 449; concurs m 

 the formation of epidemics, i. 

 557. 



, sensation of, i. 34 ; modify- 

 ing the sensibility of the sen- 

 tient extremities, 40; a cause 

 of waking, 126. 



, animal, probably the effect 



of the motion of the blood, i. 

 201, but not of the attrition 

 of its particles, 202 ; the theory 

 of it difficult, 203. 



of the body, enables us to 



judge of the state of the circu- 

 lation in fevers, i. 582. 



, increased, in inflammation, 



its cause, ii. 3 ; influences the 

 number of pustules in small- 

 pox, 156. 



, its good effects in hysteria, 



ii. 501. 



Hellebore, black, ii. 296 ; in ma- 

 ma, 526. 



Helmont, (Van) i. 400, 404. 



Hemicrania, i. 540 ; ii. 537- 



Hemiplegia, i. 297 ; ii- 348. 



Hemitritceus, i. 247- 



Hemlock in hooping-cough, ii. 

 463 ; in scrofula, 636. 



Hepatirrhcea, ii. 483. 



Hepatitis, i. 270 ; ii. 77- 



Hepatocele, i. 356. 



Heraclides of Tarentum, 380. 



Hereditary diseases; gout, ii. 110; 

 phthisis, 258 ; asthma, 447 '> 

 scrofula, 630. 



Hernia, i. 355. 



Herophilus, i. 378. 



Herpes, i. 360. 



Hippocrates, i. 368, 375 ; on e- 

 pidemic fevers, 557 ; his doc- 

 trine on critical days, 592. ' 



Hippocratic school, i. 390. 



Hippocratic method of curing, i. 

 406. 



History of medicine, i. 365 ; its 

 periods, 366; first period, 370; 



